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Results (6,839+)
Brent Paul Firing my realtor
7 September 2016 | 10 replies
Unfortunately, there is no shortage of bad agents.
Nicholas A Bush New member to the Indiana area
24 May 2016 | 7 replies
Be careful of getting frustrated by the shortage and settling for poor quality deals.
Kerwin Montilla Any one in the central florida build quadplexes
12 February 2021 | 17 replies
Hello BP I recently move to Orlando and have been searching for multi-family and have seen there is a shortage of duplexes , triplexes , and quadplexes has anyone built any in the last few years that can lead in the right direction 
Jason Ayala Interested in Small Multi Family Value Adds/BRRRR
17 October 2021 | 7 replies
There is a shortage of rentals so the rental market is very strong.
Peyton From Pace Morby Gator Community
29 December 2023 | 30 replies
I can't recount how many times i have been hit-up to sell a property for about 1 month's rent, no joke, or less, and all kinds of ridiculous nonsense, as if there were some shortage of buyers lol. 
Rich Baer Real Estate Bubble Popping
16 January 2024 | 63 replies
There is a SF housing shortage shaping up in the Dallas area.
Ashley Powell To deal or not to deal? how to make it happen?
9 August 2021 | 5 replies
I was including water(electricity is metered separate for each unit), 2% vacancies (this area has an extreme shortage of rentals), 5% cap.
Daniel Bear Novice Investor in Newark, Delaware from Wyoming
10 November 2015 | 19 replies
There's certainly no shortage of information here.
Dennis Lin Newbie looking in the Fresno Sunnyside neighborhood
30 January 2024 | 3 replies
The other big employers are the Fresno Unified school district - the 3rd largest school district in CA, Amazon, the IRS and city and county governments. rents are high mostly because we have a big housing shortage and there are no signs of housing meeting demand for a while as Fresno has a few policies that make it hard to annex land from the county so building is low.
Phil Wells Will people leave cities post COVID 19?
12 July 2020 | 196 replies
Short answer is It won’t be large enough of popular to leave a city so that it can impact housing price (to fall) and a particular area to raiseBesides the infrastructure that many talks about, there is the input and output of labor and skilled workers, Currently the market has C amount of jobs that are WFH-able, and let’s say that is 10,000 of Software engineers in this example, the current 10,000 of engineer can decide to move to less expensive area so to speak, but most of them will not, I will explain later, you see in order for the FB or google to continue to hire SE they need to have continuous input of student into the top schools, which are mostly in better areas so to speak, FB and google in this case won’t just hire anyone, so in order for less student to go to bigger cities where better education is offered, that city needs to have a better school, and public school doesn’t fund over night, so you get the idea, then for those who lives in say LA Bay Area, if they decided to move, they will need to move to an area where good education can be offered, and they won’t be there “cheaper in price” area that we are thinking about.LA has always see a shortage in housing and that will continue to get worsen, for those that moves to TX, it’s mainly being dragged by Companies moving to TX therefore the migration, of say FB decided to move to a smaller town out of no where then yes we can see that to follow, but just a WFH policy will not lead enough people to move, lastly is that no local government will incentivize enough to bring people in their cities, like what TX is doing, because simply if they haven’t they didn’t have the resource or not being able t offer incentive for the big companies to come in therefore bringing up RE and commercial Revenue stream, those that wanted to move, has a reason to move long time ago, could be cost of living has been pushing them out, or being closer to family, and now it just gave them one more reason to act on it, but WFH itself will not be a trend to get people moving.