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Ren
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Okay that’s my 2 bits.Good luck brother and feel free to ask questions.
Urbanrealtor at gmail.[/quote]Good info, thanks. I might take you up on that.
Ren
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Okay that’s my 2 bits.Good luck brother and feel free to ask questions.
Urbanrealtor at gmail.[/quote]Good info, thanks. I might take you up on that.
Ren
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Okay that’s my 2 bits.Good luck brother and feel free to ask questions.
Urbanrealtor at gmail.[/quote]Good info, thanks. I might take you up on that.
Ren
Participant[quote=urbanrealtor]
Okay that’s my 2 bits.Good luck brother and feel free to ask questions.
Urbanrealtor at gmail.[/quote]Good info, thanks. I might take you up on that.
Ren
ParticipantThanks for the responses. I wasn’t aware it was so easy to get picked up by a broker, that tells me there’s a high newbie turnover, which tells me being a newbie is not pleasant. The fact that I’m prepared to be an unpaid foot stool for a little while should help me get through the worst of it.
[quote=scaredycat]not sure what the future looks like. is the current model what r.e. agents will be living under a couple decades from now? Seems likely that commissions will be slimmer, internet will increasingly encroach. i could be very wrong. frankly i have no sense of what a good line of work would be to get in nowadays. [/quote]
This is a concern of mine. I don’t doubt commissions will be lower, I’m just hoping I can get a good 5 years out of it before it’s no longer worth the effort.
Ren
ParticipantThanks for the responses. I wasn’t aware it was so easy to get picked up by a broker, that tells me there’s a high newbie turnover, which tells me being a newbie is not pleasant. The fact that I’m prepared to be an unpaid foot stool for a little while should help me get through the worst of it.
[quote=scaredycat]not sure what the future looks like. is the current model what r.e. agents will be living under a couple decades from now? Seems likely that commissions will be slimmer, internet will increasingly encroach. i could be very wrong. frankly i have no sense of what a good line of work would be to get in nowadays. [/quote]
This is a concern of mine. I don’t doubt commissions will be lower, I’m just hoping I can get a good 5 years out of it before it’s no longer worth the effort.
Ren
ParticipantThanks for the responses. I wasn’t aware it was so easy to get picked up by a broker, that tells me there’s a high newbie turnover, which tells me being a newbie is not pleasant. The fact that I’m prepared to be an unpaid foot stool for a little while should help me get through the worst of it.
[quote=scaredycat]not sure what the future looks like. is the current model what r.e. agents will be living under a couple decades from now? Seems likely that commissions will be slimmer, internet will increasingly encroach. i could be very wrong. frankly i have no sense of what a good line of work would be to get in nowadays. [/quote]
This is a concern of mine. I don’t doubt commissions will be lower, I’m just hoping I can get a good 5 years out of it before it’s no longer worth the effort.
Ren
ParticipantThanks for the responses. I wasn’t aware it was so easy to get picked up by a broker, that tells me there’s a high newbie turnover, which tells me being a newbie is not pleasant. The fact that I’m prepared to be an unpaid foot stool for a little while should help me get through the worst of it.
[quote=scaredycat]not sure what the future looks like. is the current model what r.e. agents will be living under a couple decades from now? Seems likely that commissions will be slimmer, internet will increasingly encroach. i could be very wrong. frankly i have no sense of what a good line of work would be to get in nowadays. [/quote]
This is a concern of mine. I don’t doubt commissions will be lower, I’m just hoping I can get a good 5 years out of it before it’s no longer worth the effort.
Ren
ParticipantThanks for the responses. I wasn’t aware it was so easy to get picked up by a broker, that tells me there’s a high newbie turnover, which tells me being a newbie is not pleasant. The fact that I’m prepared to be an unpaid foot stool for a little while should help me get through the worst of it.
[quote=scaredycat]not sure what the future looks like. is the current model what r.e. agents will be living under a couple decades from now? Seems likely that commissions will be slimmer, internet will increasingly encroach. i could be very wrong. frankly i have no sense of what a good line of work would be to get in nowadays. [/quote]
This is a concern of mine. I don’t doubt commissions will be lower, I’m just hoping I can get a good 5 years out of it before it’s no longer worth the effort.
April 10, 2009 at 11:54 AM in reply to: Will rents create a price floor despite the mini rental bubble? #378840Ren
ParticipantLook to Murrieta/Temecula to see the future of San Diego. Properties there are very cash-flow-positive, they’re being bought up by investors, and the rental market is being flooded. For example, check out the apartment conversions on Madison in Murrieta. Tons for sale at seemingly great prices (which will continue to drop, IMHO). Now do a search on the inland empire craigslist for “madison murrieta”. Watch that for several months, and you can see rents tanking.
April 10, 2009 at 11:54 AM in reply to: Will rents create a price floor despite the mini rental bubble? #379116Ren
ParticipantLook to Murrieta/Temecula to see the future of San Diego. Properties there are very cash-flow-positive, they’re being bought up by investors, and the rental market is being flooded. For example, check out the apartment conversions on Madison in Murrieta. Tons for sale at seemingly great prices (which will continue to drop, IMHO). Now do a search on the inland empire craigslist for “madison murrieta”. Watch that for several months, and you can see rents tanking.
April 10, 2009 at 11:54 AM in reply to: Will rents create a price floor despite the mini rental bubble? #379298Ren
ParticipantLook to Murrieta/Temecula to see the future of San Diego. Properties there are very cash-flow-positive, they’re being bought up by investors, and the rental market is being flooded. For example, check out the apartment conversions on Madison in Murrieta. Tons for sale at seemingly great prices (which will continue to drop, IMHO). Now do a search on the inland empire craigslist for “madison murrieta”. Watch that for several months, and you can see rents tanking.
April 10, 2009 at 11:54 AM in reply to: Will rents create a price floor despite the mini rental bubble? #379342Ren
ParticipantLook to Murrieta/Temecula to see the future of San Diego. Properties there are very cash-flow-positive, they’re being bought up by investors, and the rental market is being flooded. For example, check out the apartment conversions on Madison in Murrieta. Tons for sale at seemingly great prices (which will continue to drop, IMHO). Now do a search on the inland empire craigslist for “madison murrieta”. Watch that for several months, and you can see rents tanking.
April 10, 2009 at 11:54 AM in reply to: Will rents create a price floor despite the mini rental bubble? #379468Ren
ParticipantLook to Murrieta/Temecula to see the future of San Diego. Properties there are very cash-flow-positive, they’re being bought up by investors, and the rental market is being flooded. For example, check out the apartment conversions on Madison in Murrieta. Tons for sale at seemingly great prices (which will continue to drop, IMHO). Now do a search on the inland empire craigslist for “madison murrieta”. Watch that for several months, and you can see rents tanking.
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