Morgan C.
Starting out in Baltimore MD
30 April 2020 | 3 replies
"Would I feel comfortable sending my wife here at night?"
William Robison
My 5 Intuitions Surrounding Investing in 2020
29 April 2020 | 10 replies
In the years since 2008, there has been a very steady growth of comfort surrounding stability and the expectation of economic safety.
Gwendolyn Mahlum
assignment fee paid by escrow at COE /non-disclosure to seller
30 April 2020 | 1 reply
If you're hiding just that simple fact, you aren't comfortable enough with what you're doing, and that's a problem.
Brandon Kalker
Buy and hold Loan first time home buyer
8 May 2020 | 20 replies
I'd like to rent that property out asap as I am already in a comfortable living situation.
Christopher B Shires
(4Plex) Multi-unit Financing Guidance (Please Help)
29 April 2020 | 2 replies
I originally qualified for 680k with my lender two months ago, they are now saying because of the pandemic, they are only comfortable lending me 480K.
Luis Garcia de Leon
Potential wholesale deal
30 April 2020 | 1 reply
I think it's best to be able to provide an offer on the spot, but YOU need to be comfortable and confident with what you offer.By the way, where did you come up with those ARVs?
Jose Rivera
Hard money lender in FL
30 April 2020 | 5 replies
Trying to get some reviews from this company but just found some facebook reviews on their page and not feeling 100% comfortable with that.Any info would help!
Justin Pace
Real Estate Agent License
3 May 2020 | 8 replies
@Justin Pace depends on your comfort level, if you aren't comfortable with the buying process and the area you're investing in an agent is probably best, otherwise getting your license is totally worth it.
Jerry Stevenson
Best Market to get started in?
13 May 2020 | 34 replies
Yes Detroit is one of the very rare cities that can comfortably deliver on the 2% rule if you have the right team walking with you hand in hand.
John Underwood
Should rent be canceled because of the coronavirus?
2 May 2020 | 24 replies
.-- Owners provide clean, safe, comfortable housing situations to people who can not afford to buy their own home.-- Owners maintain the property so those who cannot afford to do it have a roof over their head that does not leak (an un-doable repair expense for "The Working Poor"), and replace furnaces so they don't freeze to death in the winter, and replace hot water heaters so they can wash.The working poor cannot afford to buy furnace, let alone the price of installation.There is not a renter/owner problem in the USA, other than what is being artificially gined up.The system works well for both sides.Just my 2 cents.