
10 March 2019 | 59 replies
this subject has been talked about a bunch on BP.. why do people sell cash flow assets.the argument that they must be selling the dogs and keeping the good ones is not reality.I have been funding turn key companies for going on 20 years now.. they sell almost all their properties.they are in the business of buy rehab and sell.. they are not in the landlord business per se.. now some will have some properties but its not their goal to own hundreds of homes.. its hard to finance all of those first off.just like me who builds new homes why don't I keep them all.. well because I want to sell them that's my inventory to sell just like anyone else and I make more on one sale of a new home than I would with 20 years of cash flow at 200 a month.. so its what I choose to do..

16 March 2019 | 16 replies
Don't know that there's a correct answer per se.....
2 May 2024 | 17 replies
What a shame it has come to this and what a shame that you would post something like this.My words aren't necessary and everything for all to see is in the images.May God Bless you mate 🙏 Goddam this dude is dramatic in his emails Pains me mate,And this is just one tenth...The relationship evolved more than just a "transaction" per se and one day out of the blue, we get the above review.I was going to stay a sleeping bear but since I was poked on another thread, might as well wake up and get me some honey lol

21 April 2024 | 240 replies
Which is good for a property I own without ever seing it...

1 April 2019 | 15 replies
So first of all what is considered SE DC is basically 25% of the entire city including even parts of Capitol Hill so neighborhoods in SE range from some of the worst areas in the entire country (Washington Highlands for example) to areas i would have zero issues walking around at 2 AM (Hillcrest for example) as far as Anacostia specifically its still very block to block and some of the housing stock is really beautiful Victorians which are on the high end of the market but may still have the most upside where as there are some less attractive houses that will still go up in value but probably at a slower clip.

14 February 2020 | 77 replies
But Portland is not really a landlord per se market as it relates to BP because of price / rent ratios.. folks that buy here love it.. live here would no sooner go to Cleveland to be a landlord than go to the moon.. its a funny place in that regard..it certainly keeps portlandia Weird as the saying goes.

10 June 2024 | 28 replies
Yes, the SW is dry and we will see who hurricane season brings for the SE.

24 April 2018 | 24 replies
Now, for a beginner, my classic approach is to house hack because you get some hands-on experience with most facets of real estate investing without fully jumping in per se.

12 February 2019 | 10 replies
SE, NE NW?.

2 July 2017 | 28 replies
We have a listing in Manhattan Beach right now where the Annual Taxes are showing up as monthly on SE.