1 June 2025 | 11 replies
What I all the back end of real estate IE title insurance functions are so foreign to 99% of investors they have no clue on how any of this works if there is a water landing. jsut because you have title insurance does not always dictate a fast pay out or a payout at all..
4 June 2025 | 38 replies
Explain how the MN Twin Cities, 16th largest market in the country, is showing completely opposite data from what your saying.
31 May 2025 | 41 replies
And because our 3 cities function as one large area I think we definitely deserve some attention!
30 May 2025 | 0 replies
Tesla occupies more than 11 million SF in the Austin metro, one of the largest manufacturers here and they just signed a lease for another 300,000-SF industrial space at the Austin Hills Commerce Center.It's unclear what Tesla plans to do at the site that's about as large as three H-E-B grocery stores, but it appears to be moving quickly.
30 May 2025 | 1 reply
The property needed major upgrades—both cosmetic and functional.
30 May 2025 | 6 replies
The largest investors I know build relationships with brokers/agents and sometimes offer MORE commission to incentivize them to bring them deals first.
29 May 2025 | 1 reply
Consider transforming available spaces to maximize functionality and aesthetics.
29 May 2025 | 3 replies
Pulled these from Zillow’s rental feed for May 2025 and cleaned them up so we can see which markets are heating up or cooling off.Quick takeawaysMost expensive rents: Boston & Miami hit ~$3,000; NYC right behind at $2,885.Fastest to lease: Cheyenne (24 DOM), Salt Lake City (28), Providence & Milwaukee (34).Slowest: Hawaii statewide (97 DOM), Dallas (77), Atlanta (71), San Francisco (70).Biggest MoM improvement: Raleigh -44 % DOM, Boston -38 %, Cheyenne -27 %.Largest inventory jumps: Los Angeles (+4,535 listings MoM), Chicago (+2,344), Houston (+1,696).Snapshot of key metrosCityAvg RentAvg DOMMoM DOM ΔActive RentalsMoM Inventory ΔPhoenix, AZ$1,85047+2 %5,052+1,005Denver, CO$1,92041-5 %3,924+614Miami, FL$3,00050-2 %6,534+1,024Orlando, FL$1,90242-11 %3,208+569Atlanta, GA$1,90071-9 %4,081+637Charlotte, NC$1,93546-22 %3,574+456Raleigh, NC$1,75045-44 %1,976+399Austin, TX$1,89448-16 %5,879+1,066Dallas, TX$1,60077-5 %3,782+1,065Houston, TX$1,69556-2 %8,823+1,696Seattle, WA$1,80047-15 %4,071+819Los Angeles, CA$2,30055+6 %20,265+4,535San Francisco, CA$2,65570-26 %2,783+580Boston, MA$3,00056-38 %17,529-275Cheyenne, WY$1,50024-27 %181-5(I trimmed the full dataset for readability — happy to share the whole CSV if anyone wants to dig deeper.)Questions for you:-Do these days-on-market (DOM) numbers line up with what you’re seeing on the ground?
30 May 2025 | 7 replies
Going "full-time" in real estate investing is mostly a function of the income you need to live vs. the cash flow that your properties generate.I have several clients that have gone full time at various points in their REI journeys - it also depends on whether or not they are generating income from other real estate-related areas (e.g., real estate agent, property management, etc.).
29 May 2025 | 7 replies
They will know market data and trends better, have reliable comps to base their recommendations on, and could even be a great deal flow with current portfolio properties selling.The completely remote, centralized PM function is one of the reasons why you see the homes owned by PE firms sit on the market so long.