I don't know your market, but I don't think you can
buy enough cash flow with 100K to immediately start out with buy and hold properties and not have a day job.
Not exact matches
There's an opportunity cost lost either way, I put 30K into
buying a house to rent, with lots of work day - to - day but potential higher
cash flow forever, or I lock 30K into a retirement account now, never to be seen again, to hope for compounding and just
enough passive income from dividends to live off way later...
Scenario 2 — Reinvest To 2015 Levels: If, instead of
buying back stock, GE could quickly redeploy the capital from the sale of the financial assets and earn the same ROIC on that capital, it would generate
enough cash flow to justify the current stock price.
I thought it was bad
enough to try to dissuade people from
buying life contingent
cash flows.
Buying high yields is not
enough, those yields be realizable from companies that can produce
cash flows to support the price of the bonds.
Asking the banks to
buy more stock in the Federal Reserve would also be a possibility if things got bad
enough — i.e., where the future
cash flows from the assets could never pay all of the liabilities.
I think I first heard this from Robert Kiyosaki but the idea is that you
buy a rental property that
cash flows enough to cover the car payment.
Buy as many multi family properties I could find for the least money down,
cash flow enough to live, but then go get another job in the meantime.
@Antoine Justiz, the only way this deal makes sense is if you 1) plan to stay there for quite a while and can bank or invest the money you are saving with the reduced rent and use it to get into a property that does
cash flow positively or 2) are certain it will appreciate
enough before you go to sell it that you can get out of it without a loss (including
buying and selling costs).
My plan has been to continue
buying SFHs until I can generate
enough excess
cash flow to
buy the asset types (large multifamily / commercial) I truly enjoy.
Buy an income property with the cash flow enough to buy the c
Buy an income property with the
cash flow enough to
buy the c
buy the car.
There are good reasons to
buy places closer to Watertown, but good initial
cash flow isn't usually one of them.:) I'd caution you to be careful and do some research if you didn't know the area, but since you sound like you are down there a lot and your fiance and her family are from there you should be able to figure out the good and really bad areas easy
enough.
I make
enough from my current job to
buy more properties and I don't need to save up
cash flow right now.
After they profit from several flips, they can have
enough money saved up to put a nice down payment on a
buy and hold property so that one day they can pay it off and have a nice passive,
cash flowing rental.
My current plan of attack is to
buy and hold townhomes in the Raleigh area until I achieve
enough cash flow to retire from my day job.
They are
buying mostly homes priced between 100 and 140 percent of median price in locations where the sales price - to - rent ratio is favorable
enough to yield a 5 to 10 percent annual
cash flow with a five - to eight - year hold period.
I do not feel fear in
buying something, I am more into learning to analyze different markets and either
buy one BRRR or one with a smaller down payment to
cash flow but make sure I have
enough cash to support both types of deals, since almost all investments need money for some type of upgrades.
Strategy / Big Picture: Flip properties wholesale and accumulate
enough cash to
buy properties financed or «subject to» the existing mortgage with at least 25 % equity and $ 300 REAL
cash flow or
buy a multi-unit complex or mini storage.
If you
buy and hold, make sure there is
enough cash flow to pay the line.