12 November 2025 | 124 replies
Anyone who thinks syndicated ventures are sure-fire wins 100% of time, there just telegraphing there ignorance.
26 October 2025 | 9 replies
I hope to learn that you've created great success with your ventures and I look forward to hearing your success story in the future.
22 October 2025 | 16 replies
Do you have an idea of things you will do differently to make the new venture run smoothly?
23 October 2025 | 1 reply
Hey everyone,I’m seriously considering entering my first Joint Venture or private lending partnership on a single-family flip, and I’d love to hear from those who’ve done this before.I’m trying to understand how investors and operators protect themselves in worst-case scenarios:What happens if you or your partner gets sued personally in a JV scenario?
21 October 2025 | 1 reply
Hey All, just a new investor here venturing on buying second property as an investment in Lehigh valley county in Eastern PA.
4 December 2025 | 82 replies
I ventured into spec home building years ago and ultimatley decided I did not like the risk/reward profile, plus if you are the builder, its a HUGE amount of work.
5 November 2025 | 188 replies
You can poke fun at some of Brandon’s other business ventures but he has poured a ton of his own money into supporting some of our properties where other syndicators would have gone the capital call route long before now.
5 November 2025 | 25 replies
She gives you the deed, you give her a mortgage, the title company should be able to put all of that together no problem.Yet another way to do it is to Joint Venture with the seller where you split the profit above a certain amount.There should be several options for borrowing the money for the rehab.
26 October 2025 | 15 replies
Between 20–25% down, closing costs, and initial rehab reserves, it’s common for total cash outlay to reach the $60K+ range even on a smaller property.That said, there are creative financing options that can help you conserve capital and scale faster:Private or hard money lending for acquisition and rehab — allowing you to refinance into long-term DSCR financing once stabilized.Partnerships or joint ventures where you bring the deal and management, and a capital partner contributes funds.Seller financing or “subject-to” structures — especially with motivated sellers sitting on free-and-clear properties.Portfolio/Blanket loans that can free up equity from other assets to fund your next purchase.It really comes down to your long-term strategy: if your goal is steady cash flow and long-term holds, tying up capital in a solid asset can make sense.
25 November 2025 | 260 replies
Check out there balance sheet, it's not a profitable venture as of recent.