16 February 2024 | 7 replies
Ideally, you're someone who appreciates the value of real estate as an investment vehicle and is looking for hands-on expertise to maximize the return on your investment.Our Goal:Together, we will target properties with high upside potential, focusing on strategic acquisitions that can be quickly turned around for profit.
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15 February 2024 | 2 replies
@Vidit Maini, I came across a similar post the other day to which I'll respond precisely: "It depends on the investment strategy you're interested in implementing and predominant market of choice.
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17 February 2024 | 1 reply
LegalZoom is $299 and RocketLawyer is free (already subscribed).Based on the set-up questions LegalZoom seems more succinct/precise for a trust with a single asset.
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17 February 2024 | 6 replies
I stumbled upon the SDIRA while researching different financial vehicles and now I’m curious.
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17 February 2024 | 11 replies
If you had the opportunity to buy a building for $850,000 at 50% down versus putting the same amount of money into the stock market and just letting it ride (assume VTSAX as the vehicle) which would you choose?
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18 February 2024 | 54 replies
If I put 50% down on an investment it may cashflow but that's basically appreciation play because I'd have so much $ left in the deal & can only do that so many times before I run out of Cash.Yield in any investment vehicle, whether real estate, dividends, bonds, is a reflection of the risk in the asset.
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7 September 2016 | 21 replies
I like it is an alternative investment vehicle, and my goal is to have two or three sources of passive cash flow over time.
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6 September 2016 | 7 replies
I have been reading and reading to narrow down what investment vehicles to choose.
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11 September 2016 | 3 replies
A lot of condos here in Las Vegas run into trouble with financing because the owner occupancy for the community is < 50%, but generally speaking the bank should tell you precisely why.If you don't want to put any cash down, you can research creative financing techniques here on BP, but the more creative the solution, the less appealing it is (generally speaking) and is a tough sell in a hot market.
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9 September 2016 | 1 reply
Generally an s-corp is the absolute worst vehicle for real estate investing.