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Results (10,000+)
Justin Sullivan Newbie from Tempe, AZ
31 July 2014 | 21 replies
You'll get out of it what you put into it so become active and help us grow the community and wealth of knowledge that's already here.
Fawzeih Daher How will Detroit Midtown Transformation impact the surrounding RE Market?
12 August 2014 | 8 replies
As the downtown population grows there will be a lot of sub groups of wealth growth like we see in NY.  
Frank Gigliotti What am I doing wrong?
19 May 2015 | 16 replies
seriously guys, look into cheaper ways to buy. using the funds from a re-fi from one house to buy more than one new house is growth. growth is what you want to do. make your money work as hard for you as you can. finding houses that are dirt cheap is the answer. there are several ways to buy real estate that are nonconventional. several years ago, the federal government restricted the number of foreclosures a bank can put back onto the market. consequently, that forced the banks to hold onto the less than desireable foreclosures and market only the best that they have. that added to the carrying costs of the remaining houses that they could not market. finally, they had to make a decision; hold onto those houses until they could market them, or dump them in light of loosing the carrying costs. most banks chose the latter. so, now, you have thousands of houses that the banks just dumped back to the previous owners by filing a release of lein with the counties that they are in. legally, you have a house that the bank no longer has a claim on, and the previous owners either do not know they own it again or they don't want it. there is potential for a hell of a deal.i bought one for $2000 on a tuesday and sold it for $10,000 on thursday. i also bought one for $2250 and picked up the back taxes for $4000. that one i am holding onto to rehab and will be worth $50k when i am done. tax sales are a great place to pick up extraordinary deals too. your problem is NOT on your cash end, its on your buying end
Dilip Gandhi Guidance!
26 February 2015 | 9 replies
Few thoughts to start with am looking with few flips to make some bucks to purchase equity growth properties with +ve cashflow in it.Look for seller finance properties, which can have some +ve cashflow. 
Michael S. New Member from Upstate NY
16 March 2015 | 8 replies
I am a 34 year old Air Force veteran (2W0) and am currently residing in upstate NY near FT Drum.My REI goals are: short-term -> Learn as much as possible and close on first deal by the end of the year mid-term -> $10k/mo positive cash flow within 10 years long-term -> Maintain a sustainable growth investment portfolioMy preferred strategy is SFR/MFR Buy and Hold.I look forward to learning more from each of you as time goes on and hopefully will be able to glean enough to start successfully investing in the near future.
Jesse Waters Too Old or Too Good to be true. 100 year old duplex
13 March 2015 | 8 replies
I heard that the old original shingle roofs with old growth wood lasted 40 years.
Jennifer Whalen How to best finance my first multifamily home Boston
12 April 2015 | 7 replies
Equity gives you complete control, but growth and liquidity risks.  
Scott Trench Should Entrepreneurs Consider Getting an MBA?
10 April 2015 | 19 replies
Perhaps the MBA will help grow the business quicker once you have it.
Angela Palmer Funds to get started
20 August 2015 | 13 replies
Not growth, not last years contribution.
Nathan Lenahan What did you sacrifice?
4 June 2015 | 17 replies
With growth comes management responsibility which I could do without.