23 April 2025 | 4 replies
I have created two posts in the past day or so and they both are providing mixed information. the problem being in my market (Brooklyn ny) the lowest house is 800k and rent is generally 2000-3500 (medium) the second problem is I am a college graduate with a part time job and low income so getting a 800k mortgage is almost a no. so if I look at out of state the pricing is generally what I have saved up and I can just buy it with a low down payment but it's not near by and I can't manage it or do I stay local able to manager it but pretty much not able to do anything until I have some cash available?
25 April 2025 | 22 replies
If what you buy next gives you either: more cash flow or more equity or both, then it’s a no brainer (even with higher interest rates).
26 April 2025 | 52 replies
No one wants to hear that, though - they want hear about how youre going to get them a no-money-down househack loan on their "primary" so they can retire next month off of the "cashflow".ya shopping for bips.. without understanding how important a good banker/broker is
19 April 2025 | 2 replies
It will seem like it is a no-lose proposition I promise you!
19 April 2025 | 10 replies
Building properties on swamp land is a no gooder.
22 April 2025 | 49 replies
However, then you could just pull a bunch of floorplans/wiring diagrams and photos of the home from an MLS and use those as features to predict price.I’m also not 100% sure that model would be better than a “no internals” model, especially if the no internals one uses neighborhood points of interest and other geospatial stuff.also, I just heard the latest episode of your podcast and it had some helpful flipping advice!
17 April 2025 | 2 replies
If the GP didn’t need the funds and was going to invest them anyway, wouldn’t this be a no-brainer?
16 April 2025 | 2 replies
Traditional financing is a no-go.
16 April 2025 | 12 replies
We had a no heat call that our tech would have handled in 1 maybe 2 days tops.
14 April 2025 | 7 replies
CBIZ should be a no brainer, but customer reviews are sparse at best even though they've been around far longer than Proper, which worries me a bit.