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Montreal-area home sales down nearly 7% in May amid economic pressures: board




Montreal-area home sales fell 6.8% on a year-over-year basis in May as the province’s real estate board says median prices continued to rise.

Stop Publishing More Content. Here’s What Actually Works.


An accounting firm at about $2.5 million in revenue came to me after publishing a monthly blog post for 3 years. Mostly tax updates and compliance news. Traffic was flat. Inbound inquiries were rare. They were thinking about hiring an agency to triple their output.

The right move was the opposite: publish less, go deeper, commit to 3 content pillars.

I see this pattern constantly. Founders who aren’t getting results from content assume the problem is volume. So they add more posts, more channels, more tools. And they get the same results, faster.

Producing more generic content doesn’t fix a content problem. It amplifies it.

The actual problem

Most small business content doesn’t have a job. It’s a series of posts with no spine underneath. Topics that seemed interesting that week. Updates that felt like they should be covered. Technically useful stuff that adds up to nothing.

In a market where AI is generating generic content at industrial scale, being part of the noise layer is bad for your brand. The customers worth winning have started to recognize it and tune out.

Content that actually works does one thing: it earns trust before the customer has to talk to you. It signals that you understand their situation, you’ve thought about it seriously, and you have something specific to say.

Pillars, not posts

Pick 3 content pillars anchored to your ideal client’s real problems. Every piece of content you publish goes to one of them.

I know how this sounds. Organization. A content calendar thing. It’s actually the hardest strategic decision most founders avoid making.

Most businesses publish what the founder was thinking about that week. After a few years you have a body of work with no accumulated weight. A prospect can’t tell what you’re actually expert in.

Three pillars held over 2 or 3 years produces a different result. The body of work has shape. The depth on each pillar becomes visible, and that visibility is what earns trust.

Three is the right number. Two is too narrow. Four dilutes. Three works.

Each pillar has to pass 3 tests: anchored to a real customer problem, an area where you have genuine depth, and one you can publish against for 3 years without getting bored. If it won’t survive that last test, it’s a topic, not a pillar.

Hubs, not archives

Content organized under hub pages compounds over time. Content organized as a reverse-chronological blog buries your best work within weeks.

The reverse-chronological blog is an artifact from when blogs were journals. It made sense then. When content is meant to be a long-term asset serving both readers and AI retrieval systems, it doesn’t.

Under hub pages, your best work stays discoverable and accumulates authority. When you publish something new, link it to the appropriate hub and update the hub to reference it. Over time the hub becomes a genuine knowledge center. The blog archive becomes a graveyard.

Repurposing, not more production

The founders who win on content get maximum leverage out of each substantial piece. Volume isn’t the advantage.

The model: one substantial piece per week or two, repurposed into 8 to 10 smaller assets. A podcast episode becomes a hub page article, a few LinkedIn posts, one email to the list, a short video. A long article becomes an email series, a handful of social posts, eventually a book chapter.

This is where AI actually earns its keep. Taking original thinking and adapting it across formats is something AI does well. Producing original thinking from scratch isn’t. Keep the thinking yours. Use AI for the reformatting.

The point of view problem

The market is full of AI-produced content that reads like AI-produced content. Generic, balanced, readable, forgettable.

The content that still earns attention, gets remembered, and gets shared has a point of view. It takes a position. It says something the customer hasn’t heard, or says something familiar in a way that makes it land differently.

AI can’t produce a real point of view because it’s averaging the existing corpus. Your specific perspective isn’t in there.

Use AI to produce. The thinking is still your job.

Content without a point of view was dismissible in 2020. It’s invisible in 2026.

One thing to do this week

Name your 3 content pillars on one page. If you can’t narrow to 3, the narrowing is the work. Three is not a formatting choice. It’s the strategic constraint that forces real decisions.


Content strategy is step 4 of a seven-step system I’ve been refining for over 20 years. The full framework is in my new ebook, “7 Steps to Small Business Marketing Success.” Get it at dtm.world/7steps.

[NH] Bank Of New Hampshire Up To $150 Checking Bonus


Offer at a glance

  • Maximum bonus amount: $150
  • Availability: NH
  • Direct deposit required: Yes, no minimum mentioned 
  • Additional requirements: See below 
  • Hard/soft pull: Unknown 
  • ChexSystems: Unknown
  • Credit card funding: Unknown 
  • Monthly fees: $6-15
  • Early account termination fee: Unknown 
  • Household limit: None listed
  • Expiration date: None listed

The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Bank Of New Hampshire is offering a bonus of up to $150 when you open a new checking account. Tiers are as follows:
    • Get $75 when you open a slate checking account and complete the following requirements within 60 days of account opening:
      • Spend $1,500 with debit card
      • Use Bill Pay
      • Set Up direct deposit
      • Mobile deposit at least one check
    • Get $100 when you open a granite checking account and complete the following requirements within 60 days of account opening:
      • Spend $2,000 with debit card
      • Use Bill Pay
      • Set Up direct deposit
      • Mobile deposit at least one check
    • Get $150 when you open a prestige checking account and complete the following requirements within 60 days of account opening:
      • Spend $3,000 with debit card
      • Use Bill Pay
      • Set Up direct deposit
      • Mobile deposit at least one check

The Fine Print

  • Account bonus of $75 will be paid in the account cycle following the 90 days from account opening, only if the bonus requirements are met.
  • Debit card spend excludes ATM transactions. Direct deposit must be from payroll, social security, pension, or government benefits to qualify.
  • You must maintain a positive daily balance in the checking account until the bonus is deposited to your account to be eligible.
  • Offer is exclusive and not transferable.
  • Bank will report the value of the offer to the IRS as applicable.
  • Minimum deposit to open the account is $50.
  • Please note, accounts that are part of product conversions, whether initiated by the Bank or the customer, do not qualify for “Countdown to Cash Bonuses” as the account number remains the same following the conversion.
  • All bank account bonuses are treated as income/interest and as such you have to pay taxes on them

Avoiding Fees

Monthly Fees

These have monthly fees from $6 – $25. 

  • Slate checking $6 monthly fee. To waive, conduct one of the following conditions in a given statement cycle:
    • Minimum of 10 debit card transactions
    •  Direct deposit
    •  Electronic account payment*
    • Automatic BNH loan payment. Must be established by Bank of New Hampshire’s loan department to qualify. Call to set up a qualifying loan payment with an existing BNH consumer loan/residential mortgage.**
    • Maintain a minimum $5,000 account balance. This Account must maintain a $5,000 average daily balance.
    • Mobile check deposit
  • Granite checking $10 monthly fee. To waive, conduct any two of the following conditions in a given statement cycle:
    • Minimum of 15 debit card transactions
    • Direct deposit
    • Electronic account payment*
    • Automatic BNH loan payment. Must be established by Bank of New Hampshire’s loan department to qualify. Call to set up a qualifying loan payment with an existing BNH consumer loan/residential mortgage.**
    • Maintain a minimum $5,000 account balance. This Account must maintain a $5,000 average daily balance.
  • Prestige checking $25 monthly fee. To waive: maintain a minimum $25,000 average relationship balance. Account must maintain $25,000 in combined average balances from checking, savings, money market, CDs, IRAs, investment or trust accounts to avoid the account pricing.

Early Account Termination Fee

Unsure if there is any EATF.

Our Verdict

Requirements for this small of a bonus are absurd, especially when you consider how difficult it is to keep the account fee free as well. There is also some verbiage in the terms that make this seem like it’s targeted. This is an easy pass. Find easier & bigger bank account bonuses by clicking here. 

Hat tip to reader Harry

Useful posts regarding bank bonuses:

  • A Beginners Guide To Bank Account Bonuses
  • Bank Account Quick Reference Table (Spreadsheet) (very useful for sorting bonuses by different parameters)
  • PSA: Don’t Call The Bank
  • Introduction To ChexSystems
  • Banks & Credit Unions That Are ChexSystems Inquiry Sensitive
  • What Banks & Credit Unions Do/Don’t Pull ChexSystems?
  • How To Use Our Direct Deposit Page For Bank Bonuses Page
  • Common Bank Bonus Misconceptions + Why You Should Give Them A Go
  • How Many Bank Accounts Can I Safely Open Within A Year For Bank Bonus Purposes?
  • Affiliate Links & Bank Bonuses – We Won’t Be Using Them
  • Complete List Of Ways To Close Bank Accounts At Each Bank
  • Banks That Allow/Don’t Allow Out Of State Checking Applications
  • Bank Bonus Posting Times

Management and business management exit exam blue print in afan oromo 2018



Management and business management exit exam blue print in afan oromo 2018
#exitexamtips,#Exitexamblueprint,#blueprint,#afaanoromoo,@Kookeeftube ,#exitexam,#2018,#2025

source

Should I Hold or Sell? (Rookie Reply)


Do you have home equity sitting in your primary residence? You could use it to buy your first or next rental property! There are several ways to do this, and in today’s episode, we’re sharing them so you can make your money work harder!

Welcome back to another Rookie Reply! Whether it’s a home equity line of credit (HELOC) or a cash-out refinance, there are multiple ways to access the equity in your home. But which option is best? Stay tuned and we’ll help you determine the right move for your situation.

Next, if you’re preparing to open an Airbnb, the days leading up to launch can be nerve-wracking. Thankfully, our resident short-term rental expert, Tony, has some game-changing tips that will help you create the best possible guest experience and bring in plenty of five-star reviews!

Finally, what do you do if your investment property hasn’t appreciated at all over the last one, two, or even five years? Should you hold or cut it loose? The answer is more nuanced than you might think, but we’ll help you reach the right decision for your real estate investing goals!

Ashley:
If you have equity sitting in a property right now, we are going to show you exactly how to put it to work and which tool to use to do it.

Tony:
And if you’ve been thinking about launching your first short-term rental, we’re covering what it actually takes to get up and running and to stand out on Airbnb from day one.

Ashley:
Plus, what do you do when you bought a property a year ago and it hasn’t appreciated on single dollar? We’ll give an honest review on this.

Tony:
This is the Real Estate Rookie Podcast. I’m Tony J. Robinson.

Ashley:
And I’m Ashley Kehr.

Tony:
And with that, let’s get into today’s first question. So question number one says, “I’m trying to decide my best course of action into the rental game. I have a lot of equity built up in my primary home and I’m debating whether I should do a cash out refinance or take out a HELOC. Interest rates were about the same, but the HELOC has a 15-year max term. I tend to hear more people take the cash out refinance option when keeping a property as a rental. Is this just to keep payments lower or are there other benefits? My goal is to have money for a down payment on my next property as well as some rehab money. Well, first, I think let’s just quickly define the differences between a cash out refinance and a HELOC. If you have equity in your primary residence, there’s a few ways you can tap into that.
One way is to sell that property. You just sell it and then whatever the difference is between what you owe on that property and what you sell it for minus any closing costs, you walk away with that amount, which you can then go deploy however you want. Another way to tap into that is doing what’s called a cash out refinance where you’re able to tap into some, generally not all, of that equity by replacing your existing loan with a new loan. And the difference between your existing loan amount and your new loan is what you get to take. Now, when you do that, typically, your loan terms will change. So it could mean your interest rate will change to whatever today’s rates are. Sometimes your payment could go up. If rates are higher, sometimes your payment could go down. I refinanced my primary residence when rates were super low, my payment went down.
But for a lot of folks, maybe your rate might go up or might stay the same. So that’s one way. And then the third option is the home equity line of credit. This is where your original loan stays in place. So the first mortgage that you have that remains there. And then you’re basically, you can think of it almost as like a credit card, but it’s the equity in your home that they’re using as collateral. So you get this line of credit that you can use or not use as you choose and you only pay for the amount that you actually use. So those are really the core three ways. I think for me personally, if you’ve got a really good interest rate in place right now, I would probably leave that there. So I would avoid doing a cash out refinance. I know it seems like you said interest rates were about the same, so maybe there’s not a whole heck of a lot of difference there.
But if you like where you’re at, I might leave that there. And I actually like the HELOC because A, it doesn’t increase your mortgage payment on your primary residence. And then you can go deploy that HELOC, maybe marry that with some hard money. And you can go out and start finding some rehab projects to where you can hopefully increase the value using what’s called the BIRS strategy where you buy it, you renovate it. And through that renovation, you increase the after repair value, increase the equity of that home, and then you can refinance from the back and hopefully recoup some of that HELOC capital that you spend. And I know plenty of folks who have built their entire portfolios off the backs of one HELOC. A HELOC, some hard money and some rehab projects can go a very, very long way.

Ashley:
So I actually went to the bank this morning to do a refinance. It was on a commercial property where took out some extra money. We pretty much had the property paid off until this morning when we took more money out of it. But while we were there, the lender was just like, we have this great rate going on right now for HELOCs. And this is where if you are going to get a HELOC on your property, you should watch for this where banks are doing promotions. So a lot of small local banks will do this, credit unions and their promotion was like 4% interest rate for six months and then it would go variable rate and go higher than it said expected between six to 8%. But the introductory rate is they said they just released it. It’s competitive towards other banks. They haven’t really looked.
But if you are going to do a HELOC, watch for that where you can get that introductory rate. And Tony, you just did this correct on a HELOC where you got an introductory rate. What was that interest rate and for how long?

Tony:
Dude, I want to say it was 5.99% for the first six months, but yeah, then it kind of goes to a traditional variable rate.

Ashley:
So think about it that if you have a plan, you want to use a HELOC to fund your down payment, if you can find a way to pay off that down payment within six months. So maybe you know that over the next six months, maybe you’re getting a bonus at work or something like that, but you want to buy this property now and you have a plan in place or you have additional discretionary W2 income that you can funnel. So instead of waiting to actually buy your property till you have it saved, you want to use your line of credit and then funnel money to your line of credit to rapidly pay it off. I don’t like it when people use their line of credit and like plan to pay it off over the next 10 years. I like the idea of a line of credit to be money that is used for a short period of time and then it is paid off and then is recycled and reused for something else too.
If you don’t have a plan in place to pay it off rapidly, that’s when I would actually go and do the refinance. But it depends what your interest rate is and maybe you don’t want to lose that interest rate, what you have on your current property and you want to go ahead and use that HELOC, but definitely shop around with different banks. The lender also said to me that they had such a slow first quarter. He’s like, “Please let me know if you are buying anything. We can make deals happen because we need the business. We have so much capital sitting. If you need to refinance anything, you’re going to buy anything. We’re getting really, really competitive because we had such a slow first quarter. So bring me anything you have and we’ll try to work something out for you. ” So that has never ever happened to me before where a lender is like begging me to bring in business.
It’s always me reaching out to the lenders and saying, “I got this deal. What do you got?” And blah, blah, stuff like that.

Tony:
But I think that’s a smart thing to remember is that for lenders, their product is the money and they have to sell their product in order to be a viable business. I think it’s important for us as the investors to realize that lenders want to lend out their money. They’re incentivized to do that. I also think that’s the benefit of going with smaller local banks where you can have that conversation and they can hopefully kind of point you in the right direction.

Ashley:
Coming up, someone is about to launch their very first Airbnb and wants to know how to do it right from day one. Tony is going to break that down right after this. Welcome back. Okay. Here’s our next question from the BiggerPockets Forums. I’m about to launch my very first Airbnb listing and I’d love to hear from those who’ve been in the short-term rental game. This is a furnish finder apartment in a well located area and I’ve taken care of the basics, cleaning, photos, wifi, et cetera. But I want to go the extra mile to ensure great guest experiences and maximize occupancy. What amenities or touches have made the biggest impact on your reviews? How do you handle check-ins and checkouts efficiently? Any tips on pricing strategies or dynamic pricing tools? What should I do or avoid in my first month of hosting and how do you manage communication and automate guest messages?
So Tony, you are the short-term rental expert. I am second expert on the show. So let’s go question by question. I’ll ask you each one of them and kind of give me your best. So they want to go the extra mile. First question is, what amenities or touches have made the biggest impact on your reviews?

Tony:
Yeah. I think part of this will vary from market to market depending on who your guest avatar is. If you’re launching a property in Scottsdale that’s catered towards bachelorette parties, that’s very different than a property that’s outside of Disney World that’s catering toward families, which is very different than a property in the Poconos, it’s a couple’s getaway. So I think the amenities that you offer really needs to reflect the guest avatar that your specific property is targeting. Now you said that it’s a furnished apartment and typically when I think apartments, I’m usually thinking more kind of metro or suburban type markets and oftentimes in those markets, maybe you’re getting less of the vacation traveler, more of the utility business traveler and what they’re typically looking for is more so like a place to lay their head and like a place to work and things of that sort.
So for me, I might focus more so on things that cater toward the remote worker or the traveling business professional. What are the things that they might need a dedicated workspace, super fast internet, maybe like a white noise machine so they can get some good sleep at the end of a long day. Business professionals, maybe it’s like a steamer for their dress clothes. So just think about the things that someone in that category of traveler might need and try and speak to those.

Ashley:
I would say for me, the biggest thing is cleanliness. People comment how good of job my cleaners have done. And then really the second thing would also be like the mattresses and the pillows. That’s like to be very specific, those are like things that people have called out, not like, oh, the coffee maker or other items in the house. They talk about how beautiful the design is or how nice the woods are or things like that. But to be very specific to talk about furniture or anything like that, the only thing they talk about is the beds, the mattresses and the pillows, how comfortable they are. Okay. So our next question here is how do you handle check-ins and checkouts efficiently?

Tony:
Great question. So first, Airbnb from the guest perspective, they can rate your overall listening. They can give you an overall rating for your property, but they can also rate you on different subcategories. And one of those subcategories is the actual check-in process. So it’s important that you get this right because if it’s a poor experience, and then folks will rate you poorly on that and it’ll pull down your ratings overall. For us, we try and automate as much of that as we can. So for us, we have on every single property, it’s a keyless entry pad and we set the code to be the last four digits of that guest’s phone number. So it’s super easy for them to remember. Hopefully most of us know our own phone number, so it’s not one that you’ll forget. And then we do a few things to streamline it even more.
Number one is that we send them their check-in code multiple times before they check in. Before, we would send it to them once and then the day of check-in they’d say, “Hey, where’s my code?” So now we send it to them a few days before check-in. We send it to them the morning of and we also resend it right before check-in as well. So we try and over-communicate the check-in instruction so it’s easy for them once they get there. They also get a link to a video that shows them how to use the keyless entry pad. And then even at some of our properties, we have a litle QR code next to the keyless entry pad that links to a video that shows them how to use it. So we try and make it as easy for them as possible to get into the property.
And then we also do our best to offer early check-in at no additional costs whenever we can. So our process is that once our cleaners finish clean, they’ll notify us and then we’ll immediately reach out to the guests. And our standard check-in time is 4:00 PM, but if the cleaner finishes up at 1:00 PM, then we’ll immediately reach out to the guest and say, “Hey, Ashley, just so you know, the property was finished a little bit early. We’ve gone ahead and updated your checking codes so it’s active now if you want to get a headstart on your vacation.” So that’s how we try and build some goodwill at the beginning of our state. So it’s a little bit of automation or a lot of automation and then a little bit of communication to make it easy for them.

Ashley:
So then the next question is any tips on pricing strategies or dynamic pricing tools?

Tony:
Bigest thing I’ll say is use a dynamic pricing tool from day one. Don’t try and price manually. Don’t use the Airbnb smart pricing tool, use a tool like PriceLabs. That’ll be the best bang for your buck to make sure that you’re maximizing occupancy on days when demand is high or maximizing revenue, I should say, on days when demand is high and maximizing occupancy on days when demand is low.

Ashley:
When I first started, I wasn’t using anything and then this was 2018 and I didn’t even know about property management software, what dynamic pricing was, but I would go in and set my basic rate of, I don’t know what it was, $90 a night and then I would manually go in and put like, “Oh, on Christmas day it’s 150 or whatever.” And I would have to remember going forward with the calendar to always update the calendar to reflect that before I even started implementing. Now I use Hospitable and I use their built-in dynamic pricing. Okay. Next question, how should I do or avoid what should I do or avoid in my first month of hosting?

Tony:
And I think in the first month, you want to try and do things that don’t scale. And what I mean by that is, I got this from a book, I think it was called the Lean Startup. It’s like an older book in the startup industry, but he talked about how a lot of these SaaS companies, when they first start, they do things that work when you have 10 customers that would never work when you have 10,000. So like for example, they’ll personally call every single one of those 10 customers to personally onboard them to get a better sense of how are they using the tool and what does it look like. You can do that when you have 10, you can’t do that when you have 10,000. I would like to try and take the same approach when you launch a short-term rental is when that first guest gets there, just call them and say, “Hey, you’re actually our first guest checking in.
We’re incredibly excited to host you. Because you are our first guest, there’s a chance that there might be some things that we need to improve upon. And if there is, please let us know. We’d love to have the opportunity to correct that for you. So hey, hope you have a great stay. Just give me a call if you need anything.” And so just like super white glove service for those first couple of guests. And if you can continue that on as you scale up your portfolio even better, but as you get to a certain point, it has become a litle bit harder to do some of those things. But I think the better relationship you can have for those first two guests, the better job you can get at extracting some feedback from them, then you can go and implement that into your listing or implement into your pricing strategy or implement into your guidebook or implement that into your own processes.
But trying to identify those things that don’t scale early on, I think will help a lot.

Ashley:
Yeah, there’s no way I’m calling someone, but what I did do when my cabin, our first several bookings, I tried to make a really great impression because I really wanted those five star reviews to start and to gain some traction. So handwritten notes, thanking them for selecting this Airbnb. The very first guest ever, we did champagne and went over the top and did let them know you’re a first guest ever, whatever. But then for everyone for probably like the first 10 bookings at each, and I still do this occasionally, not all the time because it’s gotten to be a lot of bookings now, which is great, but fresh flowers on the counter, water bottles, some sports drinks in the fridge, a little bit of snacks, just little things like that. Sometimes I would go down and get from the local bakery, get a pie or something from the bakery and write in the little note, I left you a treat in the fridge or something like that.
But sometimes things like that get tricky with allergies as to what you can give someone and things like that. But yeah, very important. I think their very first days because there can be hiccups you don’t know about them, but also this is kind of like building the foundation and your traction are those very few stays for your reviews. And then there was one more question they had and it was, how do you manage communication and automate guest messages?

Tony:
I think you hit it already, Ash. It’s just like having the right software. We both use Hospitable.That’s like I think one of the best tools for newer hosts to use a lot of functionality out of the box, but not so much that’s overwhelming. There are other tools out there that I think have maybe more like more customization like Guesty’s one of those that’s like super well integrated, has a lot of different bells and whistles, but maybe for the hostess just starting out, they might be overwhelmed by that. So I think Hospitable is a great mix of functionality with kind of ease of use for the folks who are just getting started and you can automate the vast majority of your communication when you do it that way.

Ashley:
Whenever someone asks me about Hospitable and its features and stuff, the first thing I always think about is how the AI will message for you and my brain just like can’t get past that. It’s like I black out anything else because it’s like that is just the best benefit to me is to, it reads all your past messages, it pulls in any document you submit to it about your property, you’re listing everything and it just messages for you and does it way nicer and more well better written, however I would say that, then I would do it because I- More well better here than you. Let alone write something out. But there’s also a button, like if there was something that I need to actually explain, I will write it out and then I will hit the little improve button and the AI will make it form into nice, complete sentences.
But it also saves me time because I can literally just input the key points I want to make and then it forms it into nice customer service friendly messages to send. All

Tony:
Right. We have one more question and this one is for any Ricky who has ever looked at their property after a year and wondered if they actually made the right decision. We’ll tackle that right after this quick break. All right guys, welcome back. Our last question today is one that I think a lot of people are quietly asking themselves but are afraid to say out loud. So the question says, “I bought a property in Stockbridge, Georgia about a year ago for $225,000. It looked like a solid long-term investment at the time, but I’m starting to question if it was the right move. Here’s where I stand. The purchase price was 225,000. The current value after one year is still around 225,000. That’s zero appreciation. Total invested so far is around $70,000, including down payment, closing costs, agent fees, and renovations. Cashflow is only about $200 per month before expenses.
I’m looking for some perspective from experienced investors. What would you do? Well, first, I just want to say at a macro level, when we talk about real estate appreciation, if you zoom out on any one year, it can feel maybe a little frightening if you don’t see a lot of change, but when we zoom out and we look at a fear or a 10-year window, I think that might be maybe a better kind of scope to have on whether or not a property is actually appreciating at the right clip because there could be a lot of things in the very short term that could influence the level of appreciation in a certain market. Maybe in Stockbridge, Georgia, maybe because of the purchase price, folks are a little bit more sensitive to interest rates in that market. In a market like the Bay Area of California where there’s a lot of high income in earning individuals, they’re a little less sensitive to the fluctuations in interest rate and purchase prices are like a million bucks for a starter home.
But in a market where the median home price is below the national average, maybe it’s just we need rates to come down a little bit in order for that appreciation to return. So I just say that to give some context that maybe one year might be too short of a window to gauge appreciation and we might need a slightly longer time duration. And then I think the second thing I would share is that 70K invested. You said $200 per month in cash flow before expenses. So I’m not sure how we’re saying cashflow, but then before expenses, because typically cash flow is after expenses. So maybe you’re talking about like occupancy or like CapEx, like some of those other things that we should be setting aside. But even still at 200 bucks per month, that equates to … We’ll just do the math here really quickly.
200 over the course of 12 months, that’s $2,400 per year, over $70,000, that’s about a three and a half percent return on your investment, which generally speaking isn’t all that great, especially maybe if this deal doesn’t end up producing a lot of appreciation in the long term, you can probably go out into some markets and get a better cash on cash return. So is it a good deal? I think it might be a little bit too early to say definitively, but I can say that I would ideally at least see a litle bit more cash flow, especially if that $200 doesn’t account for all of the expenses associated with that property.

Ashley:
Yeah. I agree with Tony that one year is too short of a period to determine. I mean, my properties, some of them, especially my very first one that I bought, barely cash flowed $100, but I held onto it for eight years and by then it was cash flowing great, it built up equity. So I started investing in 2013 and I look to now. So 13 years later, my properties have gone. They started out pretty low, they’ve gone up and now they’re kind of steadying out as to what their value is. And I think if you bought a property in 2017 even, my property value skyrocketed in 2021, but now it’s come back down a little bit. So you can’t like time the market and unless you’re hitting a super specific like that right before COVID and then buying during COVID or selling during COVID, you’re not going to see appreciation that people have seen in the last during that time period where they just saw a ton of appreciation in a very short period of time.
So I would say like hold the property unless you can take that $70,000 and you can put it into something else that is going to give you a better return. So it goes back to the basics, running the numbers. Look at the last 10 years of Stockbridge, Georgia. What did the appreciation look like in the last 10 years, in the last 20 years? Okay? Now use that same formula to go forward. What if you held this property for another 10 years? Based on that, what would you expect depreciation to be on the conservative side? Then you’re going to look at, okay, if I took that $70,000, what else could I invest in and what would that return be and how would that compare? You also look at increasing rent over time. How much has rent increased every year in this same town? So really it goes back to running the numbers and not just thinking about what’s the better solution actually run the numbers on both scenarios.
Well, thank you guys so much for joining us today. I’m Ashley, he’s Tony, and this has been an episode of Rookie Reply. We’ll see you guys in the next episode.

 

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Can You Retire Comfortably on $750,000 in Savings?


There are many people who reach retirement age with no money saved whatsoever. So if you’re about to retire and your IRA or 401(k) has a $750,000 balance, you should give yourself a pat on the back for building a sizable nest egg.

Even though $750,000 isn’t a fortune, it’s hardly a negligible sum. But whether it’s enough to retire comfortably really depends on you.

Image source: Getty Images.

The annual income a $750,000 nest egg might give you

You’re probably aware that if you’re retiring with $750,000, you may need to stretch that money across several decades. So it’s important to come up with a smart withdrawal strategy.

If you use the popular 4% rule, your $750,000 nest egg will give you $30,000 a year of income. That does not include inflation adjustments, which the 4% rule allows for.

You may also be able to withdraw at a slightly higher rate than 4% depending on how your money is invested, which could give you more leeway. If you maintain a larger concentration of stocks, your portfolio might gain enough year to year that you’re able to get more money out of it. And if you balance that larger stock allocation with a cash cushion, you can hold it more safely.

That said, your $750,000 nest egg probably isn’t your only source of retirement income. If you managed to save that much, there’s a good chance you worked and earned enough to be eligible for Social Security.

The average monthly Social Security benefit is about $2,081. On an annual basis, that’s about $25,000. Add that to your $30,000, and you’re looking at a yearly retirement income of $55,000, which gives you close to $4,600 per month to spend.

If you don’t have a mortgage, have modest expenses, and live in a relatively affordable part of the country, that monthly budget may be more than enough. If you still have a mortgage or rent payment to make each month and live in an expensive ZIP code, you might struggle.

Of course, you may be eligible for a larger Social Security benefit than what the average retiree collects today. And if you delay your claim past full retirement age, you could boost whatever benefit you’re eligible for by up to 24%. So that’s something to keep in mind if you’re approaching retirement with $750,000 and don’t want to extend your time in the workforce to save more.

How to make $750,000 in savings last longer

If you manage your $750,000 in savings wisely, you may find that you’re able to lead a comfortable lifestyle while also limiting your risk of running out of money. But it’s important to budget carefully and set priorities.

If keeping a larger home is important to you, you may need to cut back on leisure spending. If you’d rather have money for hobbies and travel, you may want to downsize or reduce other large expenses. Giving up a car, for example, may be doable if you retire in a walkable city with public transportation.

It’s also a good idea to consider part-time work if you feel your savings won’t give you the lifestyle you’re after. Thanks to the gig economy, you may be able to earn money in a flexible manner without locking yourself into a rigid schedule. Consulting in your former field may be an option, too.

You may also want to consider relocating if you live someplace where the cost of everything from food to property taxes is elevated. Moving to an area where you can save money across almost all of your spending categories could help you do more with the savings you have.

A $750,000 could easily make for a comfortable retirement if you pair it with a boosted monthly Social Security check and earnings from a job. Or, you may not need to work if you have modest expenses and needs. The key is to think about what you want your retirement to look like, set priorities, and choose smart investments so your portfolio keeps working for you.

Seattle’s NBA team left a $10 million franchise behind. Now the Storm is worth $425 million



In the first eight years of the Seattle Storm’s existence, the WNBA team was the “tail” on the “dog” of its NBA counterpart, the SuperSonics, according to Storm co-owner Ginny Gilder.

Both bought in 2001 for $200 million by an ownership group led by former Starbucks CEO Howard Schultz, the Sonics and the Storm shared a practice facility and entertainment complex KeyArena for games. Still, the men’s team brought in the cash and was responsible for the majority of the fixed costs.

But the Sonics—Seattle’s first professional sports franchise, founded in 1966—left the city in 2008 over an arena dispute, relocating to Oklahoma City and rebranding as the Thunder. That same year, a group of local businesswomen including Gilder, formed Force 10 Hoops LLC and bought the Storm for $10 million, or just 5% of the total value of the two-team package Schultz purchased years before.

Over the next two decades, the Storm grew into a franchise with an estimated value of $425 million, among the top five of the WNBA’s 13 franchises—all of which have exploded in value amid the league’s catapulting popularity. The team tallied four championships, all with 13-time All-Star Sue Bird, who, after her 2022 retirement, joined Force 10 Hoops as a Storm’s owner in 2024.

There’s a good chance Seattle will not be a one-team basketball town for much longer. NBA Commissioner Adam Silver has said he’s focused on the return of the SuperSonics as part of the league’s expansion, with the team potentially resuming play in Seattle as early as 2028. 

The ownership of the Seattle Kraken NHL team is the parent of One Roof Sports and Entertainment, which is positioning itself as the next owner of Seattle’s revived NBA franchise.

While the Sonics were the foundation of basketball in Seattle, Gilder and the rest of the Storm’s ownership spent the last 16 years building the very basketball culture the NBA now wants to re-enter. To them, the return of the Sonics is not just an opportunity for the Storm to celebrate the transformation of women’s sports as the main act; it’s the chance to grow Seattle as a sports town, period. 

“It raises the profile of basketball even more…so that you’ll now have pro-basketball pretty much 12 months a year in Seattle,” Gilder told Fortune. “It’s the Sonics and the Storm; it’s the Storm and the Sonics. It’s bread and butter, apple pie and vanilla ice cream. They belong together.”

‘I majored in equity’

Gilder was not planning to become an entrepreneur, but she did grow up an athlete. Before she was selected to participate in the 1980 Olympic Games in Moscow (an event U.S. athletes would boycott but receive Congressional Gold Medals for years later) and won silver in quadruple sculls at the 1984 games in Los Angeles, Gilder rowed at Yale, where she received her bachelor’s in history in 1979.

At 17, Gilder joined more than a dozen of her women’s crewmates in protesting Yale’s treatment of women athletes. At the time, Yale’s boathouse had no women’s locker room, and women would wait on the bus in the winter for the men’s team to shower. About 19 members of Gilder’s crew team went to athletic director Joni Barnett’s office and stripped naked, with “Title IX” scrawled on their bodies in blue felt tip pen. Yale added a women’s locker room to the boathouse the next year. 

“I got my degree in history, but I majored in equity, in access to opportunity,” Gilder said.

Though a New Yorker by birth, Gilder became a Storm fan in 2005, the year after the team won its first championship. 

“I loved what the team represented,” she said, “And I loved the opportunity to try to make something happen on a more global scale, not be satisfied with the status quo.”

Two years later, Gilder joined forces with Lisa Brummel, a 25-year Microsoft veteran; Dawn Trudeau, another early Microsoft executive; and former judge Anne Levinson, to form Force 10 Hoops. (Levinson left the group in 2010.)

Their basketball knowledge varied greatly—Gilder admitted she didn’t know what a point guard was at the time—but the group had convictions about feminism and gender parity, as well as the financial resources to make sure Seattle could retain one of its basketball franchises. They vowed to run the team like a business.

“Women’s sports was in a very different place,” Gilder said. “And one of the things I said was, one day, we need to be able to sell our team for a profit—not because I wanted to make millions of dollars—but in America, you either have a charity or a hobby or a business.”

Unlike an NBA team, where market growth was assumed, owning a WNBA franchise required a different set of strategies, especially with no other basketball counterpart to bolster an audience or share costs.

Three more championships under Bird helped keep the team’s momentum high, and the new Climate Pledge Arena and training facility (designed by Spero Valavanis, the father of Storm CEO and president Alisha Valavanis) helped provide the team with the resources to grow. The team’s owners have said their social justice convictions struck a chord with Seattle’s sports fans.

“We’ve always believed women’s sports is valuable. And we’ve always believed you should pay to watch women’s sports,” Brummel told Fortune in 2024. “If you came to a Storm game, you’re going to pay for your seat,” she adds. “In return, we will give you an amazing experience.”

‘I cannot imagine that the Sonics will be a tail’

With an anticipated, though not guaranteed, return of the Sonics, Gilder does not see the Storm anchoring the returning franchise in the same way the old Sonics did in the WNBA team’s early days. But while the Storm has become the dog, “I cannot imagine that the Sonics will be a tail.”

“Women’s sports has grown to a place that it has its own distinctive characteristics, it has its own fan base,” Gilder said. “That’s not going to go away with the return of a very important part of Seattle’s history.”

Should the Sonics rejoin the Storm, Silver expects “multiple bidders” for the team, as well as the need to address inevitable logistical hurdles. The Storm currently share Climate Pledge Arena with the Kraken, who have majority ownership of the building.

Natalie Welch, an assistant professor of marketing at Seattle University, said that while the Storm has allowed Seattle to maintain and grow its basketball fanbase ahead of the Sonics’ possible return, the Sonics will also provide a surge of demand for the Storm.

“The Sonics are going to be a hard ticket to get for a while and not as accessible,” Welch told Fortune. “The Storm will have an opportunity to kind of capture some of that value.”

There’s risk with the astronomical growth of a sport, too. The WNBA is executing its own expansion, adding the Toronto Tempo and Portland Fire this year, with plans to add franchises in Cleveland, Detroit, and Philadelphia in 2028, 2029, and 2030, respectively.

WNBA fans often enjoy a less corporate experience than men’s basketball, Welch noted, and as the league grows and attracts more sponsors, there’s the added responsibility of keeping fans—including the Seattle faithful—top of mind.

“These even newer teams have been really interesting to see how they are walking the line of giving the hardcore fans and the longtime fans [what they want], plus trying to welcome in the new fans as well,” Welch said.

Synergy One Lending merges into American Pacific Mortgage


Synergy One Lending is merging into American Pacific Mortgage in a move the companies say makes them one of the largest retail lenders in the country. 

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The companies announced the deal Friday, which will keep the Synergy One Lending brand as a division of the Northern California-based APM. The combination is expected to increase combined production to around $14 billion a year. 

Terms of the deal were undisclosed, although the move is one of the larger deals between industry players so far this year. APM CEO Dustin Sheppard lauded Synergy One’s culture and leadership, and praised CEO Steve Majerus will join APM as president. Aaron Nemec will remain president at Synergy One.

Majerus, whose company has scooped up smaller lenders in recent years, hinted at the acquisition strategy reverberating across every sector of the mortgage space today. 

“Scale is becoming essential to win and gives us the ability to invest aggressively in pricing, products, AI, technology, marketing, and customer acquisition,” he said in a press release Friday.

Synergy One has 540 employees across 65 branches in 49 states, according to Friday’s announcement. The San Diego-based company debuted a homebuilder division last year and acquired Mann Mortgage and Draper & Kramer branches in 2024

APM has a massive footprint, with over 1,700 sponsored mortgage loan originators and 403 branches nationwide, according to Consumer Nationwide Multistate Licensing System records. The company also onboarded branches and employees from various lenders in the wind down from the refinance boom. 

According to the most recently available Home Mortgage Disclosure Act data, APM originated over $7.3 billion in loan volume in 2024, while Synergy One originated just over $2 billion over the same period. 

More mergers and acquisitions

Home loan companies aren’t showing signs of slowing the rapid pace of dealmaking of last year, as prospects for the next boom market remain relatively muted. The activity isn’t limited to shops scooping up competitors, as lenders, servicers and vendors have undertaken a variety of acquisitions this year.

None of the deals this year have shaken up the industry like Rocket Cos.’ spending spree last year, but a high-profile battle for Two Harbors and its Roundpoint servicing business persists. While massive retail lender CrossCountry’s offer is favored by the company’s board of directors, wholesale leader United Wholesale Mortgage is vying to keep afloat its original agreement, suggesting Friday it would further enhance its bid.



15% Award Discount at New and Revamped IHG Hotels


Save 15% on Points Bookings at New IHG Hotels

IHG has a running promotion for its newest hotels and resorts around the world. You can save 15% on award stays at hotels that have usually opened or reopened within the last six months. Check out the details below. 

Offer Details

This promotion for a 15% discount on Reward Nights booked at newly opened IHG hotels is available only to IHG One Rewards members who book within several months.

The offer applies to the hotels listed on this webpage and is available to members only when booking through an official IHG online reservations site. The Offer is for a 15% discount off the number of points needed to book a stay using points only. If using Points & Cash, the 15% discount will be applied to only the cash portion of each available option. You will see the 15% discount on the participating hotel’s booking page.

For members with a qualifying Chase IHG Rewards credit card, the Offer is not available to use along with the “Fourth Reward Night Free” cardmember benefit when booking a stay of four (4) or more consecutive Reward Nights. The Offer is available for eligible cardmembers booking three (3) or fewer consecutive Reward Nights.

Expiration dates for this promotion vary by property. You need to book and stay by one of these dates:

  • August 31, 2026 
  • September 30, 2026
  • October 31, 2026 
  • November 31, 2026 

Important Terms

  • This new hotel Reward Night discount offer for a 15% discount on Reward Nights booked at newly opened and recently renovated IHG® hotels (the “Offer”) is available only to IHG One Rewards members who book by the stay date indicated in the communications only shared by official IHG communication channels.
  • Offer is for a 15% discount off the number of points to book a stay using points only.
  • You will see the 15% discount at time of booking on the participating hotel’s booking page.
  • For members with a qualifying Chase IHG Rewards credit card, the Offer is not available to use along with the “Fourth Reward Night Free” cardmember benefit when booking a stay of four (4) or more consecutive Reward Nights.
  • The Offer is available for eligible cardmembers booking three (3) or fewer consecutive Reward Nights. 

Guru’s Wrap-up

You don’t need to register to get this IHG discount for awards at new and revamped hotels. Just head to the promotion page and book one of the eligible properties for three nights or less.

This discount is valid when you book reward nights with IHG One Rewards points or Cash + Points nights. There are more than 70 properties available all around the world.

How To Invest For Teenagers In India? Investing Ideas For Beginners



How to invest for teenagers and beginners is explained in this video. Learn about stock market investment for teens, ideas for beginners and things you must know before investing in the share market. This video does not recommend any stocks or financial advice. Watch till the end to know the pros and cons, investment 101 for beginners and strategies that can be helpful as a young investor in the share market.

00:00 Introduction
01:20 Double Down Theory
02:40 50 20 20 10 Rule
04:05 Step 1
04:55 Step 2
06:00 Step 3
06:20 Step 4
06:40 Mistake 1
06:55 Mistake 2
07:07 Mistake 3
07:57 Investment Option 1
08:05 Investment Option 2
08:20 Investment Option 3
08:44 7 Days Actions Plan

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