Market Updates
Four Steps to Making Your First Billion; Why High Returns are Worth the Risk; and How the Private Equity Game is Changing
Want our step-by-step process on how to partner with the biggest cash-buyers of single family houses the world has ever seen? Learn more here →
(NOTE: Want to learn how to flip houses to hedge funds? Click here for our “Partnering With Hedge Funds” special report.)
Have you noticed what's going on around us in the real estate world lately?
The only thing that’s constant in business these days is change. So it’s critical that we keep our eyes open to the news and views that can impact our livelihood – real estate investing. One of the smartest and best uses of your time is to stay on top of the latest news, trends and tremors in our industry.
And of course, one of the ways that we provide value for you is to put this information at your fingertips every month.
Accordingly, here's a collection of industry news items that have caught our attention over the past month. We feel this collection is (i) relevant, (ii) timely and (iii) noteworthy.
This month’s Digest includes actionable information on:
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Why the Seattle market is on fire
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Where you’ll be investing in 2025
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The best and worst markets for property taxes
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Where foreign capital is being invested in the US
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How to be a millionaire investor without owning any property
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REI as a get rich slow approach
All this and more awaits you below. We recommend you take a few minutes to peruse this news yourself, and consider how these things stand to impact your own business and your bottom line.
Dennis Fassett
earned a BS in Economics and followed that up with an MBA in finance. After working and corporate finance and banking for several years, he started buying single family houses, and quickly built a very nice portfolio of cash flowing rentals. When the credit markets started to dry up and he couldn’t get any additional single family mortgages he shifted his focus to apartment buildings. He now has over $3 million in rental real estate. He manages most of it his self and still has a day job. Dennis has even created his own Private Equity fund to buy apartment buildings.
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