
20 October 2023 | 3 replies
I have seen some go 10-001 but the starting digit follows that "code" in Accounting from where I have been and learned.

26 May 2015 | 157 replies
In his presentations he gets into the nitty gritty of economic cycles etc.. so in San Jose with all those engineers they really dig it :)... from my perspective most HML like him have really seen it all...

2 December 2015 | 26 replies
Additionally, what could happen if the currency continues to be devalued at an ever increasing rate, making it hard for our tenants en-masse to pay their rents since the bulk of their worthless cash would be going to food and energy costs.

7 October 2020 | 23 replies
We have a Nest thermostat to monitor the temperature, a Ring floodlight that covers the entrance door and a digital lock that I can change to code for the door.

25 August 2022 | 17 replies
Here are some of the types of properties that we find work the best...Purchase: $80k-$130kRent: $1200-$1500ROI: 10-14%Cash flow: $250-$350/doorAppreciation: Double digit (for past 10 years, will gladly send data)Location: C, B- (suburbs and certain markets)We have over a dozen Fortune 500 companies just in Metro Detroit with huge Healthcare, Auto, mortgage, Amazon fulfillment, and more jobs.The bad reputation comes from OOS investors wanting $20k D market properties.

19 August 2020 | 49 replies
The health concerns, double digit unemployment, and other people concerned with their employment does not create an environment for a high volume of discretionary housing changes.

15 May 2015 | 12 replies
@Lana Chenis focused on exactly the right metric.Given the risk and hassle of owning rentals, I would not be happy with anything less than double digit returns.

23 September 2023 | 17 replies
The storry starts teaching you about a three digit percentage of retourn a monney.

5 November 2021 | 694 replies
This is the end of the dollar reserve currency.

8 May 2016 | 113 replies
Foldvary observed that crashes tended to happen every 18 years in America starting when land first went for sale in 1800, 1818, 1836, 1854, 1869, 1887, 1903, 1924, none in 1942 because of WWII, 1970, 1979 due to Britton Woods currency collapse and then 1990.