Jermaine McIntosh
Buying Outside of the NYC Metro Area
20 June 2016 | 24 replies
Hi Jermaine,60K is nothing to sneeze at!
Glenn Mayo
Please look at this proposal and tell me why it won't work
12 January 2016 | 18 replies
.$20,000 cash down: I figure cash talks, and $20,000 isn't anything to sneeze at.Seller would carry a $67,000 note for 20 years, making my payments to him 279.17/month for 20 years.To make this work, I'd have to:- Secure a hard money loan for 70% ARV, or $77,000.- From that, pay the seller $20,000- Use the remaining $57,000 to rehab the property"Now wait!"
Kevin Blanchard
I'm leaning no - Would you do this deal?
12 July 2019 | 1 reply
That is nothing to sneeze about!
Lloyd Segal
Economic Update (July 6, 2020)
6 July 2020 | 1 reply
That infection comes through: (1) a sneeze (30,000 droplets at 200 MPH), (2) a cough (3,000 droplets at 50 MPH), (3) a breath (50 droplets at low velocity), or (4) a touch (i.e. public restrooms).
Olga Kostrova
Short term rental condos markets
21 July 2020 | 6 replies
Once you get a permit, which it sounds like in your situation you most likely won't be able to get one unless you are in commercial zoning, but if someone sneezes too loud on your property metro is going to take your permit away.
Avery Bernstein
Selling (Roofstock?) vs Continuing to Rent
31 July 2020 | 1 reply
I think $1350 (we take $900/mo) is nothing to sneeze at.
Karen F.
Class C landlords - better build up some cash reserves
26 March 2020 | 49 replies
That was likely from fomites (viral particles on objects) or respiratory droplets, and not from someone who was sneezing or coughing, because you would have remembered that.
Shuai Zeng
Cash out equity, or pay it off for full cash flow?
14 February 2020 | 2 replies
The ~$150k you'll walk away with is nothing to sneeze at.
Christian Lawson
First Investment Property
1 July 2020 | 5 replies
You could very easily have $230 - $240K in that property without even sneezing.