Ben Leybovich
The most Violent Confrontation
4 January 2015 | 94 replies
I always enjoy trading landlording war stories cemented by the mutual line "this is a ****** business we are in."
Ayana P.
Hey from Long Beach, CA
2 January 2015 | 2 replies
If you see a post you enjoy check out the persons signature.
Sylvia B.
Pet Peeve
1 April 2016 | 34 replies
Thought you might enjoy this thread title..http://www.biggerpockets.com/forums/67/topics/165517-looking-for-suggestions-to-sale-newly-rehabbed-properties-quickly
Alexis Huerta
new; around bethesda md
6 January 2015 | 3 replies
If you see a post you enjoy check out the persons signature.
Bo Thompson
New RE Investor in Lindon, UT
9 January 2015 | 6 replies
I've enjoyed learning from everyone's posts on this forum and decided I'd better make myself official.
Eric Giovannucci
Using VA's for lead generation
7 June 2019 | 7 replies
I enjoy the “hands-off” way this works.
Elizabeth Colegrove
1.3 million, 8 properties later we ACHIEVED success!!!
1 May 2016 | 28 replies
Instead of fretting about finding a job, I am looking forward to growing my empire, and spending more time on here, reluctantlandlord and enjoying our next duty station.
Logan Jones
Does anyone know anything about renatus program
4 July 2016 | 19 replies
People that enjoy this community and thrive in marketing education seem to do well in the Renatus program.
Hubert Washington
Has The Apartment Market Reached The Peak of It's Cycle?
20 March 2017 | 27 replies
A few members here are from DFW, so to use it as an example the Uptown and Knox-Henderson is bursting at the seams with activity and can probably fit no more cranes as a result the development or re-development (typically a phase that typically precedes new development in urban areas) is getting pushed north all the way and even past the Loop (Loop 12) where the apartments that used to go $15-25k a door just three years ago are now approaching $50-60's as-is and $100s once updated.This movement has displaced a lot of local DFW investors who are starting to look at Wichita Falls or parts of Oklahoma, which is actually undergoing a contraction and Louisiana, where the 7 or 8% cap rates are still feasible and cost per door is much closer to the historic levels that Dallas enjoyed for years, however, by going for the cash flow they have to forgo potentially explosive growth (which can go both ways).