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7 July 2016 | 13 replies
You'll actually lose a LOT more with it sitting 2 months than if you just listed it at the lower price in the first place.Hope you found this helpful -- being a new landlord is tough ;)
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7 April 2016 | 13 replies
My name is Wendy I've been very interested in real estate for a very long time but I was always too scared to do anything I come form a long line of "oh no what if it doesn't work and you lose your money" family.
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14 February 2016 | 7 replies
As a landlord, I would prefer not to lose an A+ tenant due to blind rent raises if I can legally implement such a strategy.
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11 July 2016 | 1 reply
This would be my first wholesale deal and I really don't want to lose this deal.
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27 September 2016 | 11 replies
But really, one loses much more than the $1200 to $1800 when that tenant being upset about rents being maxed out says adios, dude.
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28 February 2016 | 37 replies
An ignorant investment that makes money is still an ignorant investment and over the long term ignorant investors lose.
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17 February 2016 | 8 replies
Richard: Corelogic provides host of services for mortgage servicers, on of which is monitoring of real estate taxes so that the mortgagee doesn't lose its interest by virtue of a tax sale.
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15 February 2016 | 18 replies
@James DeRoest to your point I have two good friends in Oregon that went this route against my pleading with them not to .. as I have extensive experience in those markets and with the asset class.. and they did not.one sold a fantastic 60 unit at a 5 cap which is what multi trades for here in PDX these are B's and bought C class 300 units in Oaklahoma city.. not 8 months later she called me in a panic and wanted to have coffee.. they were ready to lose the building...
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14 February 2016 | 6 replies
In an absolute worst-case scenario, which would I rather lose?
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20 February 2016 | 4 replies
On the flip side, cashflow is not nearly as good as some other areas that may or may not be more exposed to the boom/bust cycle.So if you do find a good deal, it will probably be a good deal forever, and it will probably not lose significant value in economic downturns, but the price you pay for that stability is lower cashflow.