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18 May 2011 | 2 replies
Only thing that is on my credit now is my house note 1450mo truck note 375mo and student loan 100mo. my credit cards have less than 50$ balances on them.
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2 May 2018 | 8 replies
I would be renting to students and that is another reason why I can get this kind of rental income.
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10 June 2016 | 21 replies
Once you provide internet, one of the tenants may be a student and needs to print a paper.
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13 May 2011 | 9 replies
One way or another I won't take my property off the market and risk losing other tenants (like your student tenant) if the tenant doesn't have something significant at risk.
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20 May 2011 | 13 replies
You're in a college town, leasing to students will really get you pumping...If you're not familiar with the P&Z folks and the building regs people, go find out what they require for multis.
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16 May 2011 | 4 replies
I think I met the guys that were starting that business(than merrill students?)
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18 September 2011 | 80 replies
I buy and hold student rentals.
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1 June 2011 | 9 replies
While anyone can work for H&R Block, so to speak, an EA is better qualified and trained in the area of taxation.When you finish your degree you could certainly make application with the IRS as with your background and then education you would probably have a better chance than freshly graduated accounting students.
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25 May 2011 | 43 replies
i'm actually a fan of leverage...if you can lock in long term fixed debt right now, i don't understand paying cash from an investment perspective--put emotions and ideas of your comfort zone away and just look at the math...by paying off a mortgage early, you're effectively earning the interest rate of that mortgage on your cash...so around 6%...if you're a half decent investor, you should be able to better than that, and stay leveraged.....and btw, that was a terrible post...your profile says you're a student..maybe it's bc i don't trust a lot of people, but what's your angle??
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14 June 2011 | 25 replies
Don't feel bad about failing the first time.Some of the best brokers/agents I know failed the first time.When I went and took the test in 2004 the class was multiple choice in GA.I passed that one and then went on to the state test.In class most of the questions are on the state level but then the state test has national questions as well.So I would go to Barnes and Noble and read the AMP(applied measurement professional) book on national questions and it really helped.In my state we have online and in class.In class is usually better as the instructor can explain answers and concepts plus previous students tell what kinds of questions were on their tests as the questions always change.Here is how I take multiple choice tests.Go through the questions one by one and answer the ones I am only 100% sure about.Then go back and start reviewing the other questions.You will now notice that by answering the first questions you knew you have no eliminated some of the choices of other questions.So If I had it between A,and B and B was eliminated from another answer I knew the question to I know A is the answer.Then lastly I would get down to a few instead of A,B,C,D and choosing one and having a 25% chance I have gotten it down to C,D and now have a 50% chance of getting it right.Doing it this way I went through the test 2 to 3 times and only ended up making an educated guess on a few.You don't want to spend too much time on one question as you will get flustered and every answer will start running together.There were people going to the agent state test that had failed 2 to 3 times already on the state test.I passed the first time since it was multiple choice.In my state when I took the brokers test years later it was MUCH harder.With my luck the brokers test used to be just multiple choice like the state with a few questions added.The year I took it they had just changed it completely.Now it was a complex modeling test.You had read long paragraphs of situations and you had 4 choices.There was not an correct and incorrect choice.Instead there were weighted choices.So you would have ones answer being the worst is -2 to the best +2 and in some questions you problem would have 4 parts to it each with 4 choices before moving to the next.Had really crazy crap in there you would never encounter.I prayed the whole time I passed that one.They didn't give you a score just a pass or fail and I passed.That was one of the hardest test I had taken as it was all judgement based on being the head broker.