Todd Ethridge
Newby
12 January 2014 | 5 replies
There is enough wisdom and advice on this site to keep you busy indefinitely!
Rhett Tullis
Tenant passed away/passing away
26 March 2014 | 11 replies
my thought was to move her things into storage and hold it for a while (indefinitely), we have other units in the complex always opening up i would be happy to give to her if/when she is recovered.
Thomas Flanagan
Wholesaling Budget & Details Analysis
16 January 2015 | 4 replies
Budgeted for 6 months so far but would like to extend out indefinitely.
Jeff Rabinowitz
Rooms full of usable clothing. Who do you donate to?
29 October 2015 | 8 replies
If I have to have the stuff moved from inside on the day of pick up (at an indefinite time) to outside it will be easier to just load it into a dumpster at the outset.
Walter Correia
How to avoid paying real estate capital gains tax?
16 August 2017 | 6 replies
@Walter Correia, yes a 1031 exchange will allow you to defer capital gains indefinitely.
Mikkie Mills
Investors can Benefit from Autonomous Vehicle Technology
13 September 2017 | 1 reply
It is believed this technology will provide ways for investors, as well as carmakers, to experience significant profits.
Kurt Granroth
Complete newbie from Gilbert, AZ
5 November 2017 | 28 replies
The goal was to get to roughly $1.5M and then retire, since all of the math says that we could safely withdraw (the SWR) 4% of our investment pot every year ($60k a year) and be able to sustain that indefinitely.
Account Closed
'Get a Piece a dat REI Pie' Pattern Phenomenon: Rash Expectations?
2 May 2015 | 4 replies
if u seen the movie 'Limitless' it sould resonate with the psyche of how i believe our society is conditioned into a delusionally bipolar'grass is greener' mindet where we are either very happy/successful, otherwise we are down in a ditch waiting for the next opportunity to get back up there and be ecstatically happy and successful in the future.what about incremental. to me, that's how savings and investment actually materialize. heck, the very word itself 'invest' should encompass the fundamental of not consuming today in order to have more tomorow. i myself have times when i am broke but thats almost always right after a close where i invested than liquidated. my final thoughts are practically nobody on BP is living in the horrid shantytowns of any continent for matter where they are living in starving conditions with no food/water available on a daily basis nor having nothing to call their own other than the clothes on their back. such is the case out there for some large portion of some 8 BILLION humans on this planet. many, many if not most people out there all over the world don't own anything at all except the clothes they are wearing right now. likewise, many/most people on this planet don't have a practically endless supply of food so they dont go hungry. here in northamerica, luckly even homeless folks if there hungry can simply find out where the nearest 'soup kitchen' is and get a wholesome meal on a daily basis indefinitely. we have so many resources at our fingertips that it is so easy to start saving up 100s of dollars a month even based on minimum wage (whereas a family overseas living in rural areas with no local jobs other than living off the land, as is the majority of situations across the globe, may be lucky to even make $100 a YEAR!).
Jimmy Mooney
Using credit to purchase a property and then immediately cash-out refinancing to pay it back - is this possible?
30 April 2015 | 20 replies
Yep great point, as the unsecured LOC could be drawn on again but at least the equity loan would be secured by the lender so I imagine they'd be more concerned with worse case scenario where the borrow is left to carry both the new equity loan and the old LOC together indefinitely.
Account Closed
DIY Debt Consolidation & the Aftermath: Credit 'Repair'!
23 May 2015 | 6 replies
so, couple months ago i settled multiple unsecured credit cards and now finally they are reporting as closed (by the consumer) and settled (for the amount agreed; a few say for less than the full amount, though).my fico/credit score is still terrible, low, though, at 528. last year, it was in the 700s but then i splurged at home depot and realized i may as well just default on all those credit cards and let them go to collections cuz i heard they settle for around half. besides i was going 'blind' (severe postcapsularhaze) for some time after a traumatic head-on injury and even after eye surgery in both eyes so my credit score was the least of my concerns.anyways i'm wondering now that i do not have nor will i open any new lines of credit (no more credit cards, no more cell phone contracts, no mortgage, no auto loan, etc) indefinitely, how long might it take for my credit as far as 'score' to be back up to qualifying say for an FHA?