
26 January 2020 | 1 reply
I want to play this game for the long-term and not looking for short-term returns.My portfolio should benefit from appreciation, depreciation, tax-free cashing-out, leverage using low interest rates (from #1), cashflow to cover the expenses.Syndicate & CF seem to be ruled out since I can't control the asset, cannot leverage it when I want to and there's no collateral on my investment.What is a good way to start?
28 January 2020 | 9 replies
This technique allows the primary owner to retain about 80-85% of their profit while my services ask for around 15-20%.

11 February 2020 | 8 replies
In this case I would not mind putting a large down payment since you are playing the long game, and with risks growing everyday of a sell-off or bubble, you will be able to CYA in the worst scenario.

26 January 2020 | 6 replies
@Nabeel M.Normally, I would agree with @Wesley W. about not getting involved in tenant drama, but this, as he also indicated, is one of this instances where tech can change the game.

30 January 2020 | 4 replies
Learn CREATIVE FINANCING strategies/techniques (esp.

25 January 2020 | 4 replies
What's your why for doing real estate, what's your end game.

31 January 2020 | 20 replies
The name of the game is to MAXIMIZE cashflow!

26 January 2020 | 27 replies
I'm new to real-estate investing and I'm trying to understand the difference between the different forms of investingI want to play this RE game for the long-term and have the portfolio benefit from appreciation, depreciation, tax-free cashing-out, leverage using low interest rates, cashflow to cover the expenses.Here's my understanding of eachDirect RE- Full ownership / control of when to sell- Can leverage & deleverage as you want- Work involved to maintain property; But can hire a property manager to assist- Can provide cashflow to cover expenses + CoC return- Provides hard collateral / security for the money you put in- Tax benefits - depreciation, phantom appreciation, interest deduction Majority Partnership- Form partnership where you are majority owner with 2+ other people (with more capital input) - Can provide benefits of direct RE on controlSyndication- Passive investor / accredited - Less work- Access to commercial RE which you can't get otherwise- No security / collateral for your stake; Can loose everything- No different from investing in a business- Already leveraged returns; You don't control how asset is structured- Depreciation benefit passed through K1; But no benefit of 1031Crowdfunding- Low minimums- Already leveraged returns- Can be equity or debt based; Equity stake has some tax benefits through K1- No security / collateral and everything can disappear without recourseIs this correct?

25 January 2020 | 0 replies
I’m going to be 18 soon so I’ve been preparing myself with knowledge of real estate investing and what it’s gonna be lookin like I want to know from seasoned players in the game where I can start taking steps toward to make something happen soon or near future.

26 January 2020 | 7 replies
If you sell the property and touch the money - game over, you lost.For more help, talk to those intermediaries.