Daniel O'Grady
Investment Deal E-Mails
14 May 2020 | 5 replies
They want to sell it so can really inflate the ARV however they want.
Cole Holloway
Real Estate vs. Stock Investing: How Do I Allocate My Capital?
21 May 2020 | 11 replies
When the fed wants to increase inflation, they will lower rates which in return raises the dividend yield of the bond, but lowers the sell price of the bond.
Michael A.
BRRRR vs Flipping
1 February 2023 | 6 replies
My $0.05 (two cents adjusted for inflation).
DJ Roshan
NNN long term risk evaluation, Initial lease w/renewals
30 January 2023 | 22 replies
The goal with STNL is too keep up with inflation closely while being passive and having national credit.
Nick Rutkowski
New lending standards, what’s your prediction?
21 April 2020 | 62 replies
@Jay Hinrichs Yes it’s getting harder to get financing, and people are also speculating on a drop in overall RE prices (highly dependent on location, product, etc. of course.)But what is your take on mid to long term inflation?
Ayyub Omer
Turnkeys don't seem too profitable?
6 May 2020 | 25 replies
The point of hedging against inflation is also a good one.
Kelly Mainor
Home appreciation time frame
4 August 2021 | 1 reply
As every warning in every stock investment prospectus says past performance doesn’t guarantee future performance… Barring a pandemic, a stock market crash, a world war, massive inflation or deflation it would still be a guess.
Taylor Jones
Do people like losing money in the Smoky Mountains?
2 January 2023 | 56 replies
Also I would think ADR improves over time through inflation alone, so in five years you're probably cash flowing fine.
Katlynn Teague
Is there going to be a 2023 Recession???
20 January 2023 | 5 replies
Unemployment at 3.5%, inflation trending down, fed likely pausing hikes after next meeting, mortgage rates falling, foreclosures essentially non existent, seeing a lot more houses go under contract in just the past few weeks, etc.
Eric L.
Predicting Future Rent
16 July 2009 | 2 replies
Graphs for housing prices vs inflation and historic price increases are readily available for calculating house values, but I rarely see information like this for rent prices.Exactly how do you go about trying to predict rent changes?