
16 November 2016 | 1 reply
My best advice on deals is to look at listings daily on Zillow, Trulia, or Realtor.com That way you'll know prices and what's too much and what's a good deal when something comes up.

16 November 2016 | 0 replies
Hello,I am "newer" to BiggerPockets and this is now a website I frequent daily.

18 November 2016 | 3 replies
I go go go when it comes to education, I have daily, weekly, quarterly, and yearly goals that I try to crush.

18 November 2016 | 14 replies
I wouldn't lock in right now for the next 60 days, but thereafter, look closely at the cost to lock and the market.When interest rates go up, bond prices go down, mortgage rate then go up, home prices go down since people buy what they can afford, if they pay more interest they get less house.A .25% increase isn't alarming, to me, rates can change daily, it's the trend you need to watch and over short periods of time, if rate go up another .25 in days or weeks, then you may need to lock, depends on how well you sleep and the type of loan applied for, like an ARM or a long term fixed rate.

26 April 2018 | 9 replies
I follow him daily on instagram if he’s renting things, he still renting them, which means he has the money to rent a mansion, and Lamborghini for last 4-5 years.

29 November 2016 | 73 replies
I once invested $20K in an options trading course only to find out 6 months later than the emotional ups and downs and daily watching positions was too much for me.

21 November 2016 | 8 replies
Rates have definitely ticked up since election, .625% seems like a bit on high side for increases, I've seen .25% or .375% increases in daily rates available.

29 November 2016 | 6 replies
Chase updates rates daily whereas some other lenders update their pricing weekly or monthly.

20 November 2016 | 4 replies
Just wanted to post something, anything that would enable me to return to this site on a daily basis.

22 November 2016 | 30 replies
But when you realize how many accidents happen on my route daily and the typical stop and go, it's roughly 45-50 minutes to work in the morning, and about 75 minutes on the way home.