
10 April 2019 | 8 replies
I have a business opportunity that I want to invest.The dilemma I have is whether to directly invest from LLC in which case any profits income coming in have to go into the solo 401k retirement account and I won't be able to use the money for anything else.Unless any money needed will have to be taken out as loans in the future to be used.orThe other choice is to trigger a participant loan from the solo401k, in the beginning, to make the investment so that its invested through another business we own that we can be part of the profit distribution and keep it independent of the retirement plan oversight but it will require to start immediate payments back to solo 401k loan.Any thoughts or advise.Also, loan payments back to solo401k what options are available from a time-frequency standpoint.

30 March 2019 | 0 replies
Does anyone know frequency of trains?

28 February 2019 | 3 replies
But it sounds like you’re talking a little greater frequency.
9 March 2019 | 0 replies
A question for the group...how do you perform facility condition assessments? Do you have someone on staff perform this or do you use a 3rd party? Also, how is the data collected and submitted to you and how frequentl...

12 January 2019 | 1 reply
More like dating because you can get out or just ghost with little consequence and there is no "I do " to begin with.JV's go bad and break up the same way and with the same frequency that any relationship does.

15 January 2019 | 45 replies
I only bought 1 property that year and I screwed up not buying 10.Recommended listening: BP Podcast 311 w/J Scott & MadFientist Podcast w/Michael KitcesKitces mostly talks the 4% rule (which is pretty good info) but briefly touches on market cycles and historical frequency of downturns/recessions.

24 January 2019 | 9 replies
Currently I have $30K working capital and I am working about a (3) county spread in which rentable SFR are easily obtainable on a decent frequency for between $20-40K.

26 January 2019 | 34 replies
This was also part of why they chose to leave western Pennsylvania and go places where the job markets were better in their fields, leaving the parents behind in the family home.Sooner or later, the house ends up empty and in the hands of the far-off kids, who with depressing frequency get the bright idea to run it as a rental.

4 November 2018 | 2 replies
It does indicate the frequency of payouts.