15 October 2021 | 8 replies
Sort of fell into it when looking into investing in a rental in the US.
3 July 2024 | 6 replies
Yes, they fell, but not an insane amount.
27 September 2018 | 5 replies
I would have a hard time finding bank financing if the private capital fell through as my credit was shot down after I closed on my first mortgage (little credit history) any suggestions?
15 March 2019 | 4 replies
So even if you pick a state with stronger protections like WY or NV, the cause of action arose in the state where the tenant fell, so likely that the court where the accident happened would have jurisdiction.
26 November 2018 | 0 replies
When i found out it was still on the market in September (After another deal fell through) i offered $105,000.
5 August 2018 | 4 replies
My spouse and I fell into real estate semi-accidentally: three years ago, we decided to lease our first home here in Austin after purchasing a second home, and then a few months later, we inherited a property in a small town on the Oregon coast.
13 April 2021 | 5 replies
I had my hair fell of beause of the stress this work gave me.
18 August 2020 | 5 replies
Which is great as I have about 6k of unexpected cost-such as 2 floor joist completely cut in half by plumber from 1940 need repaired, the discovery of mold in walls, the tree that fell down 5 days after taking possession that cost $2k total to have removed, and a host of other small things.
28 July 2022 | 7 replies
New housing starts unexpectedly plunged more than economists projected in June as home builders grappled with the effects of rising interest rates curbing demand for new homes, according to data released Tuesday, adding to signs of an abrupt turnaround in the booming housing market.KEY FACTSThe number of housing starts, or new houses on which construction has started, fell 2% to about 1.56 million last month despite average economic projections calling for an increase of 1.4%, the Census Bureau reported Tuesday.Building permits were slightly above expectations, coming in at less than 1.7 million, but fell from May and are down from about 1.8 million in April.In emailed comments after the release, LPL Financial chief economist Jeffrey Roach said housing starts declined because demand is “quickly drying up” from higher borrowing costs as the Federal Reserve raises interest rates, though he expects home building activity should hold up despite the grim outlook.Pantheon Macro chief economist Ian Shepherdson was less optimistic, pointing out single-family starts and permits both fell by 8% in their fourth consecutive month of declines and noting construction activity lags sales, which in turn lag mortgage applications.Mortgage applications have collapsed more than 25% this year, he adds, suggesting single-family housing construction "needs to fall by [another] 20% or so over the next few months” to be more in line with demand.The latest data comes one day after the National Association of Home Builders reported the second-worst single-month drop in home builder confidence on record, driven by ongoing production bottlenecks and high inflation that have pushed the cost beyond its market value in some cases.KEY BACKGROUNDHistorically high savings rates and government stimulus measures helped ignite a home buying frenzy during the pandemic, but signs of a slowdown have quickly emerged as the Fed embarks on its most aggressive interest rate hiking cycle in two decades to curb high inflation.
13 July 2024 | 13 replies
I fell into mine accidentally when he showed up as a substitute for my usual plow guy.