Cuong Huynh
Newbie Introduction from Frederick Maryland!
17 July 2013 | 15 replies
You're not too far from me - I live in DE.
Daniel Torres
Investing in syndication vs owning single family homes
22 September 2019 | 42 replies
"syndicated" investments that would qualify for 1031 are Delaware Statutory Trusts, Tenants in Common Projects, a very few upreit possibilities, or opportunities where the syndication is nimble enough to 1031 the entire project (so you ride along with the entity's 1031).Doesn't mean that syndicated investments aren't a good option for you.
Elisha Keller
Recomend books/articles/webinars/podcasts
4 October 2013 | 10 replies
Hello @Elisha Keller ,Google these authors: Jack Miller, Bill Nickerson, Jay De Cima, John Schaub, and Bill Bronchick.
Scott E.
I think I've been wrong about subject-to deals.
23 October 2023 | 22 replies
And given the climate this is no soup de Jour and all we are going to hear about and we are going to see post after post about Hey I have no money or credit but I want to buy houses sub too..
Matt Fish
Blown Away by the Cost to Subdivide $$$$$
5 November 2023 | 37 replies
I am curious to know if other places across the country are more/less than here in the Delaware / Philly area of the east coast.
Andrew Chime
Are STR Recession proof
6 February 2023 | 41 replies
Quote from @Paul De Luca: @Andrew ChimeBased on recent data about STRs from companies such as AirDNA, many people are bearish or cautious about investing in STRs partly due to the large increase in supply of new listings.
Chris Reeves
Why should mobile home parks trade at higher caps than multifamily?
23 July 2015 | 37 replies
You see Rina, Rolfe spent three days painting a picture of:1 - The perfect business (high gross margins, high barriers to future competition (quasi local monopolies), increasing demand).2 - Claimed that this perfect business counterintuitively sells for a big discount to its true value - and painted a plausible dual reason for it:a - the stigma premium - mobile homes are yucky and embarassing, therefore demand for them is lower than would be expectedb - the current set of owners of this asset class (mom and pop) are so stupid and lazy that they have priced the rents of the asset class lower than they should be compared to apartments.3 - He then masterfully executed the classic sales technique of creating a sense of urgency - saying that the current fragmentation and irrational discount-to-value of this asset class (mobile home parks) will soon expire because "mom and pop" are dying off, and will be selling out to professional investors with huge pools of capital.4 - He claimed that when this de-fragmentation occurs (the next 10 years) the discount-to-value will disappear and that the real value of the rents of mobile homes will finally be extracted through inevitable professional management.Item number 4, Rolfe must know, makes any experienced investor salivate - it's like cat nip.