9 December 2025 | 31 replies
The cash flow is simply a bonus.Your plan to hold for 24 months and use a 1031 exchange is a strong strategy.Many seasoned investors stabilize the STR, then exchange into a higher-yielding asset like commercial, multifamily, or value-add deals that offer better long-term performance.Here’s an example:I worked with an investor who bought a $500K mountain STR.
25 November 2025 | 1 reply
Treasury yields slipped again, with the 10-year hovering near 4%, as weak labor signals and dovish Fed remarks fueled bets on a December rate cut.
7 December 2025 | 2 replies
These pay out monthly and I've seen yields of anywhere between 8%-14%.
7 December 2025 | 30 replies
In real estate, ChatGPT "quick, straightforward answers" will get you sued.Someone I buy properties at a discount for, ran into a legal problem that was unusual for him.
30 November 2025 | 3 replies
The first thing I look at is the ROI - yield to maturity.
24 November 2025 | 3 replies
Its interesting to see how the 30 year mortgage rate and the 10 year yield is tightening.
4 December 2025 | 0 replies
Treasury yields moved higher today, with the 10-year note climbing to 4.11%, up three to five basis points across the curve.
5 December 2025 | 2 replies
I could hand it over to a collection agency but I doubt that would yield anything.
3 December 2025 | 0 replies
The S&P 500 is higher, while Treasury yields have fallen, reflecting expectations for a December Fed cut.
1 December 2025 | 1 reply
@Paul McEvoyHey Paul, I see what you mean about the NJ Shore market being super tight on cash flow and rising taxes, it sounds like your properties would sell quickly given the demand and values, a couple options to consider are either selling and taking that equity to invest in markets with better cash flow or using creative strategies like 1031 exchanges to pivot into multi-family or single-family deals in the Midwest where you can get off-market undervalued cash-flowing deals, it could turn that high equity into steady income without the headaches of low yield and rising taxes