Savvy real estate investors balance their portfolio with real estate notes (trust deeds or mortgages); real estate for appreciation, real estate notes for income.
While my wife Alison and I were on the staff of the U.S. Congress in Washington, we started to invest in real estate and later discovered notes (trust deeds and mortgages). We still love real estate, and since then we've bought and sold lots of it, and lots of notes.
We then started The Paper Source, an educational resource for note investors and those who want to be. For many years we have hosted the annual Paper Source Note Symposium which attracts several hundred investors.
Because of virus restrictions, we can’t hold it live this year. Instead, it will be at your house! (That is, it will be online.)
Our speakers are people who DO what they teach. Over 3 days you will learn from some of the most experienced people on the planet (full-time note investors, tax and asset protection attorney, self-directed IRA experts, to name just a few) — and absolutely
NO sales pitches.
There will be presentations for beginners on up.
You will get NON-EXPIRING access to all the speakers’ videos and MP3 audios.
Tom Henderson, whom many call "The Note Professor" (and you will too, once you hear him) recently told me, "Bill, this is the deal of the century! Can you believe all these speakers for only $97.00? And be able to watch at anytime on any device?!"
This is my invitation to join us for the online Note Symposium October 1-3. Please CLICK HERE to see all that it offers. The $97.00 registration includes admission to the event and lifetime access to the videos and MP3s.
Flight from the Cities: Existing Home Sales Soar Nearly 21%
Existing-home sales exploded higher in June as home buyers took advantage of record-low mortgage rates and fled city centers beset with anti-police protests, riots, looting, crime, shootings, stay-at-home orders, shuttered businesses, closed schools, and a loss of amenities such as restaurants, theaters, and museums.
The Standard & Poor’s CoreLogic Case-Shiller Home Price Indexes reported modest home price increases in May, showing a stable trend amid recent market volatility.
More employees are working remotely since the COVID-19 pandemic, a trend that may last for some companies. High-rise office buildings in downtown areas may be less crowded in the future, and the commercial sector is already working with developers and lawmakers to discuss ways these spaces can be retrofitted.
Top 10 U.S. Metros with Highest Foreclosure Rates in Q2 2020
Home prices have continued to increase throughout the coronavirus pandemic, despite the hurdles the outbreak caused for the real-estate industry. The Federal Housing Finance Agency house price index rose 0.2% on a monthly basis in April. Compared with a year ago, home prices were up 5.5%.