Most other bay area investors are
betting on appreciation.
Betting on appreciation is risky as far as I am concerned.
Also... be «a little» cautious about
betting on appreciation... especially in Ohio.
I was born in Columbus, Ohio and I remember when a bunch of people were betting that when Limited Holding Company was going to bring «Thousands of Quality Jobs» to the Columbus Area and «Out of State Investors»... particularly from the West Coast were pouring money in left and right on property out there...
betting on appreciation... and when it didn't happen nowhere near the rate they were expecting, some of them sold those same properties... to people that were raised in Ohio who seemed to know better... because they knew they would get steady profitable cash flow...
I wouldn't
bet on appreciation in that area.
Not exact matches
«When you buy bitcoins, you are essentially
betting on price
appreciation alone as a way of making money
on your investment.»
When you invest in Bitcoin (or gold, or the price of oil, or other commodities, or any other currency, or fine art), you are
betting the farm
on price
appreciation alone.
Since you can't find bonds paying a 3 % interest rate and increasing it each year
on top of providing some value
appreciation over time, I think PG is the best
bet for many conservative portfolios.
The film
bets on him to create a sense of loving and
appreciation for the character and he delivers.
Both the Vanguard Dividend
Appreciation ETF (VIG A) and WisdomTree U.S. Quality Dividend Growth Fund (DGRW A --RRB-
bet on indexes that reward dividend growth.
Since you can't find bonds paying a 3 % interest rate and increasing it each year
on top of providing some value
appreciation over time, I think PG is the best
bet for many conservative portfolios.
Probably worth a punt, given the dire macroeconomic outlook makes
betting on the continued
appreciation of stocks in general a mug's game.
I personally took bought these as really long term buy and hold investments and I'm sure
betting against
appreciation on these.
People who are buying there are either doing major re-positioning - i.e total renovation of building or space and / or
betting on huge
appreciation.
The city council and state legislature are not landlord friendly, but their policies that actively discourage development will continue to drive
appreciation (which you shouldn't
bet on, but is a great bonus if you get).
As for
appreciation, I wouldn't
bet on it unless you're doing rehabs and getting forced
appreciation.
«If we were setting the
betting line
on asset value
appreciation over the next couple of years, we would probably put it at zero, with NOI growth roughly offsetting a little bit of a backup in cap rates,» says McCulloch.