
12 December 2021 | 17 replies
@Marvin Michel - when you visit Toledo we’d love to show you our office, property management operation, and cruise some of the wiser neighborhoods to invest in!

7 October 2021 | 7 replies
Unless you can somehow get control of the HOA I would pass.

14 January 2022 | 3 replies
You can receive rent, pay the bills (only if your IRA has "checkbook control") and hire contractors to do everything else.

23 January 2010 | 147 replies
I need to be protected from a government that wants to control my life, my health care, my education, etc...

24 June 2010 | 12 replies
In REI, macro-socio-economic factors may be interesting but, ultimately, they're beyond the control of the individual investor and largely unpredictable.

30 June 2010 | 11 replies
It was also hard to control.

27 August 2010 | 8 replies
Strong or weak markets overall may affect interest rates but I don't control them.

15 September 2011 | 7 replies
Personally I wouldn't do it.I want to control the area I am investing in to preserve values as much as possible.I have seen many landlords and the range of how each works is mind boggling.Some are slum lords and know it,some do an okay job but think they are the best thing since sliced bread,and then a few actually keep up their properties really well.I would buy the whole building or no dice.The 2 unit you are looking to buy you could contact the landlord next door and see if they want to sell.

23 September 2018 | 10 replies
Some pros: no large cash down payment; no bank/lender qualifying in order to control the property; ability to walk away from the deal at the end of the lease if things are not working out, and minimal risk.

3 March 2012 | 4 replies
If you can't control your DOM, your reserves may dry up pretty quick depending on how high you're aiming (most of what I have read has ARV's in the 150k type range, not sure where you're aiming).