
6 January 2020 | 91 replies
The tiny house movement seems to be catching on.

15 November 2020 | 14 replies
COVID accelerated the work from home movement.

28 February 2017 | 20 replies
If you have the right subfloor for tile, or are willing to replace what you have with what you need (plywood, hardibacker, additional labor), tile is the best product.Search youtube and BP for installation tips, but the basics are:-level, 3/4" subfloor - no movement (sometimes requires shimming or replacing joists)-layer of hardibacker or cement board -plan and play with your start/end points and layout with tiles before mixing any thinset/adhesive-aim to avoid "skinny cuts". try to have as many whole tiles and half tiles as possible-for floors: use a thinset (mortar based) product to adhere tiles to floor-for walls: use the thinset OR pre-mixed glue adhesive to adhere tiles to wall-after proper dry time, mix grout and apply to all seams.

24 December 2016 | 19 replies
@Rob Moran mid west is a stable market were prices rise very slowly if at all.and with so many homes been turned into rentals values simply fall in line with what an investor will pay for a cash flow.. with the 1% rule being pretty universal.. so 800 rent 80k prop that type of thingwaiting for a correction would only help you if you have the ability to buy pre rehab rehab your self and then find management... the prices that HAVE moved are the wholesale prices in those markets but not a lot values are still low so if you have a 20% upward movement in wholesale prices like we have seen the wholesaler house for 30k move up to 36k.. and if it moves down 20% same thing.Its all about RENT in those markets.. and 700 to 1000 has been the same for the last 20 years basically

25 July 2020 | 15 replies
Now you have all the DMM marketing companies pushing the movement that lists are awesome and DMM is awesome and it seems they themselves aren't friggin capable to deduct and analyse using simply logic for Pete's sake.The result?

28 July 2020 | 7 replies
As a fellow Long Island'er I def understand your reasoning behind out of state investing - however there is tremendous movements in the Long Island markets due to alot of different factors.

10 November 2020 | 25 replies
I was looking around the north side, but not having any luck places that would cash flow (without being very creative).I recently redid a data analysis looking at zip code level trends - basically areas that are likely to have 1% opportunities and also regions that are showing positive movement for population and rent growth.Here's a map (the color is population growth according to census data - yellow up to 9% and green above 9%).