In other words, the worst is to buy a 3 year negative cash flow property and then sell, unless the price has gone way up. (financialsamurai.com)
I'm stuck looking at negative cash flowing property after another right now. (biggerpockets.com)
If you don't speculate (buy a condo in downtown Toronto) and look for properties that cash flow $ 250 - 350 before maintenance and vacancy costs on 20 % down in the GTA you can do quite well (yes they are these properties out there, so people stop buying negative cash flow properties). (canadiancapitalist.com)