3 May 2021 | 23 replies
You're taking cash out of your bank (liquid), and putting it into the floors of a house (solid).

15 May 2021 | 13 replies
You need to meet net worth and liquidity requirements, so 20 or 25% down alone isn't going to be enough.

14 June 2021 | 1 reply
In my opinion, investors that have tenants that are not paying rent has led to more investors wanting to liquidate these properties quickly so they don't have to deal with tenants that are not paying rents.

5 May 2021 | 1 reply
I am considering taking out an additional loan on one of my properties for multiple reasons including increasing my liquidity as well as capital improvements to the property.

4 May 2021 | 2 replies
So for my goals, priorities, and comfort levels, I tend to park capital in liquid index funds just to keep it deployed.

16 March 2022 | 16 replies
Because yes the 125 is liquid in a savings account

24 March 2022 | 1 reply
Cash is liquid reserves and can be used for more aggressive earnest money or all cash purchase.

22 March 2022 | 2 replies
He will be liquidating all of his properties and had questions about 1031 exchange vs investing into our latest syndication offering.

16 March 2022 | 2 replies
In 1938, the incomes declined again while the housing prices remained mostly flat until a drop in 1941 due to massive liquidity shortage.

16 March 2022 | 3 replies
These templates should cover everything you need to supply to get a term sheet:Short Term Financing Quote:Company Name (LLC/Corp):Individual Name:Property Address:Purchase Price (if applicable):Current Value:Payoff Amount (if a refinance):Rehab Budget (if applicable):After Repaired Value (if applicable):Estimated Liquid Cash Reserves:Estimated Credit Score:Fix & Flip Projects Completed (Last 24 Months):Long Term Financing Quote:Company Name (LLC/Corp):Individual Name:Property Address:Transaction Type: Purchase or RefinanceOwned Less than 4 months?