
31 July 2015 | 15 replies
The basics are much broader than most adults are exposed to in life at child rearing ages.

20 November 2015 | 24 replies
For example, for tax year 2015 the owner-owner employee can contribute as much as $53,000, and, if are age 50 or older, an additional $6,000 for a total of $59,000.

31 July 2015 | 3 replies
I learned from my parents and grand parents at a young age, about real estate and mail box money.

3 August 2015 | 8 replies
Well in the technology age its nearly impossible to do this now, however before computers and the internet people did this all the time I hear from older investors. pretty crazy but hey you gotta learn to play the game!

1 August 2015 | 12 replies
First, congratulations on having goals and good financial sense at a young age.

26 August 2015 | 25 replies
The so-called 2% rule is a different benchmark of the same metric.It does not provide any useful information about the quality of the asset: how much of that gross revenue is consumed by operating costs; what is the age and condition of the asset (is it functionally obsolete); etc.?

18 April 2016 | 21 replies
My only worry is the age of the home (1820) but it does look well-maintained.

23 August 2015 | 8 replies
I'm 47 years old and I've got a government pension coming, but I've also got a military retirement when I reach age 60.
6 January 2018 | 8 replies
I don’t have time for the town busybodies, other landlords or simply curious.Surprisingly, I have been receiving the pdf’s back via email, having been completely filled out digitally- regardless of age.

27 August 2015 | 13 replies
I've also originated a 30 year fixed rate cash out refinance to a guy in his 90's, he qualified and you can't discriminate on age.