Scotiabank agreed to acquire Maple Financial Holdings Inc., which owns a small U.S. commercial bank, as the Canadian firm looks to expand its structured-finance business in the American mortgage industry.
Scotiabank to buy small Dallas bank in mortgage-finance play
6 Green Flags Most Real Estate Investors Miss
There are six “green flags” most real estate investors completely miss, but can make them serious wealth. Any of these six will allow you to buy an undervalued investment property, increase its value (and rents), and walk away wealthier than the other investors who simply glanced past it.
The best part? These are often turn-offs for ordinary homebuyers, so your competition is even slimmer. Henry has been buying properties like these for years, and if he stumbles upon one with any of these six green flags, he stops and evaluates it. These signs are so powerful, they could allow you to buy a $250K on-market property that’s secretly worth $350K…just nobody knows it!
So what are the six green flags? We’re going through each, piece-by-piece, from unused “space” that commands higher rents, to “free” land that can help you cover your down payment or renovation costs, and even secret second units most homeowners are completely unaware of. Find any of these, and it’s the needle in the haystack most investors wish they could buy.
Henry Washington:
Most investors are looking for red flags in properties, but I’m looking for green flags that everyone else is missing. Here’s what happens. You see a house listed for $250,000, but it’s sitting on the market because the numbers don’t pencil. But if you know what to look for, you’ll see that that house is actually worth $350,000 with just a little bit of work. I’m going to show you the six green flags that let you spot these opportunities before anyone else does. Finding these undervalued properties isn’t about getting lucky or having some off-market deal source. It’s about knowing what to look for that turns off ordinary home buyers and even scares away most investors. The best deals I’ve ever done have all had at least one of these green flags hiding in plain sight. You don’t need expensive marketing systems or special connections. You just need to know what to look for.
It is always important for you to have your looking goggles on and what we’re looking for are opportunities to add value by doing little or minimal work. So it’s how can we add max value without having to spend max dollars? That’s the lens I’m looking through when I’m looking for some of these green flags that properties have. All right. The first green flag I want to talk about is looking for homes with opportunities to add additional bedrooms. And the caveat is to add those additional bedrooms under the current roofing structure, meaning I don’t want to have to build out addition to add a bedroom, but just make some minor changes within the current structure and add to the bedroom and bathroom count. Back in the day, people used to love a formal living room and a formal dining room. Those spaces are not currently leveraged by the modern family.
And so you can put on your value glasses and try to find homes that have some of these spaces that are now obsolete and convert them to what families now want, which is additional bedrooms. So how do you find these opportunities? What I look for specifically in listings is I am looking for houses that have a larger square footage number than what the bedroom and bathroom count would suggest. In other words, if I see a two bed, one bath home, but it’s got 1,500 to 1,800 square feet, that tells me that that house probably has some additional spaces that are not being used as bedrooms that I may be able to make some small tweaks to and create additional bedrooms. Other things to look for are there laundry rooms that are the typical size of a small bedroom? I’ve purchased several homes that have had massive laundry rooms even in what would be considered a lower price point or first time home buyer home.
And so I have been able to successfully repurpose large laundry rooms into bedroom space. All that typically requires is moving the laundry to somewhere else in the house, maybe a closet in a hallway, maybe there’s a bonus room or something where you can add some laundry space. The other two spaces, one, I talked about formal living rooms, but there’s also formal dining rooms. These spaces were popular in the 50s, 60s, and 70s, but now aren’t popular. And what I love about them is it’s fairly easy to convert them to bedrooms because they usually already have a window. And we all know that in order for a space and a home to be considered a bedroom, it needs two things. It needs an egress window and it needs a closet. So sometimes you’re able to just simply close in a doorway, put a regular door instead of an opening and then build out a reasonable sized closet in that room.
And for less than five grand, you’ve now created a bedroom space that is going to increase your rent that you’re getting by two to $400 a month depending on the market that you’re in. That small investment pays you back in a very short period of time and then you get to keep putting that additional cash flow in your pocket once your investment’s paid back. All right. The next green flag to look for is of a similar vein. This time we’re looking for houses with opportunity to add bathrooms. Houses that have more bathrooms tend to be more desirable, both when you’re selling the property or when you’re renting the property. One of the most important factors I look for in homes that I can add a bathroom to are seeing homes that don’t have a true primary suite. In other words, none of the bedrooms have direct private bathroom access to their own bathroom.
This is a feature everybody wants. Everyone wants at least one bedroom with its own private bathroom. People will buy homes that don’t have this setup, but it may take you a whole lot longer to sell it or it may take you a little bit more time to rent it because this is a convenience that people expect in a home. And so if I can find a home that doesn’t have it, it usually means I can buy that home for a decent price and then force the value by adding the bedroom. But there’s another thing you want to think about when looking for these situations. Not only do I want the house not to have its own primary bathroom, but I want the house to be on a crawl space. Why on a crawlspace? Because if the home is on a crawl space, it’s much easier to add plumbing under the house because there’s no concrete you have to drill through.
You literally just need to get a plumber under the house and they can move the plumbing to the parts of the house that you need the plumbing to be at in order to add the bathroom. And what does that do? It makes the cost of adding that bathroom substantially less expensive than if it’s a house that’s on a concrete slab. So if you’re going to look for quick opportunities, I always look for no primary suite and on a crawl space. And a bonus third thing to look for when you’re searching for opportunities to add bathrooms is se if the main hall bath for this property that doesn’t have a true primary is a large bathroom. Most modern homes are split floor plans now, meaning the primary suite is on one side of the house and the rest of the bedroom and bathrooms are on the other side of the house.
But in the 50s, 60s and 70s, all the bedrooms typically were at the end of a hallway and there was a bathroom somewhere in the middle. A lot of the times there is room to create space to add a doorway from one of the bedrooms into that bathroom and to create a true primary suite by splitting that bathroom from one to two. Next up, I’m going to tell you how to spot an opportunity to add more square footage to a property without making expensive structural changes. But first, we’ve got to take a quick break.
All right we are back on the BiggerPockets podcast. Let’s jump into green flag number three. The next green flag I want to talk about is one of my favorites and that is simply finding homes that you can easily add square footage to. In other words, that square footage is already under roof. I don’t have to do anything structural. It already exists there, but it’s missing one particular component and that component is it doesn’t have air conditioning. If it is not a heated and cooled space, then that space cannot officially be counted in the heated and cooled square footage of a home and homes are valued based on their heated and cooled square footage. So if you can take a space that exists and make one simple change, usually it’s just adding an AC register off of the already ducted AC in the house. You can now create heated and cooled square footage where it didn’t exist before.
So how do you find these opportunities? Well, that’s a little more difficult because usually when you’re browsing listings online, you can’t just tell if a room is heated and cooled unless you can see the registers in the pictures. But even if you can’t, it doesn’t mean that they don’t exist. It just means you can’t see them in the picture. So this is going to require a little more legwork. You’re either going to have to go look at these houses yourself and have your eyes open to find these things or ask questions of the listing agent or have your agent ask questions of the listing agent to find those details out for you so that you understand that you’re walking into an opportunity that has some potential value. Well, what kinds of rooms are under roof that are not heated and cooled? Most of the time I have found that these are sunrooms or reading rooms that are typically on the back of a house.
Maybe that house had a porch at one point and a previous owner enclosed that porch but never heated and cooled it. So now you have an opportunity to heat and cool that space so that you can count it as additional square footage. I would say 95% of the homes that we have found that have this same situation to add value, they have all been sunrooms or reading rooms, or they call them Florida rooms in different parts of the country. The other 5% of the time it’s just been like I’ve converted laundry rooms that weren’t heated and cooled, or I’ve converted garage space and maybe an oversized or weird garage into heated and cooled square footage. Another caveat to remember in this is if it is a sunroom, it’s typically going to have exterior walls. So it’s not just that you have to add HVAC. You also will need to add insulation to those exterior walls so that the room feels and operates truly like an internal room.
You don’t want to have a heated and cooled space that doesn’t have insulated walls. A, you’ll get tagged on the inspection when you go to sell the property or B, your tenants will complain because they can never keep that room cool enough or hot enough and they’ll run their electricity bills through the roof. So typically what I do with these spaces is I still leave them as their intended purpose. So it still stays a sunroom. It’s just now heated and cooled square footage. I rarely take sunrooms and make them bedrooms just because they’re cool features of a house that people enjoy. People still use sunrooms. It’s not like green flag number one where we were converting obsolete rooms. This is not an obsolete room. Sunrooms are rooms people enjoy. So I leave the functionality, I just make it more comfortable for people and more valuable for me.
Look, of all the green flags I’m talking about, this is the one that I have executed the most and has worked successfully pretty much every time. So keep your eyes out for this one. All right. The next green flag to look for are homes that have unfinished basements with separate private access. Why are homes with unfinished basements that have separate private access important? The main reason is that having separate private acces means I have the potential to finish out that space and leverage it as its own unit. This is important, frankly, because BiggerPockets has done a great job telling people how amazing house hacking is and now there are couples and families and investors all over the country who want to house hack. And in my market, duplexes that househackers want tend to sell for substantially more than just a single family home. So you can add value and create desirability by being able to turn a single family into what is essentially a multifamily.
Again, there are several things to consider here. It is not as easy as I’m just saying. Just convert the space. You’re going to have to pull permits. You’re going to have to make sure plumbing can fit where you want it to. You’re going to have to make sure that the basement structure is sound enough to support what you’re trying to do in that space. And most importantly, you want to make sure that the basement is tall enough to be comfortable for someone to live in and that there are egress windows for people to get out of in the event of an emergency. All those boxes will typically be checked during the permit process, but knowing what to look for allows you to give your agent some search criteria or for you to have some search criteria to put into Zillow, Redfin or Realtor wherever you’re searching for homes so that you can identify those opportunities and then you can go do the due diligence to see if you can actually execute on those opportunities.
Yes, this is probably one of the more expensive green flags that are on here, but it is also one of the most profitable green flags that we’re talking about because of the immense value that you’re adding to the property. So if you think you found one of these spaces and you’re trying to figure out what your next steps should be, the first thing I would do is contact the city, specifically the zoning department, and find out if the house is currently zoned to allow you to add a second unit legally. If the property is not zoned appropriately, the next question to ask is, how much will it cost and what will it take to apply to change the zoning? The answer may be you can’t do anything or the answer may be here’s a series of steps, but if the property is appropriately zoned already, that is one less barrier that is in your way to be able to add that value.
That would be step number one. Step number two is you’re going to need to get a contractor in there and get some bids on what it would actually cost to do this. So you need to engage a contractor to get the answer to what it’s going to cost and you need to engage your agent to understand what that property would be valued at after you add the updates. I have more green flags you need to be looking for on your next property and we’ll get right to those after the break.
We are back on the BiggerPockets podcast talking about green flags you should be looking for. Let’s dive back in. All right, this next green flag is one of my favorites. This is a strategy that we’ve probably executed on the second most amount of times and that is identifying properties that have potential to give you additional land. Get this typically for free. So how do we do this? We specifically look for homes where the owner owns two lots right next to each other or where the lot for the home is abnormally large, large enough that the city may allow you to split that lot. So how we look for these things is we dial in our search criteria and we specifically look for large lots or we specifically look for where the seller owns the lot next door. A lot of the times sellers will sell this all as one and not even realize that the two parcels are parceled separately.
That’s the best case scenario because then you don’t have to go split the lot yourself. But in a lot of scenarios, what we’ve done is we’ve purchased homes that have an unusually large lot and as part of the due diligence process, you can call the city and ask if they will allow you to split the lot because then you’re getting a sense of, can I create the value prior to you purchasing the property? The caveat with this guys is to make sure that you can make your profit on the deal without you having to monetize the additional lot. In other words, I will never buy a house to flip because it has an additional lot or because I can split the lot. If it requires me to flip the house and to sell the lot in order for the deal to be profitable, I only do this strategy if all I do is flip the house and I do nothing with the additional lot, I have already made my money.
That’s how you ensure that you truly get the land for free and that you’re buying a profitable deal to protect yourself because what you don’t want to do is end up with a piece of land and then find out that the city won’t let you develop it or find out that you can’t zone it appropriately to do what you want to do and now you’ve got this piece of land and you’ve got debt on it, but you can’t monetize it. Things like this happen all the time. So you truly want the land to come to you at no cost so that you can monetize it. And if you can’t monetize it, you can sell it for pennies and it won’t hurt you. Now we know how to look for these additional lots and we know if we can have those lots split to add the value, but what do you do with it once you own it?
Well, that’s the best part is you can do what you want. I have monetized land in multiple ways. The most common way we monetize the land is to just sell the land. I would say 70% of the time when we flipped a house and got an additional lot, we have sold that additional lot to the buyer of the house. So they paid me the value I wanted for the house and then they paid some additional to get that lot so that they can use it for themselves, build on it for themselves or just keep it as land for themselves to have a bigger lot. But in some instances, like one instance I have right now, I have a vacant lot that I kept from a house that I flipped and we are developing a new construction home on it. So I’m going to build a property and then I’ll sell that property.
So I’m going to do my first ground up construction and I was able to get the land for free. One thing you can also do, which is probably my favorite way to do this is I sold a vacant lot on owner financing. They gave me a four or $5,000 down payment and they made monthly payments to me over the course of five years. And so I turned a property that I paid nothing for into a check on day one and then cashflow for the next five years by owner financing that land because I owned it free and clear. All right, that was a lot so far, but we’ve got one more, but don’t worry, I’ll make it brief. This is one that everyone should be looking for and are probably one of the easier ones to look out for. And that is looking for properties where the rents are priced under market value.
I know this sounds super easy. Why would this be out there? No one’s going to find this. This is all over the place. There are landlords all over the country who are selling their properties who probably haven’t kept up with yearly rent raises. And so you’re able to identify some of these opportunities and then make offers on those properties where you know, “Hey, all I have to do is get fresh tenants in here who are willing to pay market rents and now I can make more money from this property. Now this property pencils and is cash flowing, or maybe I only need to do a light renovation and I can increase rents drastically.” Not every landlord was a good operator and kept up with the rents. So if you can identify properties where rents aren’t at the market value and you can see where you can increase rents without having to spend a ton of capital to do so, you have found an opportunity to create cashflow.
So how do you look for these situations? Again, this is one that’s going to take a little extra work. So I would say start with your buy box. Don’t just buy anything because there’s this opportunity. Make sure these deals are within your buy box. And if you’ve got properties in your buy box that are rentals, ask your agent to find out what the rents are. And then if you don’t know what market rents are to know if the rents that that property is receiving can be raised, you need to either have your agent pull rent comps to give you something to compare it to or speak to local property managers and ask them what this property should rent for if you were to give them this property to manage. Property managers get calls like this all the time. It is perfectly okay to call a property manager and say, “Hey, I’m looking at purchasing 123 Main Street.” It’s saying rents are about A, B and C.
Are you seeing that as what market rents are or is there room to go up based on what you’re seeing in the market right now? And that will give you what the true rents are so you can make the comparison and understand if this is truly an opportunity for you to increase value by increasing rents. So there you go. If you can find opportunity to increase rent, you find opportunity to increase cashflow, more opportunities, pencil, and you’re actually finding deals that make sense in this current real estate market. All right folks, those are our green flags. I hope this was valuable to you. I hope you took some notes and are going to start executing, putting on your search and goggles and finding these opportunities that are hiding in plain sight and starting to build wealth by increasing value. If you found this helpful, go ahead and give us a like.
Leave a comment down below. Did I miss any other green flags that you like? We’d love to hear what some of you are out there doing to add value to the properties or how you’re finding opportunities to purchase. As always, thank you so much for listening to the BiggerPockets Podcast. We’ll see you on the next episode.
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Bad News for Peach Lovers: Why the Fruit Will Be Scarce and Costly This Summer
Adverse weather conditions and corporate closures are devastating orchards across California, Texas, and New Jersey.
Early Award Booking for Hyatt Elites and Cardholders
Early Award Booking for Hyatt Elites and Cardholders
World of Hyatt is adding a new perk for elite members and Hyatt credit card holders starting June 30, 2026. This was previously announced in February, but without an exact date. Eligible members will be able to redeem award nights more than 12 months in advance, giving them earlier access to book high-demand properties before general members.
According to updated World of Hyatt terms, the following members will receive exclusive advance booking access for Free Night Awards and Points + Cash reservations:
- Explorists
- Globalists
- Lifetime Globalists
- Primary cardholders of a Hyatt credit card (regardless of status)
Eligibility for the benefit is based on your status at the time of booking, and booking windows will follow the local time zone of each hotel or resort.
Hyatt has not yet provided exact details on how much earlier eligible members will be able to book compared to regular members, but the move appears designed to give elites and cardholders a better shot at securing hard-to-book properties and peak travel dates. I’m assuming that those without a Hyatt card or elite status will be limited to a window of 12 months or less.
This change comes shortly after Hyatt also updated its award chart for 2026, with several properties moving up in category pricing. Some popular hotels became more expensive, including a few well-known sweet spots for Category 1-4 free night certificates.
SpaceX and This Nuclear Stock Could Turn $10,000 Into a Fortune
SpaceX is expected to go public this summer, perhaps as early as June. While there are ways to buy into SpaceX today, most investors are better off simply buying shares during the initial public offering.
While SpaceX’s valuation is supposed to be huge — experts believe the company is targeting a market cap between $1.5 trillion and $2 trillion — one opportunity in particular could easily be a multitrillion-dollar market on its own. SpaceX is in a prime position to target this growth opportunity, but so is an innovative nuclear energy company backed by Sam Altman, the CEO of OpenAI.
Image source: Getty Images.
Every AI company has one glaring problem
Artificial intelligence (AI) is growing by leaps and bounds. Many forecasts predict annual growth rates of 30% for years to come.
But there are bottlenecks to this growth. AI companies typically don’t operate their own compute power. Instead, they outsource this task to cloud providers that build and maintain data center infrastructure. It will be hard for the AI industry to grow if data center infrastructure doesn’t scale commensurately.
“The race to scale AI has triggered one of the largest infrastructure build-outs in modern history. By our estimates, global spending on data centers could reach $7 trillion by 2030,” concludes a recent report from global consultancy McKinsey & Co. “Whether a build-out is successful depends on many nuances, including the availability of capital and energy resources.”
That last concern — energy resources — directly relates to the much-needed data center build-out. Data centers are energy-intensive, given that the AI applications that rely on them use a massive amount of compute power. So not only do we need more data centers to support AI’s growth trajectory, but we’ll also need more energy sources.
SpaceX and Oklo can save the AI industry
SpaceX has a unique opportunity to meet the AI industry’s rapidly growing energy needs. That’s because there are two ways to fix the energy resource bottleneck in scaling data centers. Either new energy sources can be brought online, or energy demands can be reduced. That’s exactly what SpaceX hopes to deliver via orbital data centers, or ODCs.
There are still many credible challenges to the viability of ODCs — everything from physics-related concerns to radiation vulnerabilities. But the general idea is to lower cooling costs by placing data centers in the low ambient temperatures of low Earth orbit, furnished with solar panels that can consistently produce clean power. We’re likely still years away from seeing ODCs become a reality, and it’s a growth opportunity that only a few companies worldwide can even dream of. With its leading rocket technology and a downward trajectory in launch costs, SpaceX is in a prime position to make ODCs a reality.

Today’s Change
(0.40%) $0.27
Current Price
$68.09
Key Data Points
Market Cap
$12B
Day’s Range
$65.62 – $70.98
52wk Range
$44.88 – $193.84
Volume
272.8K
Avg Vol
12M
Oklo (OKLO +0.40%) — a nuclear energy company backed by Sam Altman — is also pursuing a unique strategy for meeting the AI industry’s energy demands. Rather than placing data centers in space, the company is targeting traditional terrestrial deployments powered by nuclear energy. But not just any kind of nuclear energy. Oklo’s nuclear power plants use small modular reactors, or SMRs.
The AI and data center industries need power fast to support their growth. And while Oklo’s first systems may not be online for a few years, these SMRs are faster and cheaper to build than large conventional nuclear power plants. Perhaps due to Altman’s influence, Oklo has already signed a slew of deals with major data center providers. Now the company must prove it can secure the necessary regulatory approvals and bring projects online on time and on budget. If it succeeds, expect Oklo to grow aggressively alongside the AI industry.
I raised $15 million without VC in one of tech’s most capital-intensive sectors. Here’s what I learned
Hebron Sher is the co-founder and CEO of Zevo, a peer-to-peer EV and electrified asset sharing platform. Through its micro-lease model, Zevo helps owners turn underutilized electric vehicles into income-generating assets while giving renters flexible access without long-term ownership. Sher has scaled the company outside traditional venture capital, raising directly from private investors and focusing on capital efficiency, asset utilization, and the infrastructure needed for high-cost electrified assets — from EVs and autonomous vehicles to robotics and embodied AI.
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Equitybee Review: Startup Investing And More

Quick Summary
- Provides funding to startup employees seeking to buy shares through an ESPP, and participate in the upside.
- Unique opportunity for accredited investors to invest in startups
- Low “carry” fees compared with other venture capital platforms.
Pros
Cons
Equitybee is a platform that connects startup employees who need funding to exercise their stock options with accredited investors willing to fund these opportunities in exchange for a share of the future upside.
Startup employees often accept lower salaries in exchange for the possibility of a big payoff down the road. It’s a simple tradeoff: take less cash today in exchange for equity that could eventually become very valuable.
The problem is that stock options aren’t always easy to afford. Many startup employees have the right to exercise their stock options, but they may not have enough cash available to cover the cost. That’s where Equitybee comes in. In this full review, we explain how Equitybee works for employees and investors, and cover key features, pros and cons, as well as some alternatives.
What Is Equitybee?

What Does It Offer?
Equitybee gives investors exposure to privately held startup stock when they help an employee buy the stock through an Employee Stock Purchase Plan (ESPP). Rather than buy shares directly, investors fund employees exercising their options and participate in future gains if the company succeeds. The arrangement helps startup employees maximize their compensation while investors gain the possibility of future growth.
Invest In High-Growth Startups
When you invest through Equitybee, you are not directly purchasing startup shares yourself. Instead, you’re entering into a legal agreement tied to the future value of the employees shares.
If the startup eventually goes public, gets acquired, or experiences another liquidity event, investors receive their original capital back plus a negotiated share of the upside. The structure is different from traditional venture capital investing because investors are funding employee stock option exercises rather than directly purchasing equity from the company itself.
Help Startup Employees Get Full Value from Their ESPP
An employee at a publicly-traded company, such as Amazon or Netflix, may be able to participate in an ESPP. But these employees can turn around and sell their shares on the market. Even if they have to wait a year to sell, the shares are very liquid, so most employees can take advantage of the ESPP.
Employees at high-growth startups don’t have the same luxury. The privately held stock can’t be sold on a stock exchange, so employees have to wait for a liquidity event to realize value from their stocks. Startup employees may not be able to afford to keep such a large part of their net worth tied up in private stock, even if they believe in the future value of their company.
Equitybee investors help you take advantage of the ESPP. Investors give you money now, so you can invest in the ESPP. At a future liquidity event, you give the investor a share of the future value. Liquidity events can include acquisitions, mergers, or going public.
Potential to Earn Interest and Enjoy Stock Growth
Equitybee investors don’t own stock. Instead, they own a share of the future value of a stock. If an employee’s company has a liquidity event, the investor receives an interest payment plus a percentage of the growth. The investor and the stock owner can decide whether to settle their arrangement with shares of stock or cash.
Is Equitybee Risky?
When you invest with Equitybee, it’s considered venture-style investing, so you need to approach it with caution. Many startups fail, and other may remain private for years longer than originally expected. And some companies may never experience a meaningful liquidity event at all.
As an investor, you may tie up your money for a long period of time and still lose some or all of your invesment. Liquidity is also limited. Unlike investing in publicly-traded stocks or ETFs, there is typically no active secondary market where you can easily sell your position if you change your mind. This is one of the reasons that Equitybee is limited to accredited investors.
$10,000 Minimum Investment
The minimum investment on Equitybee is $10,000. Some funding requests may be larger than $10,000.
Must Be Accredited To Invest
As mentioned, Equitybee is only available to accredited investors. In the United States, accredit investor status generally requires the following:
- Annual income above $200,000 (or $300,000 jointly); or,
- A net worth of $1 million or more, excluding your primary residence
These restrictions exist because of the high-risk, speculative, and illiquid nature of the investment.
Are There Any Fees?
Investors are required to pay two fees. First, you pay an upfront 5% platform fee whenever you invest. A $10,000 investment will be a $9,500 investment plus a $500 platform fee.
You can also expect a backend fee if your investment successfully liquidates. After an exit, you owe a 5% “carry” fee to the platform. This means you pay 5% of their investment back to Equitybee. For example, if a $10,000 investment turns into $50,000, you’ll make a $40,000 profit. You owe 5% of that profit ($2,000) to Equitybee.
How Does Equitybee Compare?
Equitybee offers a unique opportunity for venture capitalists to do well by doing good. These investors only gain exposure to high-growth startups, but also help employees at these startups maximize their compensation. The investment opportunities on Equitybee skew “late-stage” meaning they have a good chance of exit.
Compared to traditional venture capital funds, the fees are relatively reasonable. There is no annual fee and the carry fee is just 5%. Many VC funds charge a “2 and 20” model, meaning you’ll pay annual management fees in addition to 20% in carrying fees.
As of March 2026, Equitybee investors have funded over 890 startups, and there have been 298 liquidity events, with an average time to return of 29.3 months. The company has served over 4,000 startup employees and investors.
Before signing up with Equitybee, we recommend exploring alternatives such as StartEngine or and AngelList . Depending on what you’re looking for, they may offer more investment opportunities or make it easier to invest.
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Min Investment |
$10,000 |
Varies, but can be less than $500 |
Depends on the deal, can be as low as $1,000 or higher |
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Fees For Investors |
5% platform fee |
Up to 3.5% |
1 – 2% |
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How Do I Open An Account?
To get started as an investor with Equitybee, you’ll need to sign up its website and confirm your investor accreditation. You’ll be asked some personal questions, which provides Equitybee with more information about your investor profile. Once your profile has been set up and you’ve provided the necessary identification, you’ll be able to credit an investment account and get started.
Is It Safe And Secure?
From a cybersecurity standpoint, Equitybee uses standard encryption and other security protocols to protect your personal and account information. Securities are offered through EquityBee Securities, LLC, which is an affiliate of Equitybee, and FINRA Member.
From an investment standpoint, it’s important to remember that the types of investments offered by Equitybee are inherently risky. While they are only offered to accredited investors, they should never be considered a core portfolio holding. There is a very real possibility that you will lose money, and many startups never generate liquidity for investors, even over the long term.
How Do I Contact Equitybee?
Equitybee has a headquarters in Palo Alto, California, and Tel Aviv, Israel. The U.S. customer service number is 650-847-1149. If you have questions you can also email Equitybee through the company’s online contact portal.
Is It Worth It?
You may find profitable investments on the Equitybee platform, but it is currently a relative niche platform in the venture capital investing world. Venture capital investing is a numbers game, and broader exposure typically yields better returns.
That said, Equitybee is not designed for everyday investors. It has high investment minimums ($10,000) and limited investment opportunities, making it difficult to develop a diversified venture capital portfolio. If you don’t qualify as an accredited investor, you may want to consider a platform like StartEngine, which is available regular investors.
If you’re an accredited investor who understands the risks and wants targeted exposure to later-stage private companies, Equitybee provides a unique way to participate in startup growth without directly joining a venture capital fund.
I think the platform’s employee-focused model adds an interesting angle. Investor’s aren’t just betting on startups. They’re helping employees unlock equity compensation they may not otherwise be able to access.
Editor: Colin Graves
Reviewed by: Robert Farrington
The post Equitybee Review: Startup Investing And More appeared first on The College Investor.
Mortgage tech roundup: New tools for lenders and brokers
In the heat of the homebuying season, multiple companies in the mortgage industry are rolling out new products to stand out from competitors.
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LoanDepot
The following is a roundup of some other recent news from those looking to help lenders and consumers in different ways.
LoanLogics launches broker portal for income verification
LoanLogics, a provider of mortgage due diligence and automation solutions, launched the LoanBeam Broker Portal to give independent mortgage brokers access to automated income calculation technology.
The self-service platform, powered by ThoughtFocus, allows brokers to upload loan files and tax documents, submit bulk orders, process payments and track order status in real time. The system generates underwriter-ready income verification documents using standardized calculations, aiming to reduce manual work and errors.
The portal also allows brokers to submit additional documents if audit findings exist.
LoanLogics serves more than 700 clients, including 60% of the largest U.S. lenders, with more than half of all loans processed running through its technologies.
Age Safe America launches home safety assessment app
Age Safe America introduced a mobile app that assesses home safety for older adults and generates a standardized safety score. The app enables certified Age Safe specialists to conduct evaluations and provide homeowners with modification recommendations to support aging in place.
The technology addresses fall prevention and home safety concerns for seniors, potentially reducing the estimated $80 billion annual cost of fall-related injuries. The app creates consistent assessment standards across the industry and generates reports that homeowners can share with family members, healthcare providers and contractors.
The app is available for certified specialists.
Attom launches AI-powered automated valuation model
Attom launched an AI-powered automated valuation model that uses the company’s 30-year property database. It enables more reliable valuations for underwriting, portfolio analysis, and risk management, particularly in markets where traditional AVMs struggle.
The model uses machine learning algorithms to analyze property characteristics, sales histories, tax assessments and market trends. Attom’s database includes deed records, mortgage information, foreclosure data and neighborhood demographics.
Through testing across the past decade of residential sales, the AVM consistently delivered a median absolute percentage error of 2.9%, with more than 80% of valuations falling within 10% of the actual sale price.
CommLoan includes land, build-to-rent loan data
CommLoan, a commercial real estate lending intelligence platform, expanded its dataset to include land acquisition and build-to-rent financing data. The addition aims to help lenders identify market opportunities and assess competition in those segments more effectively.
The platform aggregates loan-level data from multiple sources to provide lenders with market intelligence on commercial real estate transactions. The new datasets cover land acquisition loans and build-to-rent construction financing, both growing segments in commercial real estate lending.
This new update will also make these types of transactions more streamlined for brokers, allowing them to capture opportunities directly within the CommLoan platform. Targeted lender distribution and faster feedback loops will allow brokers to move deals forward faster.
Ncontracts debuts AI compliance research tool
Ncontracts, a governance, risk and compliance software provider, released Nquiry, an AI tool designed to streamline regulatory research for financial institutions.
The platform aims to reduce time spent on compliance questions by providing cited answers to regulatory queries in minutes rather than hours. The system sources information from federal and state regulations, agency guidance and internal policies, delivering responses with specific citations to support audit trails.
“Compliance teams are stretched thin, often spending hours searching for answers across fragmented sources,” said Michael Berman, Ncontracts CEO. “Nquiry changes that by delivering precise, cited answers in minutes, so teams can focus on strategy and risk management instead of manual research.”
The tool integrates with Ncontracts’ existing compliance management platform. Users can ask questions in natural language, and the system provides answers drawn from its regulatory database while maintaining documentation of sources. The company said the platform is designed to help compliance officers support multiple queries from business units while maintaining defensibility during examinations.
Savvymoney adds home equity tracking to credit tool
Savvymoney launched Home Value and Equity, a feature that integrates property wealth data into its credit score platform. The tool provides homeowners with estimated property values, equity positions and borrowing capacity alongside their credit scores.
The platform also provides access to education and resources that explain what home equity is and how it can be used, from financing a renovation to consolidating high-interest debt or planning for a major life expense.
Savvymoney said the feature addresses consumer demand for consolidated financial information. The company’s platform is embedded in more than 1,600 financial institutions’ digital banking environments.
Blend Labs opens platform to bank-built AI agents
Blend Labs launched Autopilot MCP, a server built on Model Context Protocol that allows financial institutions to build custom AI agents that integrate with its lending platform. The technology enables banks and credit unions to create AI tools that can access loan data, automate workflows and execute tasks within Blend’s system without switching between applications.
The server provides lenders control over how AI agents interact with their lending operations while maintaining data security protocols. Financial institutions can deploy AI assistants to handle tasks such as pulling loan status updates, generating reports or managing application workflows.
The company said the technology addresses lender demand for AI solutions that integrate with existing systems rather than requiring staff to learn new standalone tools.
Class Valuation offers appraisal risk tool
Class Valuation launched Class Valuation Underwriting Engine, a platform designed to transfer appraisal repurchase risk from lenders to the company, while reducing underwriting workloads.
The Houston-based valuation management firm’s platform uses proprietary data analytics to review appraisals before loan closing. CVUE identifies potential valuation issues that could trigger repurchase demands from Fannie Mae or Freddie Mac.
Lenders using the service receive protection against appraisal-related buyback requests. Class Valuation assumes financial responsibility if an appraisal it reviews later results in a repurchase demand due to valuation defects.
The platform aims to address lenders’ concerns about representation and warranty frameworks that hold them liable for appraisal quality issues, even when using independent appraisers. By identifying problems before loan delivery, CVUE allows lenders to resolve valuation concerns earlier in the process.
First American adds AI assistant to title platform
First American Title Insurance, a subsidiary of First American Financial Corp., launched AgentNet Assist: Title Intelligence, an AI tool designed to reduce manual work for title and settlement professionals. The feature, integrated into the company’s existing AgentNet platform, uses generative AI to help users navigate workflows, search for information and complete common tasks through natural language queries.
The tool aims to address time-consuming administrative processes that pull agents away from customer service. Users can ask questions about closing procedures, policy requirements or system functions and receive immediate responses without searching through documentation or contacting support.
The assistant is available to all AgentNet users at no additional cost.
Heasy releases mobile swipe app for homebuying
Heasy, a real estate technology company, launched a mobile app designed to streamline the home purchasing process for first-time and underserved buyers.
The app, Heasy – Home Buying Made Easy, provides educational content on mortgages, uses swipe-based interface popularized by modern dating apps to empower buyers to discover their dream home faster.
Users swipe right on homes they love and left on those they don’t. The app learns each buyer’s unique preferences, from architectural style, neighborhood vibe to school ratings, and delivers increasingly tailored matches over time.
HomeLight launches AI agent for real estate closings
HomeLight introduced an AI agent designed to automate real estate transaction closings. The real estate technology company’s AI agent handles tasks including opening orders, ordering homeowners association documents, interfacing with lenders and wiring funds.
“We’re deeply focused on building the tools and technology that solve the hardest problems facing agents, lenders, and escrow officers as they close transactions day-to-day. In many ways, EVA is just the beginning of us delivering on that process,” said Drew Uher, founder and CEO of HomeLight.
HomeLight, founded in 2012, operates a platform that connects home buyers and sellers with real estate agents and provides transaction management tools.
CreditXpert debuts search tool for credit rescore strategies
CreditXpert introduced MortgageXperts, a search engine designed to help real estate professionals find mortgage loan officers who identify credit rescore strategies for borrowers who fall short of qualification requirements.
A borrower’s credit score is often the difference between getting approved and getting turned away. Until the launch of MortgageXperts, real estate professionals haven’t had an easy way to identify which mortgage partners are using credit optimization tools on behalf of their clients.
Real estate professionals can search for mortgage loan officers by location, licensed states, loan type, mortgage type and languages spoken. They can also search directly by name or NMLS ID to verify whether a current or prospective lending partner is already committed to optimizing borrower credit.
“Real estate professionals have been asking us for years how they can find mortgage partners who use our predictive analytics platform to help their borrowers,” said Mike Darne, vice president of marketing at CreditXpert. “And with more than 50,000 mortgage professionals using CreditXpert, the network behind this platform is unlike anything else in the industry.”
Summer Of DashPass: Pick Worldcup Winner & Share $5 Million In Credits & More Deals
The Offer
Direct link to offer
- Summer of Doordash is back from 5/28 – 7/22. Full list of deals in the image below. I’ve highlighted some deals that readers might find interesting:
- Pick worldcup winner by June 10 (must place an order by then) and if they win you’ll win a share of $5 million in DoorDash credits
- 6/18-6/24: 30% off $75+ at Kroger (max $30)
- 6/25-7/1: 35% off $25+ at 7-Eleven (max $10)
- 7/27/8: 30% off $55 at Lowe’s (max $20)
- 7/9-7/15: $30 off $100 at Best Buy
- 7/16-7/22: $10 off $25 at Starbucks
Our Verdict
Picking the worldcup winner does require making a purchase by 7/15. Suspect a lot of people will be participating so I wouldn’t expect a big payout and I don’t think it makes any sense at all to make a purchase specifically to participate.


