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Stocks Are Soaring, Gas Is Crashing: 6 Money Moves to Make Before the Iran Ceasefire Cracks


Johnson / Money Talks News

Your portfolio just got a reprieve. Don’t waste it. President Trump announced a two-week ceasefire with Iran late Tuesday, and within hours the entire financial world flipped on its head. The Dow Jones Industrial Average soared 2.95%, the S&P 500 gained 2.56%, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite surged 3.46% at the open Wednesday. Oil? Crushed. West Texas Intermediate (WTI)…

Mortgage Rates Drop on Ceasefire, But Beware of the Bounce


Mortgage rates continue to move lower, extending the rally from last week due to a two-week “ceasefire” in the Middle East.

However, there have already been reports of multiple events including a massive bombardment in Lebanon since the ceasefire was apparently agreed to.

In other words, it’s unclear how much of a ceasefire this really is, and at this point I’m surprised the markets are still rallying as much as they are.

So while mortgage rates will be lower today, my guess is lenders will be cautious lowering rates too much.

That could also mean that any benefit seen today could wind up being short-lived.

Lower Mortgage Rates as Ceasefire Leads to Oil Price Dump

The two-week ceasefire reportedly agreed to yesterday at the eleventh hour has resulted in a global market rally.

Stock prices surged and bond yields came down as oil prices fell below $100 a barrel.

Of course, if we rewind back to the end of February, oil prices were around $70, well below the current price of $95.

And the 30-year fixed was sub-6%, far below the 6.375% or 6.5% quote you might see today.

So it’s a bit of a one step forward, two steps back situation. Sure, we can cheer the victory, but the bigger picture is still somewhat grim.

In addition, there have multiple reports of heavy fighting since the ceasefire was announced.

A major offensive in Lebanon carried out by Israel, reports of drone activity, uncertainty about the Strait of Hormuz and whether Iran will demand a toll, and now a closure of the Strait.

Once you start to dig into the details, and look at what’s happening versus what’s being said, it doesn’t look so great.

This might mean to take the win today, but be cautious if you’re trying to decide between locking and floating a mortgage rate.

Mortgage Rates Might Bounce Back After a Nice Rally

This all leads me to believe that mortgage rates might suffer another setback soon.

They’ve fallen from recent highs of around 6.625% to roughly 6.375%, meaning they’ve come down about 0.25%.

That’s a decent move lower, but they remain about 0.375% above those pre-war levels.

And with the ceasefire decidedly tenuous, it wouldn’t shock me to see a mortgage rate reversal sometime in the next few days or weeks.

While things may have deescalated in the near-term, the future looks very uncertain.

Even today, just less than 24 hours after the ceasefire, we’ve seen intense fighting and conflict.

For me, it kind of paints the picture that it’s not going to be a quick resolution, as hopeful as the markets might be right now.

Ultimately, all we did was pull ourselves off the brink of something really bad. We didn’t solve anything.

Remember that prior to this crisis, the Strait of Hormuz was wide open and oil/energy prices weren’t a concern.

Inflation was falling and everything appeared to be moving in the right direction.

You’d be hard-pressed to say that today.

Colin Robertson
Latest posts by Colin Robertson (see all)

Coinbase Entity Obtains Australian Financial Services License


Coinbase (NASDAQ:COIN) announced on April 7, 2026 that it had obtained a financial services license from Australia’s authorities via its local business entity. The digital assets exchange stated in its update that it is the first among its competitors to acquire the Australian Financial Services License (AFSL) and is said to be authorized to support retail derivatives trading in the country.

Coinbase Australia also stated that it will now provide cryptocurrency as well as equity perpetuals to Australian traders and investors. This will now be followed by futures as well as options trading.

Coinbase further explained that they are going to try to compete with traditional financial services on stock trading, digital payments, and other traditional financce products with the speed as well as efficiency of cryptocurrencies.

The AFSL now requires Coinbase Australia to follow the same conduct standards, disclosure guidelines, governance processes, as well as consumer protection rules as TradFi institutions operating across the country.

The latest authorization comes right before expected new legislation which reportedly includes that Corporations Amendment (Digital Assets Framework) Bill 2025. This update may require all digital assets exchanges to maintain a license.

Notably, Coinbase Australia was launched back in 2022.

It is now a key part of the so-called Digital Economy Council of Australia. And it is sharply focused on assisting with crypto regulation in the country.

Additionally, it’s further expanding its legal services, compliance-focused initiatives, marketing campaigns, as well as supporting operations teams.

It’s also worthwhile to note that Coinbase obtained conditional approval for a national trust company charter from the US Office of the Comptroller of the Currency (OCC). This should enable continued innovation in order to integrate digital assets into TradFi ecosystems.



Secretly Distribution acquires music data and analytics firms Entertainment Intelligence and Babel Ops


Secretly Distribution has acquired Babel Ops, the technology company behind music data and analytics platform Entertainment Intelligence (Ei).

The deal, announced on Wednesday (April 8), brings both companies under the ownership of the independent distributor, which says Babel Ops will continue to serve its existing client base of independent labels and music businesses.

Babel Ops was founded in 2020 by Erik Gilbert and Greg Delaney, who previously co-founded Entertainment Intelligence (Ei) in 2014.

Ei’s Enterlytics platform currently powers reporting for more than 1.2 million artists across more than 55,000 labels, according to the company.

Babel Ops builds bespoke data management, analytics and royalty processing tools for independent music companies. Its clients include Cargo Independent Distribution, Concord, Partisan Records, Reservoir Media, Secret City, MNRK and Exceleration, among others.

The firm is led by a team of 10 developers under the leadership of Gilbert and Delaney, alongside General Manager Phil Birch and Lead Developer Ryan Berry.

Two longtime Secretly database administrators, Ember Wyrdt and Reggie Provine, will join Babel Ops under the new arrangement.

“We believe independence is something you actively build and protect, not something you inherit.”

Greg Delaney and Erik Gilbert, Babel Ops

“We believe independence is something you actively build and protect, not something you inherit,” said Greg Delaney and Erik Gilbert.

“Babel Ops and Ei were created to give independent music companies the technological strength to operate, grow, and innovate on their own terms, especially as the industry consolidates.

“What drew us to Secretly is a genuinely shared ethos: a belief that independence should be supported and strengthened, not absorbed into dominant systems.”

Darius Van Arman, CEO of Secretly Distribution, framed the acquisition in the context of what he described as growing consolidation and the concentration of technology infrastructure among the industry’s largest companies.

He said: “At Secretly, we’ve long admired the team behind Babel Ops and Entertainment Intelligence, and we share their commitment to providing small and medium-sized companies with world-class analytics and other tools.

“We are proud to have these two companies as part of the Secretly ecosystem, not only so they can support our business, but also so that they can deliver world-class work for our peers and competitors.

“It’s not enough to safeguard independent routes to market; you must have access to market-leading technology that enables you to compete against the largest companies.”

Darius Van Arman

“We believe that the best way to secure our own independence is to support the independence of others.”

Writing on LinkedIn about the deal, Van Arman reiterated his stance: “With the rise of generative AI and other recent developments — such as the majors acquiring digital supply chain companies like FUGA and Revelator, and Bill Ackman’s attempt to acquire Universal Music Group — it is clear that we are moving into a new era of market concentration and algorithmic control.

“Now, more than ever, if you want to stay independent and help others stay independent, you must vigorously protect your ability to do business on your own terms, according to your own values.

“It’s not enough to safeguard independent routes to market; you must have access to market-leading technology that enables you to compete against the largest companies.”

Phil Birch, General Manager of Babel Ops, said in a press release: “Like SD, Babel Ops is built to enable independents to challenge the mainstream.

“In our case, it’s by creating technology tools that sets our clients on a level playing field with anyone in the industry when it comes to data management and analysis.”


Babel Ops has maintained a long-standing development relationship with Secretly Distribution, including building the distributor’s bespoke repertoire management system, RIOT, alongside SD Head of Digital Operations Kristian Downs.

The company also counts Cargo Independent Distribution — the UK-based distribution company launched in 2024 by Cargo Records, Secretly Distribution and Beggars Group — among its development clients.

“Working with the Babel Ops to build the [client] portal has been a really positive step,” said Jolan Bangina, Head of Operations at Cargo Independent Distribution.

“It gives our labels a far more transparent view of their physical releases through a live data feed with hourly updates, offering a level of visibility that simply hasn’t been available to labels before.”

Jackson Mercer, VP of Platform Operations at Concord, said: “Babel Ops have been a key partner in building, maintaining, and evolving two of our critical source-of-record systems during a time of rapid growth at Concord.

“We see them as an extension of our team and look forward to continuing to build great products together.”

The acquisition comes at a time of accelerating consolidation in music’s technology and distribution infrastructure.

Last week, Warner Music Group entered into a definitive agreement to acquire Revelator, the independent music platform specializing in digital distribution, rights management and analytics.

Earlier this year, Universal Music Group completed its $775 million acquisition of Downtown Music Holdings, including its FUGA distribution technology subsidiary. On Tuesday (April 7), Bill Ackman‘s Pershing Square submitted a non-binding proposal to acquire UMG in a deal valued at approximately $64 billion.

Secretly Distribution’s move to bring Babel Ops in-house represents a different approach: rather than a major label group absorbing independent infrastructure, an independent distributor is investing in technology to strengthen its own operations — and those of its competitors.


Secretly Distribution is the in-house distribution arm of the Bloomington, Indiana-headquartered Secretly Group, which also includes labels such as Jagjaguwar, Dead Oceans, Secretly Canadian, and the Numero Group.

Secretly Distribution has been on an expansion trajectory in recent months, launching an Asia-Pacific division in November 2025 and adding label partners including Jack White‘s Third Man Records and Hayley WilliamsPost-Atlantic.

Van Arman, who also serves as Chairperson of Merlin, the digital licensing agency for independent music companies, wrote an op-ed for MBW in February exploring the challenges posed by generative AI to independent music businesses.Music Business Worldwide

AI : Threat Or Opportunity ? Bajaj Finance का Example देखिए… #shorts #anujsinghal N18S



Bajaj Finance is embedding artificial intelligence across its operations to drive cross-selling, improve productivity, and lower operating costs, with management indicating that technology-led execution will define the lender’s next phase of growth.
Speaking during the company’s Q3 FY26 earnings call, Managing Director Rajeev Jain said the firm has begun integrating AI into its customer engagement, underwriting, and servicing framework as part of a broader digital transformation.
The company has already deployed AI tools to analyse customer interactions at scale. AI systems have processed roughly 2 crore customer calls, converting voice interactions into usable data and generating new sales opportunities that were previously not captured, Jain said.

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The Iran war is either concluding with the world worse off, or escalation is just delayed again


A fragile ceasefire agreement in the war began with bombs continuing to explode in Lebanon and contradictory statements about whether Iran will continue to control the critical Strait of Hormuz energy choke point.

But the most likely scenarios moving forward involve either Iran exerting more control over global energy markets than it did before the fighting started in March, or the current tenuous agreement merely delaying another military escalation by days or weeks, geopolitical and energy experts said.

There is a less likely “happy scenario” where global energy trade returns to normalcy—but even that will take until the end of this year because of supply-chain challenges—and where Iran is left weakened and militarily degraded for the long term, said Bob McNally, former White House energy advisor under President George W. Bush and founder of Rapidan Energy Group.

“We think the odds favor this ceasefire either not ever sticking or unraveling if it does,” McNally told Fortune, arguing the April 7 announcement of a two-week ceasefire was vague, fragile, and contradicted by Iran—not exactly justifying oil prices falling by almost $20 per barrel overnight.

“The only thing we know for sure is the president called off a larger attack,” McNally said. “I am amazed at the market’s willingness to price in relief so willingly. While we do see a ceasefire as an ultimate end state, we don’t think we’re there yet, and we think this is going to get worse before it gets better.”

Hours after President Donald Trump issued profanity-laden messages threatening that Iran’s “whole civilization will die” in one night on April 7, he announced a two-week ceasefire in exchange for opening the narrow Hormuz waterway through which about 20% of global energy supplies transit. Iran agreed to open the strait but only “via coordination with Iran’s Armed Forces and with due consideration of technical limitations.”

Iran said it could continue to charge tolls per vessel, while Oman, which is situated on the other side of the strait, said, “No fees will be imposed”—yet another contradiction.

Regardless, Israel, which was unhappy about the ceasefire, continued to attack Lebanon on April 8, and Iran kept the strait closed and threatened to withdraw from the ceasefire.

If the ceasefire does hold, Vice President JD Vance, special envoy Steve Witkoff, and Jared Kushner are scheduled to travel to Islamabad for in-person negotiations with Iran on April 11, White House press secretary Karoline Leavitt said.

What happens next

Rystad Energy chief economist Claudio Galimberti sees an enduring ceasefire as the most likely scenario, but it won’t be pretty. Iran is likely to assert its control over the strait for at least a few months before any broader, long-term deal is reached with the U.S. and neighboring, oil-producing Gulf states.

“The normalization of the Strait of Hormuz is still far, far away,” Galimberti told Fortune. “It’s a very fragile situation.”

He agreed that regular flows through the strait are unlikely at least until late 2026. In the meantime, a stronger ceasefire could mean the resumption of about one-third of vessel traffic through the strait.

Traffic for oil, liquefied natural gas, fertilizer for agriculture, hydrogen for semiconductors, and petrochemicals plunged to 5% of typical flows in March and only grew to nearly 10% for a few days in early April before ceasing again on April 8.

Only a single Iranian-linked oil tanker passed through the strait on April 8, said Rohit Rathod, senior analyst with the Vortexa cargo tracking firm.

A lot of work remains. First, the strait would have to be cleared of mines and emptied of the hundreds of ships that have remained trapped for over a month. Then, vessels would need to resume their complicated, global logistical dance. And eventually, Saudi Arabia, Iraq, Kuwait, the United Arab Emirates, and other Gulf states would restart their oil and gas production volumes—all of which would take many months, Galimberti said.

Oil prices—down to about $94 a barrel from over $110 the day prior—could continue to fall but remain elevated from pre-March levels by at least $10 per barrel longer term, including from higher insurance costs on tanker journeys, he said.

“The political risk premium is going to be embedded for a long time,” Galimberti said.

A return to the normal transit system of goods and commodities means ensuring insurance availability, commercial trade financing, and the resumption of empty, inbound “ballasting” vessels.

While the currently trapped ships will want to exit as quickly as they can, resuming other traffic is much harder, said Alan Gelder, senior vice president for refining, chemicals, and oil markets with the Wood Mackenzie energy research firm.

“[Inbound] ballasting vessels are unlikely to enter via the Strait of Hormuz any sooner than a ‘just in time’ logistics basis, at risk of becoming trapped if hostilities resume,” Gelder added.

As for the liquefied natural gas (LNG) exports, which mostly come from Qatar, shipments could be back up and running by the end of the summer, but more than 15% of its export capacity will remain offline for years because of serious damages inflicted by Iranian attacks.

In the meantime, McNally sees investors and energy traders overreacting to the ceasefire—as evidenced by the big spike in stock markets and the opposite drop in oil prices.

“The market was eager to hear a ceasefire had been reached. And the market continues to underappreciate the gravity and the risk of a prolonged disruption from Hormuz,” McNally said. “I still think there’s an unwarranted, large reservoir of hope and optimism that you see reflected in prices today.”

We’re Selling Our Rentals (Here’s Why)


We’re selling off rental properties. Nope, that’s not clickbait; we’re actually getting rid of cash-flowing rental properties from our real estate portfolios.

Is there a market crash we fear is coming? Do we think this is the peak of real estate? Have we finally decided to listen to the social media doomers who keep telling us it’s another 2008? Not quite. Instead, our reasoning behind selling might make a lot more sense than you think. In fact, after you listen to this episode, you might decide to sell some rentals. 

So, what are we doing with the money? Are we going to sit on cash, pay off properties, or retire early? Both Dave and Henry have different reasons for selling, but both agree there’s one thing you should do (at least twice a year) to see whether you should sell properties in your portfolio.

Thought you were supposed to “hold forever,” as many of the traditional real estate investors have told you? We have proof that selling can often make you much wealthier than holding—here’s how.

Henry Washington:
It’s 2026 and I’m selling a bunch of real estate. That’s right. I’ve got properties in my personal portfolio that I am listing on the market and I’m hoping someone else buys them before their values drop. I am constantly analyzing my market and that’s what it’s telling me to do right now. But this isn’t one of those real estate is dead videos. I’m not selling everything and I don’t think the crash of the century is coming. In fact, I’m also buying properties right now. That’s right. I’m selling and buying real estate all at the same time. If that sounds crazy, then let me break it down for you. What’s going on everybody? I am Henry Washington and I’m here with Dave Meyer. Today, we’re going to talk about selling some properties. Dave, are you selling properties?

Dave Meyer:
Yes, I am selling property, but I’m kind of always selling properties. So I don’t really feel like it’s that different from what I’ve done for the last eight years at least. And I want to talk about what I’m selling, what I’ve sold in the past. We should get into this. But I also, just before we get into this and people start panicking, I also want to say I’m also buying. So it’s not like a one way thing where I’m only selling properties right now. I’m also buying properties. That’s part of the reason I am selling some properties is because I want to buy other or different things. And we’ll get into that, but I just don’t want anyone to confuse, I’m selling off my whole portfolio. I’m only getting rid of stuff and I’m not reinvesting. That’s not the case.

Henry Washington:
Yeah, that’s very true. That’s a great caveat to make as I just left the bank grabbing a check to take to my title company because I am literally buying a house when I get done with this podcast.

Dave Meyer:
There you go. Exactly. So keep this all in perspective. Selling, I think is just a tool just like acquisitions, just like doing a renovation. It’s one strategic lever that you can pull as you build your portfolio. And I think it is an undertalked about and very valuable part of being an investor. I just never understand those people are like, “Buy and never sell. I’m never selling.” It’s just so stubborn and silly. It doesn’t make any sense.

Henry Washington:
Yeah. I mean, sometimes properties run their useful life in terms of kind of where they are from a maintenance perspective and how old they were when you bought it. It’s not logical advice. Now, in a perfect world, should you just keep everything you buy and amass a ton of wealth over a long period of time? Sure, that sounds great. But real life happens. Assets diminish beyond the point of your financial ability to bring them back to life. Your life finances and circumstances change, and maybe you can’t hold onto properties as long as you thought you could. Or sometimes you just need some money, Dave, and you got to sell something to get some money.That’s okay, guys.

Dave Meyer:
Yeah. Sometimes you just enjoy the fruits of your labor or take a little bit of benefit for paying for your kids’ college or a wedding or life. You need a new car, whatever. Real estate to me always has been and always will be a means to an end. So if there is a better end, if you need some other use of your money, if there’s a better use for your money, go do that. I think that’s another reason. But I also just want to reiterate that from a math perspective too, there are also just times that it makes more sense. You will make more money in real estate by selling and buying something else. And I think we should talk about all of these different scenarios today.

Henry Washington:
Yeah. I think there’s a lot to cover here and I want to jump into it. And I guess one of the things that I first want to talk about with you is you said you are buying and at the same time you said you are selling. So it sounds like you’re strategically selling some so that you have cash to buy something different, which may be a slightly different approach than what I am taking in my portfolio. I am selling some rentals, but I am not turning around and acquiring nearly as many rental properties. I am selling for a different reason. So what’s your theory behind what you’re selling and what you’re buying?

Dave Meyer:
I mentioned this, I think at the beginning of the year, but I’ve just sort of entered what our friend Chad Carson would call sort of like the harvest phase of my investing career. Just for everyone’s reference, Ched Carson, great investor. I’ve been on the show many times, has this framework where he says there’s basically three stages to an investor’s career. The first one is just starting. Get in that first deal, do your first two deals, learn a little bit. Then you go into growth mode, which is like when you got to hustle. It’s like you’re doing the Burge, you’re doing what Henry does, off market deals. You’re just trying to find ways to build wealth as quickly as possible. But at a certain point, I think for most people, five, 10, 12 years into their investing career, they reach a point where they want to get into what he calls the harvest mode, which is that you’ve built enough equity, you have enough properties, and now it’s time to realign your investments in your portfolio with the lifestyle that you want going forward.
There are some people who want to stay in growth mode forever. Our mutual friend, co-host of On the Market, James Daynard, that dude literally can’t stop. He would do it for free.

Henry Washington:
He would be miserable if he wasn’t

Dave Meyer:
Involved. I don’t know what he would do, but it’s good that he has this because he would go crazy. And there are other people like that, but I’m personally just not like that. Like I said, real estate is a mean to an end for me. And I am trying to go into what I’m calling sort of like the end game portfolio. I’m only 38. I’m sure I’ll still keep trading, but I’m starting, my buy box has changed. The type of assets I want to own in this harvest stage of my career are different. And I could just give you some examples, but I’ve bought a lot of really old properties in my career. I invest in the Midwest. I invest in Denver. Both have a lot of old housing stock and they’ve done great, fantastic. I do them all again. But at this point in my investing career, I just flew to Denver last week to look at some maintenance stuff.
I don’t really want to do it anymore. I invest out of state. I want stuff that’s really rock solid that I can go once or twice a year, look at these properties, say they’re good, and keep going. So that’s the general philosophy is just find stuff that aligns with me as a 38-year-old dude instead of what I was doing when I was 25 and had a lot of time and frankly, more drive to build a lot of wealth. I’m in a fortunate position where I’ve made a good amount of money in real estate and now I want to use it differently.

Henry Washington:
Yeah. There are some parallels to our stories. I’m also following a three-step framework, but I am following selfishly my own three-step framework, which is very, very similar to Chad Carson’s. And I’ve often said this that I see investing in three buckets, which is, again, your growth mode. So that’s a little bit about what you talked about in your three-step process. So you’re building and growing, and then you’re stabilizing, and then your third bucket is protection. And most people are going to spend time in two buckets at a time, but disproportionately in one versus the other. So when you’re first starting out, you’re spending probably 80% in growth, 20% in stabilizing. And then at some point you’ve grown enough and you’re finishing your stabilizing, so you’re spending the majority of your time and you’re stabilizing, and then you’re spending 10, 20% of your time in protection.
And me, protection means paying off assets, right? We don’t truly own the assets until we pay off the lender. And so protecting what you’ve built is part of my process. And part of my investing goal has always been to be able to leave paid off assets for my children. Part of my goal is that my children will be able to be the people that they’re called to be and not the people they have to be to make money. I want them to have income producing assets so that if they are called to do something that doesn’t make a lot of income, they’ve got some income coming in. So for me to do that, I got to get to paying some of these off. And I had this realization over the past couple of years that like, all right, well, how many do I need paid off to leave to my children?
And so I have done all the math and built all the spreadsheets and I have literally outlined the properties that I want to keep. I’ve outlined the properties that I’d like to keep but would be willing to sell and the properties that I absolutely want to sell to be able to achieve that goal of paying off the chunk of the portfolio that I want to pay off. And so I am selling assets as a part of that process. We’re selling assets and then we’re refocusing that money to pay off some of the other assets in our portfolio that we want to keep. You’re selling because it’s a good time right now. We’re finding great deals on the market. So it’s a great time to take some of that money and go buy other assets if that’s part of what you want to do in your real estate business.
But I think what I want people to take away from this part of our conversation is that both of us got started, built a business, operated our lives, and then saw how our lives have changed over time, saw how our businesses were running over time, and now we’re making adjustments based on our current or new end goals that we want for ourselves. And that’s like the best thing about real estate is you can build any life that you want and you can position your portfolio to provide or help providers support the life that you want. That’s the goal. This is what everyone should be doing at some level.

Dave Meyer:
Hell yeah. That’s the whole reason you do it.

Henry Washington:
Right. Does it mean everybody needs to sell something right now? No, but it does mean that you need to be looking at your portfolio, looking at your business and looking at your life and saying, “What is it I want for my life in the next one year, five years, and 10 years?” And then make decisions based on those things. And if the decision is selling gets you to those goals in the most efficient way, then you absolutely should be looking at selling.

Dave Meyer:
I couldn’t agree more. If you understand your goals, that’s how you start to decide if you’re going to sell. I want to get into that a little bit to help people understand what to sell, if they should sell. And it really does all start with goals. I think you heard Henry and I both just say that. I want to have a lower headache portfolio. Henry wants to de- risk his portfolio by reducing debt, both fantastic goals. It really makes these decisions about what to buy and what to sell a lot easier if you have clarity about those goals. But before we get into that, Henry, I got to address the elephant in the room. Are you selling at all at all because of market conditions and you think prices are going down or you just don’t like what’s happening in the housing market? Is that influencing your decision at all?

Henry Washington:
A very small percent of that is true. The market conditions are playing into it because it’s such a good time to sell because values are still up. And even though expenses and a lot of the things that come along with real estate are also up, what you’re really not seeing nationwide is value starting to drop a ton because of those things. In some markets, yes, values are coming down a little bit, but because values are stable, I’m able to capitalize by selling assets that make sense for me to sell and getting a decent chunk of money for doing so. Does that mean I’m doing it because I think values are going to plummet in the next year or two? No, but I know where they are now and that’s the decision I can make. I’m not guessing about where they’re going to be in the future.
I’m taking advantage of where they are now.

Dave Meyer:
Right. You know your goal, you’re responding to market conditions. That’s exactly what any investor in any asset class should be doing. And I’ll be honest, the way I’m going about it is definitely because of market conditions, but not because I think there’s going to be a market crash. I just think that the types of deals that worked for the last 10 years and the types of deals that are going to work in the next 10 years are a little bit different. Going forward, you’ve all heard my thesis. I think we’re not going to have a lot of appreciation in the next couple of years. And so I’m looking at these deals that I have and I say, if they’re not earning me solid cash flow, if they were just kind of those like mid-cash flow deals and they’re not going to appreciate, I don’t want them.
What’s the point of holding onto an old building that’s not going to appreciate and has mid-cash flow? I still made a ton of money off those deals from appreciation, but they have served their useful purpose. And I actually think, I know gasp, I think cashflow opportunities are going to get better in the next couple of years. Prices, in my opinion, are going to come down. I think rents are going to start going up in the next couple of years, and that’s going to make better opportunity for cashflow. So I’m just shifting towards those kinds of deals. And if they appreciate, fantastic, but I’m just changing a little bit what I prioritize, not because I am like, “Oh my God, these properties are going to tank.” It’s just like, no, there’s better opportunity out there and I can do better things with my time and money.

Henry Washington:
Yeah, I think that makes a lot of sense. And it’s actually a great transition into the next question I wanted to ask you. And that’s basically around for those investors that are listening, especially the ones who have a portfolio, maybe they have five properties, maybe they have 25 properties. What kinds of properties should investors consider selling or what trigger points should they be looking for in their assets to determine if it’s time to sell it or if it’s time to hold onto it? And I’d love to hear your thoughts right after this break. All right, I am back with Dave Meyer on the BiggerPockets Podcast and we’re talking about selling it all. No, we’re not selling everything. We are selling some assets.

Dave Meyer:
Buyer sales. If you want to buy Henry’s entire portfolio for 50 cents in the dollar, give them a call.

Henry Washington:
We are talking about selling assets. And before the break, I asked Dave, what trigger points or things should people be looking for in their portfolio to maybe tap them on the shoulder and say, “Hey, you might want to think about selling this asset.” Given that we are in a position right now where values are stable for the moment, so if they want to take advantage of values where they are, what should they be looking for?

Dave Meyer:
I love this question. This is one of my favorite things to talk about. And I’m going to give you one Dave nerdy analytical response and one maybe more applicable response. So the one nerdy thing is I always look at a metric called return on equity. It’s just basically a measure of how efficiently your money is earning you a return. And I look at that for all of my properties a couple times a year and the ones that aren’t doing well, I compare them to what I could go out and buy in the market today. And so if I go and see my return on equity on XYZ property is 9% and I can go buy a fresh deal and it’ll get me 12% or 15%, I’m probably going to sell it and just 1031 it into another deal. And this is actually really common for return on equity to decline over the lifetime of your deal.
And it’s a good thing. It’s a sign that your deal actually went really well because what happens is usually if you do like a renovation or a Burr or some type of value add, you get a lot of equity built up upfront. And that’s great because you make a lot of money in those first few years, but then you have a lot of equity trapped in those deals. And so your efficiency of how well you’re using that equity goes down. And so I always try to do this thing called, I call it benchmarking. I’m like, that’s why I always look at deals because even if I’m not planning to buy, I’m always looking at deals in the markets I invest in and be like, okay, I could get a 12% ROE, I can get a 15% and I compare that to my other deals. And that’s like the sort of the analytical way I do it.
The other way, honestly, a lot of it is just vibes. And I know that sounds ridiculous, but it’s totally true. It’s so true. Everyone who owns property knows this. You have that city property that you don’t want to own anymore. And it’s just like, sometimes you’re like, “Oh, you made me all this money.” I’ve gotten to the point where I can be not emotional about it and be just very objective about it and be like, “I don’t want to own it. It’s annoying to me. ” I actually, I went to Denver last week because I wanted to go see a couple properties, a major rehab going on in one of them, and I just wanted to see them. And I walked into one of those properties and I was like, “Uh-uh, nope, uh-uh, not for me anymore.” It was what I thought I was going to hold onto forever.
And I looked around and I was like, “I’m getting rid of this thing. I don’t want it. ” So there’s just part of it. And I think you and I probably have the ability to do that because you can look around a property and be like, “This is just going to be annoying forever.” And you could just feel that. And I was like, “I don’t want to be annoyed forever, so I’m selling it.

Henry Washington:
” Yes, that is absolutely true. I have walked into properties, rentals that I’ve bought and just in the middle of a turn and went, “I don’t want this. I don’t want this anymore. I don’t want to be here.” Absolutely. That’s so true. I love it. Selling based on vibes and we joke about this, but there is absolute truth to it. And the more seasoned you get as an investor, the more you’ll start to understand those things and those feelings.

Dave Meyer:
That’s right.

Henry Washington:
So for me, I’m looking at, is the property performing like I underwrote it to perform? And Dave and I are similar in that we underwrite very conservatively. And so most of the time properties end up performing better than I underwrote, but sometimes they still don’t. And you have to know that so that you can make a decision. And it’s not just like, “Oh, it’s underperforming. Sell it. ” For me, it’s like, all right, is it underperforming? All right. If it is underperforming, then what is it going to cost me in terms of money and time to get it to perform like I want? And before I even look at that, I think through, is this the kind of property I want to own 10 years from now? So if the answer is yes, I want to keep it for a long term. I love the location.
Then I look at what’s it going to cost me in time and money to get it to perform like I want? And then once I do that, I can make an informed decision. I can decide whether, let’s say it’s going to cost me $25,000. Now my decision isn’t do I sell it or do I spend 25 grand? Now that decision is like, do I spend the 25 grand to get it to perform or is my money better spent selling it and then taking the money I would’ve spent on that property and buying another asset? And that’s based on you understanding your market and your buy box because right now what I am seeing is great buying opportunities. So if this was 2025 or late 2024, I might consider fixing an asset and keeping it because the cash on cash return I would get from buying a new asset was not as good as it is now.
And so now the decision in this year might be, “Hey, let’s just take this and go buy a different asset because I can get so much better numbers. I can get a higher return for that money that I’m going to spend.” Whereas a year ago, that wasn’t the

Dave Meyer:
Case.That makes so much sense. I think Henry and I could probably do this by vibes because we just have, as an investor over time, you will get there if you’re not there yet. You will just be able to walk into a building and be like, “This has potential or it doesn’t.” You just know if you know your market well, if you know what construction costs, you know what rents are going to be in the area, you know what people want to rent or buy, you’ll be able to know. And the vibes that I’m talking about is basically just a cost benefit analysis that you’re doing in your head. I’ll actually just give you an example. I’m choosing to sell a property. It’s a duplex. I got a great buy on it. I haven’t hold it that long, but because I’ve got a good buy, I could sell it and make money off the equity.
But the layout of one of the units is weird. And I was getting quotes for doing the layout. I think it was going to be around 30, 35 grand to do the renovation. The amount that it was going to increase my rents was like 200 bucks a month, which is not very good in my opinion. And it was going to be 30 grand to … I talked to my agent, maybe the ARV was 50 higher than it was going to be. It’s like, so am I going to invest 35 grand to make 15 grand in equity and 200 bucks a month in rent? And I was like, no, I could just keep that property, but it’s not going to rent very well as well as I want to with the weird layout. And I have a lot of equity that I’ve built in this property.
So why wouldn’t I go find a property, find a project where I could do a better Burr, do the kind of renovation I’m talking about where the numbers are just better, where it’s going to increase my rent more than 200 bucks a month, where I’m going to earn more than 15K in equity for investing 35K. For me, it didn’t take that mathematical analysis. I could just walk in and be like, okay, this is not going to work. But that’s kind of what’s going on in my head. And if you’re sort of a newer investor, you should just do the numbers, get the quotes, run the comps and figure that out. And I think you’ll see that sometimes selling actually makes a lot of sense.

Henry Washington:
Yes. Some of the other reasons I sell, look, I’d be lying to you if I told you I hadn’t sold a property that positively cash flows just because it’s a big pain in my butt. So sure, I will sell a headache property.

Dave Meyer:
Well, what kind of headaches? I’m just curious because I have a good example I’m thinking of this, but what do you see as headaches? Is it maintenance?

Henry Washington:
Two reasons. It’s either maintenance or it’s just super hard to rent. When it rents, great. Cashflow’s great, but maybe something weird about it makes it hard to rent. And that is a big headache in my butt because vacancies kill you.

Dave Meyer:
That’s the one I was thinking of. I sold a property because my neighbor just kept bothering my tenants and they kept moving out. I would get all of these great tenants and they were just like, “This guy, Ed,” that’s his real name. So weird and so- We are not

Henry Washington:
Hiding names to protect the innocent here.

Dave Meyer:
I won’t share his last name, but Ed, dude, killing me. And I would have these great tenants and they’re like, “We’re sorry we love the house, but we’re leaving because this guy won’t leave us alone.” And I tried talking to him and eventually I was like, “You know what? I was just going to do something where I don’t have to deal with this guy because he’s annoying to me. ” And I think the key is I could do that because I had a good buy, because I executed my business plan and I had already built enough equity in this property that if I went to sell, the transaction costs aren’t going to kill me. I think the problem you get in, and I think that we should talk about this a little bit, is when you’re forced to sell within first year, two years, that’s where I think you really can get in a little bit of trouble.
That’s the situation that I think I personally try and avoid.

Henry Washington:
All right, Dave, since we are landlords talking about selling properties either because they got the wrong vibes or the numbers don’t make sense to us or we’ve maxed out the equity, are we saying that new investors should be scared to buy properties from older investors? Hold that thought because I want to hear your answer right after the break. All right, we are back on the BiggerPockets Podcast. I am here with Dave Meyer and we are talking about why we are selling off some of the properties in our portfolios. And some of the things that we’ve covered is basically understanding and tracking the data for your portfolio so that you can make informed decisions about what you should or shouldn’t sell based on what your return on investment’s going to be for selling based on whether you think you could buy something new that’s going to give you a better return than either fixing or selling something that you currently have.
But just in general, being able to evaluate your portfolio on a consistent basis and make informed decisions. I believe that every real estate investor has to do this and has to do this well if they want to maximize their portfolio. But we’ve been talking a lot about what we are selling or why we’re selling some of these things, and I bet it’s giving some new aspiring real estate investors pause about buying properties from old crotchety landlords like us.
So I want to hear your thoughts. Should new investors be scared to buy properties from landlords who’ve owned properties for ages?

Dave Meyer:
Absolutely not. I actually think it’s some of the better opportunities, to be honest. I have definitely sold properties where I’m just like, “I don’t have the hustle anymore to do this. ” Or my portfolio is so big that I don’t want to dedicate all of my time to this one property, but I’ve definitely left meat on the bone when I’ve sold properties to people. I think that this happens quite a lot because investors like Henry and I, or you talk to James who’s always trading out properties as well, it’s just sometimes it’s not your buy box at that perfect time, but different properties work well for different people at different times in their life. So I can just think of properties I’ve sold that would’ve been a perfect live and flip or a perfect house hack for someone, but I’m not house hacking anymore. So it’s not a good idea.
I’ll also just throw out, I was looking at a deal, a landlord who owned a couple of properties, it was three, four units in a neighborhood I like, and unfortunately he passed away and his wife had the property, didn’t know what to do with it. There had been a lot of deferred maintenance over the last couple of years, but I was like, “This is a pretty good deal. The deferred maintenance rents are well under, so they’re pricing it low, but I can actually make something out of this. ” And I think you see that a lot with older landlords is that they don’t keep up with current rents and that’s an opportunity. Are there some people who are going to demand top dollar and they’re hiding something? Yes. But if you do your due diligence, I think actually buying portfolios or buying from old landlords is probably one of the better options right now.

Henry Washington:
Yeah. I mean, a solid chunk of my portfolio came from landlords getting out of the business, but this is the entire point of the underwriting and due diligence process That’s what it’s for. Focus your time and efforts on getting really good at understanding your buy box and getting really good at analyzing deals and making the offer that makes sense for you, not the offer that you think the seller will accept.

Dave Meyer:
That’s right.

Henry Washington:
And I think that new investors especially get caught up in this. They either don’t make an offer because they just assume the seller will say no, and so they make a decision for the seller, or they increase their offer because they feel like what they need to pay is too low, but they really want the deal. And so they fudge the numbers a little bit and increase their offer because they don’t want to hurt somebody’s feelings. You cannot do this. Do not be afraid to buy from anyone.

Dave Meyer:
That’s right.

Henry Washington:
Get good at underwriting. Get good at analyzing. Get good at knowing what questions to ask about deals to give you the comfort you need for that deal and then buy the ones that work. It doesn’t matter who owns it. Control what you can, and you can control how you underwrite, you can control what you offer. What a seller wants for their property is between them and Jesus. That ain’t got nothing to do with what I can pay for it. And that goes for me too, as a seller of properties right now. Just because I’m asking 500,000 for a property doesn’t mean that’s what somebody has to offer me. If somebody offers me something for 250 for it, I’ll look at it. Does it mean I’m going to accept it? Nah, but shoot your shot.

Dave Meyer:
Yeah, 100%. That makes total sense. This property I was just talking about, the one that the duplex I decided to post on the market, my agent was like, “We could list it for, I think it was like 290, 295.” He’s like, “Or I might be able to find someone off market will buy it for 285.” And I was like, “Great, sell for 285.” For me, the time is more important. And so someone could be walking into 10 grand of equity because I don’t want to be inconvenienced. And that’s just how it works.That’s how a lot of investors work. Sometimes you trade money for convenience. And if you’re an early investor, you trade convenience for money.That’s kind of the way this works. If you are going to hustle and go do these things, maybe you’re going to be a little inconvenience, but you can get 10 grand of equity off me today.
That’s just how investors work. So I think that’s why you need to be able to underwrite, understand what the value of this property is and be able to understand where it fits, what role it plays in your portfolio. And you can absolutely find good deals from existing landlords.

Henry Washington:
What would you say should be the timeframe that investors should be analyzing their portfolio? Should they do this once a month, once a year? What do you think makes the most sense?

Dave Meyer:
I would recommend most people do it twice a year, at least. I probably do it quarterly because I’m just a crazy person, but I think twice a year is the right number for most people. You can get away with once a year if you just know you’re not going to do anything that year. Sometimes you’re like, “I’m so busy. I have a new job. I have a new baby.” Whatever. You’re just like, “Fine.” But if you’re trying to grow your portfolio and actively manage, I think six months, something like that.

Henry Washington:
I think you should be doing it in the winter and in the spring at a minimum, because it may take you a year to get a property ready to sell so that you can maximize the value. It may take you six months. And so if you want to be strategic with it, like we are right now, I am listing several properties that I probably could have listed a couple of months ago, but we held off on listing them until this spring and we were actively getting those ready to sell so that we could list them in the spring. So had I not been looking at this six months ago, I wouldn’t be able to capital eyes on what I’m hoping is more bang for my buck by having them ready to go and put on the market in spring. It may be that you’ve got to non-renew a tenant and just put them on month to month so that you can be ready to list that property.
It may be that you’ve got to get a tenant out so that you can do some refreshes to that property before you list it. There are things that are going to have to happen with a property before you can get the most value out of it. And if you’re not doing this at least twice a year, you’re going to miss out on opportunities to list them in favorable times in order to maximize the return that you’re going to get for selling that property.

Dave Meyer:
That just kind of happened to me. There’s this property I’m thinking about selling. I haven’t decided yet, but I was looking at this in January and I was like, oh, the lease isn’t up till the end of July. So there’s no reason for me to really think about it. But I said in my calendar, think about this again in April because then I would have three months to figure out whether or not I’m going to sell it, talk to the tenant if they’re going to re-up, just do the analysis. It sort of just reminds you. And I know if you only have one property, you probably know when your leases are up, but when you get to a bigger portfolio, you forget. And so you just kind of need to be doing this continuously. I think that makes a lot more sense. So Henry, before we get out of here, one last question.
What do you say to the people who say buy and never sell? What’s your last piece of advice for people listening here?

Henry Washington:
I think buying never sell is just unrealistic advice. Let me give you an example. If I bought a hundred year old house, and even if I spent some money renovating that property and now I’m 20 years in, well, now that house is 120 years old. If the market is favorable in terms of being able to buy something that’s going to give me a higher cash on cash return than the property that I currently own, even though I’ve been paying on it for 20 years,
If the maintenance is kicking you in the teeth, it may make sense to sell that asset to go buy a better quality asset because my goals and what I want from my family and what I want out of my real estate business, that older property is not the best fit for my goals. So it’s too much of a blanket statement to say you should never sell. Sometimes you just got to sell an asset because you might need some cash. I think people who say they never sell is crazy to me. That just means to me, I just think you have a bank account full of money and you never, ever, ever have to worry about any of the expenses involved in real estate because you’re just flush with cash all the time.

Dave Meyer:
Yep. I mean, it doesn’t make any sense. I’m glad we’re doing this episode. And part of the reason I wanted to do it right now is because the other day, my real estate agent in Denver just sent me a text and was like, “This property that I used to own and sold just hit the market again.” So I’m just going to give you the numbers right now. I bought this in 2010. It was my first deal. Bought it in 2010 for 462. I sold it in 2018, so eight years later for $1.025 million. So huge, huge return. I had three partners on that deal, but huge return there, right? Massive. But it was a pain in the butt. It was just because we had some issues with tenants, we had break-ins. It was a pain in my butt. Know what they’re selling it for now?
1.050. So I made about $600,000, and then in the eight years since, people have made $25,000. I’m just saying, I haven’t timed all of them that well, but I just want to show that I took that money. I 1030 to wonder into two other deals that have done very well. And I just think I saw the writing on the wall that the property had reached its maximum age. Now, this might go back on scaring people from buying from people like I said. But I just want to show people that this actually works. I didn’t pull all my money out of the market. I reinvested it. Those deals have done well. I’ve actually sold both of those deals and I’ve reinvested those again. So that’s my style of investing. I like optimizing, but I just want to show you that it actually works. Had I held onto that deal forever, like everyone said you should have, I would’ve made a lot less money.
So I just want to give you some examples and I have plenty more where this actually works. So just think critically about the best way to use your time and money. That’s the job of the investor and selling is a crucial tool in your tool belt as an investor.

Henry Washington:
Again, I know people are listening to that and thinking, oh, you got lucky in time in the market. And was there some luck to it? Sure. But there’s a lot of experience and research to that too. At the beginning of this episode, you talked about you think that values are going to either stay flat or come down a little bit over the next few years. And if you’ve been in this business for the last five years, you know we got huge equity bumps in between 2020 and like early 2023, like drastic equity bumps. And so if you have an understanding of real estate in general, what’s going on on a national perspective and then diving deeper into what’s going on locally in terms of values, it can help you make decisions like this. So what Dave is essentially saying is, “I don’t think I’m going to get a massive equity bump in the next few years.” So if I’m going to sell something, now’s probably a good time to do it because it’s not like I’m going to miss out on massive amounts of equity by selling that asset over the next couple of years.
So it’s not just luck. It is critical thinking and it is understanding your market and knowing what data points are important to those things.

Dave Meyer:
I think in the kind of market, in a buyer’s market that we’re in, it’s a good time to reload right now. It’s a good time to take stock and say, “Hey, my portfolio has been great. I am super grateful for everything that it’s done for me so far. Might need to change what it looks like a little bit for the next phase of my investing career.” And that’s where I’m at, but I encourage people to think like that all the time, every year. Think, is this the right portfolio for me at this point in my life? And if not, bite the bullet, sell some stuff, reallocate, use some of your money, have fun, go on vacation, whatever you want to do.

Henry Washington:
Buy the Lambo, post it on social

Dave Meyer:
Media.

Henry Washington:
Tell everybody how to get rich in six years.

Dave Meyer:
That is what I’m going to do. What’s this property? What’s this two block sells? They’re going to go buy a Lambo.

Henry Washington:
Oh gosh, that’d be the day. That’d be the day.

Dave Meyer:
Yeah.

Henry Washington:
For the record, Dave will not do that. Dave would buy like a brand new forerunner before he buys a Lambo and then drive it for the next 50 years is what he would do. All right everybody, thank you so much for joining us on this episode of the BiggerPockets podcast. Again, it is okay to sell assets. Just be strategic about when and how you do it. And in order to do that, you’re going to need information, which means you need to have your accounting and bookkeeping in order so you know which assets in your portfolio are ripe for selling. And you’re going to need to understand a little bit about the real estate market so that you can know if it is a good time to actually turn around and try to sell those properties. But don’t listen to anybody that tells you you should never sell.
You can’t make blanket statements. Every investor has a reason for investing. Every investor has a life. So build your business and make business decisions around the performance of your assets and the life you want to live. And I think you will be a much happier investor than trying to hang onto something just because you think you’re supposed to. As always, this is Henry Washington. He is Dave Meyer. We appreciate you being here and we’ll see you on the next episode of the BiggerPockets Podcast.

 

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20 High-Paying Remote Jobs You Can Get Without a Bachelor’s Degree


Johnson / Money Talks News

For decades, the four-year degree was sold as the only ticket to a decent paycheck. That story is finally falling apart. According to TestGorilla’s State of Skills-Based Hiring 2023 report, 73% of companies surveyed used some form of skills-based hiring in 2023 — up from 56% the year before. Translation? The “bachelor’s required” line on a job posting is often just a leftover template.

Has American Express Dropped the 5 Card Limit?


American Express 5 Card Limit

American Express has long had a limit of five credit cards that a customer can hold at any given time. This limit didn’t include charge cards or Amex cards issued by other banks.

But a report on reddit points at a chat rep saying that American Express no longer has this five card limit. The customer was chatting specifically to close a card because of that limit, and the chat rep replied:

“To clarify, we no longer have a five‑card limit. All applications are reviewed individually and are subject to approval based on several factors.

If the number of existing cards is the reason an application cannot be approved, this will be clearly indicated at the time of submission. In those cases, the application will not remain in a pending status—you will immediately see a message stating that you’ve reached the maximum number of allowable cards, and the application will be declined for that reason.”

This seems like very specific information. The chat rep acknowledges that the five card limit existed, but has now been dropped. That information could still be wrong, as it has been the case with lots of information provided by phone and chat reps in the past.

In this case the rep says that there is still some kind of limit when it comes to the total number of American Express cards that you can hold. Once you’ve reached the maximum number of allowable cards, you will be told so once you submit an application.

Have you applied for any Amex cards recently? Leave a comment and let us know if you have been able to go above that 5 card limit!

Could this be the end of green building standards in Ontario — again?




Premier Doug Ford’s government is taking another swipe at green standards while nixing a requirement for municipalities to build climate change goals into their official plans.