12 March 2026 | 3 replies
Hey Everyone,With real estate equity fundraising slowing but private credit strategies booming (debt funds now grabbing bigger shares of originations per MSCI), I'm seeing performing notes emerge as a standout opportunity for 2026.Key trends I'm watching that could impact your note strategy:Investor loan defaults rising (especially fix-and-flip and multifamily debt maturities), creating more inventory for buyers like us who focus on seasoned, clean-paying 1st lien residential notes.Yields holding strong at 9-12% for well-equitied performing notes, beating CDs by 2-3x while offering real downside protection.Seller-finance & hard money surging amid tight institutional lending—great for secondary buyers targeting re-performing assets.Liquidity improving via digital platforms, but smaller regional banks offloading non-core notes to meet capital rules (14% YoY sales velocity up).Question for the group: With this shift toward debt over equity, are you buying more performing notes to hold for yield, or repositioning into workouts/NPLs?
13 March 2026 | 4 replies
I know it's sexy to want to go take all the money in the Midwest and move it back to the coasts, but frankly, when you do that, you prevent the Midwest from improving, and you will probably not manage, repair, or enhance the area or homes any better than the locals could.
9 March 2026 | 7 replies
Los Angeles allows certain additional rent increases for approved capital improvements and, in some cases, portions of property tax increases.
13 March 2026 | 15 replies
When outreach is tightly filtered (ownership duration, equity position, occupancy status, recent activity), response quality tends to improve significantly.Volume alone doesn’t fix pipeline gaps — targeting does.Curious if you’re seeing better results from one channel over another right now?
13 March 2026 | 3 replies
They’ve also continued to roll out meaningful platform improvements, and it genuinely feels like customer feedback plays a big role in how they develop new features.
7 March 2026 | 0 replies
Improvements focused on preparing the home for assisted living operations, including operational systems, staffing structure, and creating a high-quality residential care environment.
7 March 2026 | 0 replies
Improvements focused on preparing the home for assisted living operations, including operational systems, staffing structure, and creating a high-quality residential care environment.
7 March 2026 | 4 replies
Only the building does.That matters because in high land-value areas (think: beach towns, prime neighborhoods, “walkable” tourist zones), a big chunk of your purchase price may be land.And if more of your price is land…that means less is depreciable.Which means:smaller depreciation deductionsless impact from cost segregationless bonus depreciation than you expectedI’ve seen investors buy an STR expecting a huge write-off, then realize the land allocation killed most of the tax benefit.Before you buy, make sure you understand how much of the purchase is actually depreciable basis (building + improvements) vs. land.It’s not a deal killer — it’s just something you want to model before you close.For STR owners/investors: do you check the land vs. building allocation before buying, or do you only find out after tax time?
2 March 2026 | 0 replies
I’ve worked extensively with Yardi and operational oversight in multifamily assets.I’m currently providing remote operational support to small and mid-size multifamily owners who need help stabilizing systems, improving delinquency tracking, or managing leasing workflows.Looking forward to connecting with other operators and contributing where I can.
5 March 2026 | 0 replies
Cost Breakdown — Prices out fencing installation for the parcel (even the costs of different materials) — Estimates entry gate and access control costs — Calculates gravel and lot preparation costs — Factors in lighting installation — Includes Phase 1 Environmental Study costs (required before most commercial purchases) — Breaks down total lot improvement costs for an A (fully paved lot), B (gravel lot), or C (dirt lot) class facilityMarket Analysis — Accesses Truck Parking Club to pull current competitor pricing in the area — Maps all nearby truck parking locations for supply/demand comparison — Identifies gaps in coverage where demand exceeds supplyThe Return Breakdown — Plugs in purchase price and debt structure — Models occupancy scenarios (stabilized at 70%, 80%, 90%) — Calculates monthly revenue per stall — Projects overall asset value once the lot is operational — Gives a clear go/no-go score on the dealWhat It Spits OutI give it an address and a purchase price.