Kris Bano
I Need Some Advice / Thoughts
2 January 2024 | 21 replies
What you're trying to accomplish is definitely doable.
Alicia Marks
QOTW: Do you have a BHAG (Big, Hairy, Audacious Goal)?
3 November 2022 | 68 replies
It's a lot, but doable.
Katie Ferguson
First time investor - give me your best advice!
9 January 2020 | 22 replies
Ok @Katie Ferguson, that sounds like a doable goal (I am assuming).
Michael Zuber
Can a 25 Year old be Financially Free by 35?
25 December 2018 | 72 replies
I think it’s doable but it takes ample savings and years (8-12 minimum) of diligent savings and investing to make it happen.
Account Closed
Why Brethren of the Buy & Beholders Church want to burn a heretic
5 July 2017 | 47 replies
Choose your own numbers so you will not argue what is do-able.
Charles Richardson
How can I buy a 96 unit apartment complex
19 July 2018 | 135 replies
This will all be very challenging, but is doable.
Naftali Tolibas
How many hours of sleep do you get?
5 October 2018 | 83 replies
I noticed I tend to sleep in more when the motivation to wake up is less than the urge to snuggle and snooze.
Ryan Zaninovich
Is there any decent market left to still get a decent return?
24 March 2018 | 38 replies
His only benefit was from equity paydown(paying the mortgage) his advice was count on 50%, obviously heavily influenced by tenant turnover.On current strategy, the world is yield starved with low rates of return on everything, so many are accepting formally unthinkable returns as "better than money in the bank"I would be firmly in the "time to re-strategize" camp, and think the artificially low interest rates will cause a lot of malinvestment as financial engineering usually does.7.5% should be doable with multifamily or syndicationAlthough there seems to be no end to those who will overpay, perhaps not understanding actual costs or investing for other reasons(besides cashflow) on the commercial side.
Luke Terry
My Issue w/ Grant Cardone's statement to never buy a house
31 October 2017 | 18 replies
Which is the same.Or .... if you took that 70k and invested it in a 8% fund (very doable at least with today's growth)... after 5 years, you'd have earned around 32k in interest and be up to 102k.