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851 Terms
153 Beginner

Investment Strategies & Methods Terms & Definitions

Different approaches to real estate investing including buy-and-hold, fix-and-flip, BRRRR, wholesaling, REITs, and syndications.

What You'll Learn

  • Essential investment strategies & methods terminology
  • Practical applications and examples
  • Professional investment language
  • Common usage in real estate

Quick Overview

153
Beginner
144
Advanced

Structured Learning Path

Master investment strategies & methods with our progressive approach

Advanced

Advanced Applications

Complex strategies and professional concepts (144 terms)

All Investment Strategies & Methods Terms (851)

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After Repair Value

Intermediate

After Repair Value (ARV) is the estimated market value of a property after all planned renovations and improvements have been completed, crucial for assessing investment profitability.

15-18 min5619 views

Agricultural Real Estate

Beginner

Agricultural real estate refers to land and any associated structures primarily used for farming, ranching, timber production, or other agricultural purposes. It represents a unique investment opportunity focused on food production and natural resources.

2-3 min6000 views

Alignment of Interests

Intermediate

Alignment of interests in real estate investing refers to the congruence of goals, incentives, and expectations among all parties involved in a transaction or partnership, ensuring everyone works towards a common, mutually beneficial outcome.

5 min5954 views

All-Cash Offer

Beginner

An all-cash offer in real estate is a proposal to purchase a property without requiring any financing, such as a mortgage. The buyer pays the entire purchase price directly from their available funds, leading to a faster and often simpler transaction.

3 min6115 views

Alpha

Advanced

Alpha measures the excess return of an investment or portfolio relative to the return of a benchmark index, adjusted for risk, indicating the value added by active management.

6 min17730 views

Alternative Capital Sources

Intermediate

Alternative capital sources are non-traditional funding options for real estate investments, including private money, hard money, seller financing, and crowdfunding, offering flexibility and speed for deals that may not qualify for conventional bank loans.

13-16 min52334 views

Alternative Investment

Beginner

An alternative investment is a financial asset that does not fall into conventional investment categories like stocks, bonds, or cash. For real estate investors, these often include assets like real estate itself, private equity, or commodities.

2-3 min59 views

Alternative Investments

Intermediate

Alternative investments are financial assets outside of traditional stocks, bonds, and cash, including real estate, private equity, and commodities, often used for diversification and higher return potential.

5-6 min13559 views

Alternative Lending

Intermediate

Alternative lending encompasses non-traditional financing sources like hard money, private lenders, crowdfunding, and seller financing, offering speed and flexibility for real estate investments, often prioritizing asset value over borrower credit.

14-15 min15640 views

Analysis Paralysis

Intermediate

Analysis paralysis is the state where a real estate investor over-analyzes a potential deal, leading to inaction and missed opportunities due to excessive research and fear of making a mistake.

5-6 min62 views

Anchor Tenant

Intermediate

An anchor tenant is a prominent, well-known commercial business that attracts significant customer traffic to a property, enhancing its value and stability for real estate investors.

13-16 min26601 views

Anchoring Bias

Advanced

Anchoring bias is a cognitive heuristic where an individual's decisions are overly influenced by an initial piece of information (the anchor), leading to skewed valuations, negotiations, and market analyses in real estate investment.

6 min7318 views
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