Meghan Begue
Is Colorado's Multifamily Market Still a Good Bet for New Investors?
6 October 2024 | 12 replies
After recent significant increases in property taxes, homeowners insurance, utility costs, supply costs, maintenance costs, and construction costs the margins are thinner to a significant degree.
Bruce Woodruff
Old wood (houses) are better (From FB)
1 October 2024 | 2 replies
Electrical wiring is a push, with the sheathing better but the wires cheaper and thinner.
Irene Morgovsky
Charlotte County FL - renting out home, math doesn't add up
3 October 2024 | 6 replies
They're not the ones who sweated blood into the place, so no offense to management companies, but I can't see going above 10% or 15% at most, assuming nothing major happens etc.I will look into those calculators, thanks, good idea.
Jay Hinrichs
September Success story for a JLH Capital Partner.
30 September 2024 | 4 replies
Investors are a little bit like white blood cells in a city - they clean up the properties nobody wants or is able to take on.
Jon Zhou
Ashcroft capital: Additional 20% capital call
9 October 2024 | 312 replies
I have heard on the street from others that syndicate multifamily there is a blood bath coming and in process.
Greg Moore
Anyone moving their investments to Bitcoin?
7 October 2024 | 190 replies
I got real estate in my blood or more like concrete.
Chida Truong
Pace Morby Mentorship
14 October 2024 | 420 replies
I would trust Theranos with my blood before I ever trust a gator boi with my money!
Nir Berko
Renovating a Property for Section 8 Tenancy
23 September 2024 | 10 replies
Make sure your flooring can withstand pee, spilled beer, spilled juice, blood etc...
Chris Bruce
Probate Best Lead Source
25 September 2024 | 96 replies
I gestured, and said come on let me improve your day a little bit and get you some coffee, and maybe something a little sweet to raise your blood sugar to help you will feel better.
Billy Knox
Why use a Real Estate Agent?
20 September 2024 | 73 replies
Acting as a messenger, the agent may be in a better position to negotiate a discount without ruffling the homeowner's feathers.A real estate agent can also play the “bad guy” in a transaction, preventing the bad blood between a buyer and seller that can kill a deal.