Kevin Greene
Beginner from Suffolk, Virginia
23 March 2016 | 9 replies
Remember you don't have to own a property to control it.
George Gammon
"negative rates distort everything" warren buffet. how about RE?
3 March 2016 | 29 replies
Some analyst are suggesting that Warren is too far past his prime and has lost his touch.
Lindsay West
Newbie from Buford, GA area
1 March 2016 | 3 replies
Remember you don't have to own a property to control it.
Account Closed
Investing in Rochester Area
2 March 2016 | 20 replies
Last vacancy I had, I had 0 lost months rent.
David Stone
Rental turned Lease-to-Own
2 March 2016 | 1 reply
Since you have already lost 100% of the income to debt servicing then create a trade off in your calculations.
James Urycki
Beginner in Illinois Gaining Knowledge
6 March 2016 | 11 replies
Remember you don't have to own a property to control it.
Ziaur Zahid
Leveraging or pay full price?
4 March 2016 | 13 replies
That way you get a forced equity bump and cash flow in a market within your immediate control, which is really difficult to do out of state.
Terry Koepp
Using a Self directed Roth IRA
1 March 2016 | 4 replies
The end result is you have total (checkbook) control over your IRA.
Elena Jobson
I bought a "lemon"
2 March 2016 | 37 replies
Tub was cracked due to not being supported. 2) No access panel required by code for the pump, the pump was in the rear of the tub buried under the tub deck. 3) No thermostatic anti-scaled mixing valve required by code for the roman tub filler 4) No dedicated circuit for the pump required by the manufacturer, the electrical for the tub was piggy backed on the vanity lights 5) no GFCI protection on the tub as required by code 6) no grounding of the tub motor as required by code 7) ABS drain glued to PVC drain pipe with ABS glue 8) the tub valve connections uried with no access were IPS threaded stainless steel flexible water lines instead of hard sweated copper connections, (lost count on all the shark bites they used, they must buy them in bulk) 9) all the tile was tiled directly on the plywood of the tub deck, no underlayment to prevent the tile from being popped and the grout cracking from moisture getting to the plywood...the list goes on and on.. oh and the tub filler valve was located on the back side of the tub, not a code violation but certainly not user friendly for somebody to have to climb basically into the tub or over it to turn the water on, but that's minor in the scope of all the code violations and poor workmanship, that's just poor design.
Jarred Sleeth
First Diary- Flip Analysis
24 April 2016 | 7 replies
I lost a house that j assumed would pull 170-180,000.