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4 April 2017 | 94 replies
As an aside in an ever increasing scam prevalent culture, several tenants that I've placed were more comfortable knowing that they were working with a licensed professional using standard forms.
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20 February 2017 | 1 reply
Does anyone have any advise on how to find International (preferably Chinese) investors?
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5 March 2021 | 37 replies
Becoming a real estate is a great way to learn the culture of that side of real estate - what you won't learn at Realtor School is how to invest - creative financing and making money.What you will learn is how to keep from getting sued - how to use their forms and making full disclosures.Learn the business from their prospective - but keep in mind (before you become brained washed) that your real goal is to become a successful investor.So - follow their rules - but start to study real estate investing - get a mentor - go to auctions, tax sales - foreclosures - make offers on expired listings.So to make your broker happy -- list a few properties and sell some also.Apply for a credit line, check protection and set up some joint ventures with friends and relatives.You WON'T make that much as an agent - but you'll become wealthy if you learn how to CONTROL and ROLL real estate - make sure you learn advanced creative real estate formulas and use those principals often.Good luck with your release from incarceration of employment.
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17 November 2018 | 38 replies
I'd love to see a wider variety of guests on the show (i.e. people from a minority culture, people who are investing as a parent/child team, people who are renting specifically to refugees, people investing in Detroit and loving it).
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29 January 2017 | 29 replies
It also has a TON of culture and great food because of the population, and lots of community and government support to improve the area.
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10 February 2017 | 5 replies
Having met my future wife and then moving to the Bronx, from Wilton CT, it was a bit of culture shock for me at first, but that was 20 years ago.
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4 February 2017 | 17 replies
I've seen several other investors try to explain this and it still looks like Chinese to me (and I don't speak Chinese).
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7 February 2017 | 57 replies
Like the proverbial Chinese water torture, the drip, drip, drip of profit flowing out of the deal can be maddening.Personally, there has to be a significant premium AND a definable & short period of due diligence before I even consider a FHA financing deal.
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23 August 2019 | 117 replies
I'm in a somewhat similar situation; not that my husband's not interested, he thinks he can't do any of the research/buying since he's not a native English speaker nor familiar with this aspect of the culture (never mind that my whole post-college life has been spent outside the USA, so I'm quite clueless about many things).
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13 March 2017 | 9 replies
I know at one time "Chinese" was a huge issue - very prone to mold and some other issues.