13 November 2025 | 0 replies
Looking for deal-structure feedback from people who’ve actually done LA infill / TOD projects under California’s newer pro-housing laws (including SB 79).
16 November 2025 | 0 replies
Since I know a lot of folks here invest in South Florida, thought I'd share the key findings:📊 Key Data:- Luxury inventory at 10.2 months (discounts averaging 10%)- Operating costs up significantly: Insurance +29%, Maintenance +24%- Cap rate spread: 4.7% (Brickell) vs 5.3% (Kendall/Doral)- Condo fees up 45% since SB 4-D passedFull report with neighborhood breakdowns: https://thsld.com/miami-property-management-trends-2026What are you seeing in your markets?
16 November 2025 | 0 replies
**OPERATING COST REALITY CHECK:**- Insurance: +29% YoY (coastal exposure + reinsurance crisis)- Maintenance: +24% (labor + materials)- Property Taxes: +22% (reassessments catching up)- Condo Fees: +45% since 2021 (SB 4-D structural compliance)**MARKET DYNAMICS:**- Luxury ($1M+): 10.2 months inventory, seeing 10% discounts- Single-family: 6.4 months, still climbing 4% annually- Condo/townhome: 12 months inventory (buyer's market forming)**CAP RATE SPREAD:**- Miami core (Brickell/Downtown): 4.7%- Suburban (Doral/Kendall/Homestead): 5.3%- 60bp spread = biggest arbitrage opportunity in years**INVESTOR BEHAVIOR SHIFT:**Seeing capital rotate from luxury spec plays → workforce housing with stable cash flow.
14 November 2025 | 3 replies
I didn't get the impression it was a mega hub of corporate lifestyle.
7 November 2025 | 3 replies
Originals were 1 mega pixel, now up to 4 meg.
17 November 2025 | 3 replies
Rental Property Investor from Jacksonville, FLPREVIOUS POSTWhy I sold Cleveland.If you're a real estate podcast junkie like me, you definitely have noticed the clear shift towards real estate syndication in the multi-family space over the last couple of years especially.As deals became harder to find in single family and smaller multis across much of the desirable markets,the allure of pooling investor funds to acquire larger assets became a sort of self-fulfilling prophecy.Books that were mostly hurriedly written flooded the market pimping the upsides of this strategy.The argument for was simple and convincing:it is better to own 1% of a large deal than 0% of no deal.Personally,I could not help but notice that the popularity of the idea coincided with the rise of real estate crowdfunding.The likes of Realty Shares and Realty Mogul raised a bajillion dollars practically overnight making it very easy for everyday real estate aficionados to own small bites of a mega deal in rural Tennessee at the click of a mouse.A few of my friends experimented with the crowd-funding route, tossing $5000 into this debt offer and $10,000 into that equity offering.These punts yielded mixed results anecdotally, as an equal number seemed to have great experiences to share as did absolute nightmares.To be fair, no real estate niche is 100% fail-safe or iron clad.Money has been lost in a large single family portfolio as well as a personally purchased medium sized apartment complex.It is also certainly true that in the end, every investor will run out of money to invest in more properties if they decide to go it alone trying to rapidly scale up their portfolio, and real estate is most assuredly a team sport at all levels.
22 November 2025 | 26 replies
I especially want the previous owners to have recently paid for my roof, HVAC, electrical etc, plumbing.4) the current market is mega-rough, and IMO getting rougher.
9 October 2025 | 10 replies
I have a huge lot in North Hollywood (about 27k sqft) and would like to explore my investment options with SB 9 land split.
21 November 2025 | 251 replies
Just like they're selling mega cap and tech.
10 November 2025 | 48 replies
Quote from @Russell Brazil: Most mega donors spent more of their own money trying to defeat Mamdani, than they would pay in an increased tax rate.