I want to respond in detail to your other posts backbreaker, but I am in the process of moving so it will have to wait.
Let me just say that you have valid points, but I suspect that your mother's experience has caused you to see this from a skewed perspective.
Let's put it this way-
"Knock on wood", but it would take a major, catastrophic disaster to sink my ship at this point. Even though it may seem like I throw money around recklessly and gamble without regard to risk, you need to know that this isn't the case at all. I have MANY, MANY resources to draw from when I hit setbacks. The most important ones are my knowledge and creativity which get me through pretty much anything that gets thrown at me. I didn't have these resources in the beginning, mind you, but at the same time I also didn't have so many "lines in the water" either. My "safety net" expands as I go along and although I am very highly leveraged I have the utmost confidence in my backup plan.
I really want to explain in more detail about the proper use of debt because both you and Gio aren't seeing the complete picture.
I have been doing this for a LONG time. I have seen the good, the bad, and plenty of the ugly. I know all about vacancy loss and leaky toilets and ALL of the stuff that comes along with the different facets of real estate. So I'm not exactly talking theory here. I have done it, seen it work time and time again for not just me but others as well. And what I do IS NOT dependent on real estate prices making double digit gains either. I have LOTS of equity in my properties and even if the economy tanked and real estate corrected by 20% (I highly doubt any correction will be this drastic and especially not in the market I am in) it wouldn't sink me.
I know that it doesn't matter to you at this point but I can't help but think that you are THIS close to being able to understand what I am saying and if you did it would increase the effectiveness of your investments by several times.
More to come...
Let me just say that you have valid points, but I suspect that your mother's experience has caused you to see this from a skewed perspective.
Let's put it this way-
"Knock on wood", but it would take a major, catastrophic disaster to sink my ship at this point. Even though it may seem like I throw money around recklessly and gamble without regard to risk, you need to know that this isn't the case at all. I have MANY, MANY resources to draw from when I hit setbacks. The most important ones are my knowledge and creativity which get me through pretty much anything that gets thrown at me. I didn't have these resources in the beginning, mind you, but at the same time I also didn't have so many "lines in the water" either. My "safety net" expands as I go along and although I am very highly leveraged I have the utmost confidence in my backup plan.
I really want to explain in more detail about the proper use of debt because both you and Gio aren't seeing the complete picture.
I have been doing this for a LONG time. I have seen the good, the bad, and plenty of the ugly. I know all about vacancy loss and leaky toilets and ALL of the stuff that comes along with the different facets of real estate. So I'm not exactly talking theory here. I have done it, seen it work time and time again for not just me but others as well. And what I do IS NOT dependent on real estate prices making double digit gains either. I have LOTS of equity in my properties and even if the economy tanked and real estate corrected by 20% (I highly doubt any correction will be this drastic and especially not in the market I am in) it wouldn't sink me.
I know that it doesn't matter to you at this point but I can't help but think that you are THIS close to being able to understand what I am saying and if you did it would increase the effectiveness of your investments by several times.
More to come...