
3 November 2021 | 72 replies
I would be using a hard money lender (80% LTV, 10%, 1yr loan term) to acquire and then begin renovations and raising rents to market. and then do a VA cashout refinance or FHA and move into one of the units. so my risk is if the property will not hold its value or go down and I cant refinance and/or if my new tennat base will be able to afford the new rents ($950).My gut is telling me to stay liquid and see how this plays out but there's this FOMO (fear of missing out) side that thinks this will blow over and I won't have a deal.

22 March 2020 | 2 replies
I am an investor and my goal is to acquire smaller multi family properties (duplex, triplex, or quadplex).

22 March 2020 | 4 replies
Is acquiring a Section 8 Tenant a possibility where Uncle Sam pays the greater portion of the rent and even has tenants available for screening in some markets?

23 March 2020 | 7 replies
I'm not strapped on capital and this would only require around $40,000 to acquire so it wouldn't inhibit my investing on future properties for the year.

24 March 2020 | 3 replies
I just acquired a 6-unit building December 31, 2019 on the south side of Chicago, the plan is to rehab and refinance so I have a one year short term loan.

23 March 2020 | 0 replies
*Looking for input from experienced investors on current strategies I am using to acquire & manage more rentals.Current Holdings of 8 Single Family Properties- 4 of them bought in 2016 with 20% down & 15 year mortgages.- 2 of them bought in 2019 in cash that I rehabbed & planning to refinance on secondary market when 6 month seasoning period hits in 1-2 months.

30 March 2020 | 134 replies
Have limit orders in for acquiring long positions in SPY dollar cost averaging from 2200 level down to 1800.

7 April 2020 | 4 replies
Same here....I'm acquiring properties now as well....several in the last 2 months!
24 March 2020 | 9 replies
Here's a quick guide for getting started in toilet paper arbitrage:Step 1: Find a Distributor or ManufacturerStep 2: Acquire Toilet Paper (in bulk)Step 3: Wait for Prices to SkyrocketStep 4: Sell Toilet PaperStep 5: Repeat...Important Metrics: - Price Per Roll (PPR): (Total dollar amount of rolls sold ➗ Total number of rolls sold)- Price Per Wipe (PPW): (Average Price Per Roll ➗ Total number of wipes in one roll)- Wipe Rate (WR): (Total number of rolls ➗ Total number of days)- Toilet Paper Coverage Ratio (TPCR): (Wipe Rate ➗ Total number of rolls ➗ Total number of days)Right now I'm working on getting these uploaded into the BP calculator for Pro members... so stand by.Good luck!
7 April 2020 | 2 replies
This is where we acquire the most growth!