28 December 2025 | 0 replies
The currency they didn't invest is literally worth less than it was and my sneaking suspicion is the equivalent capital will fail to yield an equivalent (or superior) asset in the near future.
12 February 2026 | 2064 replies
It is only in very limited contexts, such as assignments of income that;“The power to dispose of income is the equivalent of ownership of it.”
12 January 2026 | 334 replies
I think the bottom line is that this thing only had legs with free money, and once the Fed took that away it was the equivalent of seeing who's swimming naked when the tide goes out.
29 December 2025 | 8 replies
. - If you can invest as little as $250, this is the equivalent of a mutual fund.
26 December 2025 | 7 replies
Is the "equalization office" your equivalent of a planning and zoning commission?
22 December 2025 | 21 replies
I have Spark (business equivalent of Venture) I use primarily for all of my business expenses and I have Venture as my default personal card.
18 December 2025 | 6 replies
Anyone out there know if there is a female equivalent to GoBundance?
11 December 2025 | 1 reply
When Selling a property using Flat Fee MLS services, how should one conduct reverse mls prospecting or equivalent if they don't have MLS access?
14 December 2025 | 33 replies
Not dollars.In terms of dollars break your investments into short, near and long term.Short- how much living expense in cash equivalent forms or monthly cashflow you want to keep around?
8 December 2025 | 0 replies
Weeks like this tend to shake national confidence because every headline feels like a plot twist.And the backdrop is getting heavier:1.2 million Americans have been laid off in 2025 — the equivalent of the entire city of Dallas, Texas losing its job base in less than a year.Consumer confidence is at a 3.5-year low.Holiday spending plans are softening.Headline PCE inflation just rose to 2.8%, the highest since 2023.And despite all of this, the Fed is still cutting rates.It’s a strange economy — tightening in one direction, loosening in another.Yet Louisville, as usual, refuses to behave like the national narrative.Housing prices nationally have only fallen seven times in the last 76 years, and only twice during recessions.