Inspired To Invest Real Estate Investing Podcast Ep 1 |”From Debt To A Multi-Million Portfolio”

By Serena Holmes

Welcome back to the “Inspired to Invest” real estate investing podcast and our first episode with a guest! For today, we have Kunal Mohindra from Edmonton, Alberta joining us.

To tune in, click here for video and here for audio.

Discover Kunal’s inspiring story – a full-time pharmacist turned real estate transaction engineer, who has managed to transact on over 40 properties since 2016.

How did he unlock the power of real estate investing and help not only himself but also family and friends? Join us for this incredible conversation as we unravel Kunal’s journey and learn valuable lessons that can benefit any aspiring real estate investor.

From recognizing the importance of partnerships to overcoming obstacles in the world of real estate investing, Kunal shares the ups and downs of his journey since moving to Canada in 2009. We’ll discuss the value of delegation, building a network of support, and how Kunal shifted his focus to joint venture partnerships after facing challenges with second mortgages.

Gain insights on the power of mentoring and the impact of creating generational wealth through strategic investments on this real estate investing podcast. As Kunal’s “freedom number” comes into focus, we explore his plans for transitioning out of his pharmacy career to concentrate on real estate investing full-time.

Understand the significance of setting goals and staying motivated on your path to financial freedom. Don’t miss this incredible opportunity to learn from Kunal’s experiences on this real estate investing podcast and get inspired to start or enhance your own real estate investing journey.

Giving back and inspiring others to invest in real estate is a big part of Kunal’s purpose in life and with that said, we are excited to release his episode on this real estate investing podcast titled “From Debt To A Multi-Million Dollar Real Estate Portfolio”.

To get in touch with Kunal directly, he can be on Instagram and Facebook.

To connect with our host, Serena Holmes directly or for other podcasts she has been a guest on, click here. To buy a copy of The Accidental Entrepreneur, check out these retailers. And, for everything related to real estate and real estate investing, please make sure you’ve subscribed to @serenaholmesrealtor on YouTube.

Thank you again to our sponsors, Honeybee Development Group & Synergy Mastermind for bringing us this real estate investing podcast episode!

To learn more about Honeybee Development Group and the opportunities they have for investors, go to their website, company Instagram page, Alejandra’s Instagram page, or on Facebook under Alejandra Mimi Rei

For more on Synergy Mastermind and opportunities to join Synergy 4.0 running from September 2023 to June of 2024, go to their website or their company Instagram page.

Tune back in on Wed., Jun. 21 for Episode Two with Rosanne Selci, a real estate investor from Kingston, ON who has scaled from 4 properties to over 100+ in the last 2.5 years.

Are you a full-time real estate investor with an inspiring story to share? To be considered, apply here.

Interested in learning more about real estate investing, check out all of these great articles.

FOR THE FULL TRANSCRIPT OF THIS EPISODE OF “INSPIRED TO INVEST”

Host | 00:02

Welcome to the Inspire to Invest real estate investing podcast, where we’re sharing stories from real estate investors and how investing has changed their lives. This episode of Inspire to Invest has been brought to you by Honeybee Development Group and Synergy Mastermind. Hey everybody, welcome to the Inspired to Invest podcast.

Host | 00:25

This is actually our first episode with a guest, and I’m so excited to interview Kunal, and I’m going to read just a short bio to introduce him, and then he can, of course, tell us all the great things about himself. So, kunal, he is a pharmacist full time, but he’s also a very passionate real estate transaction engineer, self proclaimed. He was born and raised in India, and he moved to Canada in 2009 as a student, and giving back and inspiring others to invest in real estate is part of his purpose, so I think that’s perfectly fitting for our first episode with our guest. Kunal started investing in real estate as a fix and flip investor back in 2016. Now he’s focused on helping other friends and family unlock the power of real estate by investing in cash flowing properties, and he actually has over 40 properties under his belt. So, with no further delays, kunal, maybe you can tell us a little bit about yourself in your own words.

Guest | 01:20

That is a great intro, Serena. I think I don’t need to. You know we’re done here because you did a such an awesome job with the intro. So yeah, as you mentioned in the bio, I started with fix and flip. You know, in the real estate game I’m a pharmacist working as a pharmacist. Well, actually, I did a master’s after my pharmacy degree, so got into the e-health space That’s where I primarily spend my eight hours a day, kind of thing And then remaining is all about real estate. Mesting started with fix and flip, then got into, you know, buying hold and then joint venture partnerships and stuff like that. So the journey has been phenomenal and I am very happy with where I’m at with the real estate, what it has done for me and all the lives I have impacted, because that’s what I feel is the real estate And I feel is the real gift when it comes to investing in real estate. There’s just so much, so many lives you can impact by, you know, investing in this vehicle called real estate.

Host | 02:18

Yeah, i find that interesting. So obviously you have your job during the day and a lot of times people call the role of a real estate investor. They’re six to 10. The term or other people might have different hours and stuff like that, but that’s not uncommon, that a lot of people will keep their job, they’ll keep their security and they’ve got their paychecks coming in. But that’s a great segue into real estate investing so that you can have the best of both worlds And eventually, as you start to build your portfolio, maybe that may be something that you reconsider down the road, but I’d say the majority of people do start with that safety net.

Yes, absolutely Yeah, so in terms of your family and friends. So you mentioned impacting them. Can you shed a little bit more light on some of the things that they’ve done by following your lead and getting involved?

Guest | 03:01

Yeah, i feel like I have done that in various means. So an example would be I always like to kind of bring examples, real life examples. One of my neighbors was very intrigued by what I’m doing in the real estate space and he was renting at the time and I was able to kind of coach him, mentor him, to first of all get his first property like his primary residence and then get two additional rental properties ongoing and this has been.

I think I’ve been mentoring for like last three years. So I believe there are people all around us that we can support mentor guide in whatever way, shape or form we can. I mean, it’s only two properties that he has as investment properties but hey, he’s still growing. He didn’t go through any of the education that I went through. He didn’t go do fixed and flips like me, but he’s got two rental properties under his belt. So I believe that I tend to do that whoever would listen to me, even if I’m going to pick up like a food at a restaurant, if they are going to give me a listening year, i will share what I have done in real estate investing and tell them about it and see how I can kind of leave them better than how they met, how I met them in the conversation, kind of thing, whatever.

Host | 04:14

I mean, people don’t know what they don’t know. Right And honestly it’s a four letter word for a reason.

Guest | 04:19

Exactly, so I think you can get people out of there if you can.

Host | 04:22

So obviously you’ve got a lot of experience, but what was the catalyst for you to decide? You know, obviously you’ve got a respectful, respectable, like reputable career. So what was that catalyst to really move over into real estate investing as well?

Guest | 04:35

I think early on in my even in my pharmacy career, i realized that just doing a job, just having, like you know, climbing up the corporate ladder, let’s say will not get me to where I want to go in my goals in life. And every book I pick up and read has like the every millionaire. I kind of hear their story and I’m like they all have something to do with real estate in their journey and their portfolio in some way shape or form. So real estate has always been something that has been at the back of my mind, kind of nagging me hey, you got to get into this thing called real estate investing. And also even like if I were to go back and I’ve recently actually had a chance to reflect on this as a kid, whoever I saw was super wealthy or were doing really well in their life, They had a big real estate portfolio, including my father-in-law.

So, I was just like, well, i got to get into this and figure out how to kind of make it happen. Now, like you know, like most people I think I didn’t start with a whole lot of money bags to kind of, you know, get into the game. I started investing in real estate with credit card debt. Now, i know I’m sharing this with the open, wide public kind of thing, but I started with, like lots of people asked me, how did it get started with investing in real estate when you didn’t have a whole lot of savings? Well, i started with over a hundred thousand dollars worth of credit card debt. Yeah, but that was invested in a flip and I knew that I’m working with the right person. So I had that sense of security because I was partnering with someone who had experience.

And I had the experience I felt I felt okay with taking on that credit card debt to do this flip. We did the flip in about a couple of months. We basically sold the flip, made money and I was able to pay off my credit card debt and everything was onward and upward from there. But it was a risk and I just did what I had to do to get started.

Host | 06:31

Yeah, and I think that’s the main thing is that you got started right. So I think so many people are just afraid to take that first step, but that’s really the entry point, right. So I think more people just need to jump in. And it doesn’t mean you take calculated risks, right. So I think anyone would look at those numbers and, yes, you’re paying that debt, but what’s the reward on the other side, if it goes well And also play in, what’s the worst thing that could happen? right, because there’s tangibility in real estate, like maybe worst case, you break even, right. So you kind of want to run those numbers appropriately just to make sure that you are proceeding with caution. I guess you could.

Guest | 07:05

Yes, absolutely.

So obviously you have so much experience, really, really diverse. What would you say is your biggest success to date and what made that so successful for you?

Guest | 07:15

I would say I’ve done a lot of different strategies in real estate investing, like I did, fix and flip, and then I started doing which is also fix and flip, but really converting single family to duplexes and doing the birds, and then eventually got into plain simple buy and hold. And what has been, you know, the biggest success for me has been impacting lives. That’s what matters more to me than anything ever will. An example again would be a picture that I got from one of my joint venture partners of their daughter I believe she’s eight now holding a few pictures of properties we own together, because I sent them some pictures of the properties we own together and she’s holding them and her mom writes at the bottom this little kid is going to go to college because of you, no just pulling up on art strings.

Exactly. That means more to me. that, i think, is my purpose, is to impact lives, and real estate investing is just a vehicle. It’s simply a vehicle. That’s how I look at it, and I think it’s just the lives we can touch and impact by investing in real estate. I mean, i could share multiple stories like that, but the ones that I keep close to my heart are the ones that where I felt like I get a heartwarming message like that you know, which means the word to me, and I think it will mean more to me always, even more than any kind of transaction.

I do any amount of money and make whatever I own, it doesn’t doesn’t really matter. It’s the people, the lives that I get to impact by investing in real estate.

Host | 08:50

That resonates with me as well Amazing. So obviously that would be one of the successes, but have you had any? you know tough lessons to learn, and what would those have been along the way.

Guest | 09:03

Sometimes, i think we all, as investors, as entrepreneurs, we just like to grow too big, too soon, as much as possible. We’d like the speed element. So, some of my tough lessons has been there was a time in my life where I realized that you know what I have, these, these properties that I’ve built up, and I have equity in all these properties. So let’s I don’t know why at the time, but it felt smart to go take on some second mortgages to grow my portfolio even further.

I went and use those second mortgages to kind of park some money in my account and go buy more property. That was a smart move. It just basically put me in a little bit of a pickle where I had the second mortgage debt which I was hoping to pay from my job income. But we forget that. You know the well there’s the household that I have to run as well. But in general, what it is, that investing like cash real estate is a cash flow for equity rich business right.

Host | 10:02

So happy.

Guest | 10:05

Exactly, Exactly, Exactly. So you know the equity is there, but really I can’t go spend that equity to pay off these second mortgages. That easily.

So I was in a bit of a pickle and I think I realized that you know, i tried different, multiple ways. The only way to kind of get out of that and get back into that growth phase for myself was to kick a few properties out the door. So I sold three properties, got rid of that, and I think that was a big lesson for me is that it’s it’s a it’s a slow game and you just got to take it that way.

You got to you know, slowly acquire as many as you can with joint venture partners. I think is a great way to kind of grow. And that’s where I really shifted And I was like, well, i can’t do all of this on my own. The second mortgage debt and using that debt to kind of, you know, go buy my property isn’t the right move. So joint venture partnerships are a much better way to grow your portfolio than doing it with the second mortgage debt.

So that’s been an obstacle, that’s been a learning and definitely came out looking much better than it was by selling those three properties together with the pickle I was in.

Host | 11:11

Yeah, no, that makes sense. Do you ever look back and you think there’s something that you wish you would have done differently along the way?

Guest | 11:18

I would say that early on, even before I got into investing I think I know this is going back much back further But I always had the mindset where I don’t want to share my profits with anyone.

I just want to keep it all.

I call it the orange versus the watermelon kind of mindset, right Like.

I want the orange.

I don’t want to give it up. I just don’t want to give it up. I just want to keep it all. And a lot of us struggle with that mindset, and if I were to go back to my former self, i would give them a lesson. It would be always try to find a way to get a slice of a watermelon and try to shoot for the orange, because you’re going to do so much better. The interesting part is like, and what that is essentially in a short kind of in a word, is partnerships. Yeah, they can actually help you advance in your journey so much faster If you get old, it’s like the quote right Like if you want to go fast, go alone.

Host | 12:11

If you want to go far, go together.

Guest | 12:12

So I think it just depends.

Host | 12:14

I can understand why. You know, even for myself, having been in business with a partnership that ended in a way that I just didn’t expect. You know my partner left four years in for personal reasons. But nobody goes into a partnership necessarily with the end in mind.

So I think, from a real estate perspective, if you are going to join venture with someone, you just want to very clearly outline all those things in your joint venture agreement, because you just never know the way that things will go right. And I think, being very clear about those responsibilities and the expectations, like someone’s just the money partner, obviously they shouldn’t be shouldering some of that work. And I have heard about that in some instances where people are like, well, i was supposed to be the money partner but then all of a sudden I was doing this and I was doing that And you know you just want to make sure those responsibilities don’t get blurred. But I think if you can be strategic and grow the right way, then obviously you can have, not to say infinite, but you know you can really really expand, probably beyond anything that you can do completely by yourself.

Guest | 13:08

Oh, absolutely. I feel like you can really expand. It’s like I call it, like putting a puzzle together You have some pieces of the puzzle, someone else has some other pieces of the puzzle and you can just complete more puzzles if you choose to put other people essentially and advance in your journey, because everybody gets to kind of like both parties, multiple parties, whoever’s kind of getting involved, they all get to go faster. So I’m a big believer, big proponent for partnerships And I wasn’t when I was starting and I feel like it took me a bit of a. It was a slower start because I just wasn’t open to partnerships.

Host | 13:43

Yeah, no, that’s great. And on that note, we’re just going to take a very brief pause just for a word from our sponsors.

Sponsor 1 | 13:50

Hi everyone, my name is Alejandra And I’m Mimi, and together Alejandra and I lead Honey Bee Development Group, where we deliver exceptional results for properties and projects in the development sector.

So as co-owner of Honey Bee Development Group. I’m here to inspire you. I’m here to give you all the words of encouragement to say, yes, you can do it and start today. Don’t wait until tomorrow.

Build a strong support system and a network around you. Real estate is not a one-person game. It takes a lot of minds to collaborate, so have the right accountants, lawyers, the network of support that can help you and answer your questions so you don’t make some very expensive mistakes.

Every real estate investor started somewhere. So please visit our website honeybeedevelopmentcom, And then let’s see where the universe is going to take. You Just get that first step.

Sponsor 2 | 14:48

Thanks again for following along with this episode of Inspired to Invest. In addition to real estate investing and running my own brand experience agency for 18 years, i also published a book called The Accidental Entrepreneur in October of 2021. This is my story and it chronicles how I turned tragedy into triumph to embrace my destiny in entrepreneurship. If you’re interested in picking up a copy, you can find the link at serenahomesrealtorcom And you can also find my link tree with all of the retailers in the details below. Thanks again for your support.

Sponsor 3 | 15:29

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Host | 16:06

And welcome back. Thank you for joining us Again. we have Kunal here and he’s sharing his wealth of experience with us. Now, obviously, we talked about some of your successes and challenges. Now, when you think about obstacles, what do you think is really the biggest obstacle that you’ve faced so far, and maybe one that you could perceive that you could face in the future?

Guest | 16:24

Going ahead, I think one thing that I face, constantly face, and I still feel like I’m still working on it, is managing operations within the business. I feel you know, let’s say, following up on the property manager to make sure that this one gets listed for rent because the you know lease term is coming up and the tenant maybe wants renew, maybe doesn’t, but following up right.

So tasks like that, the operations, I find, you know, I want to grow, I want to grow, grow, grow, grow, do expand, do more things but, most like oftentimes I find my operations really pulls me down And I find it hard and challenging a little bit to delegate some of those tasks, because I call it tacit knowledge. It’s up here in my head and it’s hard to delegate. At least right now I feel it’s a little bit hard to delegate. So I kind of do it all And I find that it’s not helping me grow and it almost pulls me down. So that’s a big obstacle and I think a lot of us, kind of you know, run into that.

And so what am I doing to overcome that? really would be talking to other people who are ahead of me in the game. How I look at it is like, you know, i’m in this elevator. Either I’m sending the elevator up by you know, taking someone for a lunch or whatever. Whoever’s above me, on a level above me. I’m going there like spending time with them to learn from their journey and help myself elevate to the next level or I’m sending the elevator down to help someone else come from whatever level they’re on to the next level.

So I’m always in this elevator going up and down, depending on what it is. So for this obstacle in particular, i would say I’m definitely sending my elevator up to try and learn from someone who’s ahead of me, who’s done this longer and who’s got more experience, just to ask, like, how do you delegate something like that? So just kind of getting as much input as I can from people that are in my circles.

Host | 18:28

Yeah, no, i think that makes sense. I mean, even having been in my business, it was not quite the same, but that was a challenge that I had because I was brought in for operations. I mean, like I just wanted to go and plan all the events and do all the things that I was brought in for. Very, very difficult to just start delegating that, and I had to wrap my head around the fact that done is better than perfect And I had to trust the people that were working for me And we basically developed playbooks for every single component in our business So that way, when we brought people in, they not only knew what had to happen but how we expected it to be done for consistency, so that if one person was not there while we’re all doing it the exact same, they should be able to go in that file and see exactly where their progress is at, and then we could duplicate all of those different things. And even when people were brand new, it was just less of a learning curve, so it was easier to onboard people and things like that.

But I think at the end of the day, when you’re the business owner, you’re the property owner, there will always be things that come back to you, like if the tenant is not in place on time for the first of the month or they’re not paying their rent, it’s going to escalate to you. So I think eventually that’s where people will hire someone in an operations role to kind of mitigate and manage some of those things. But I think that’s a challenge that everyone has at different levels, and maybe 10 properties you could get here, and then at 50 and then 200. It requires kind of a different version of yourself and a different level of systems in place for each level of growth, and that’s obviously why the masterminds and these education systems are all so important.

Guest | 19:58

Big time. They’re so super important. right To just be your network. You need to elevate your network if you want to increase your net worth. Yeah, Right.

Host | 20:07

Yeah, Now what would you say is the best advice you’ve ever been giving when it comes to real estate investing?

Guest | 20:12

I would say if you feel stuck, shoot the puck. I live by that right. Like I mean. Again, i like to give examples for everything I say. An example would be just the other day I was talking to a property owner and trying to see what I could buy off of him. He’s got a portfolio of 14 properties and he wants to sell five or six maybe.

So, he was sharing that he’s got a land which is suited for a commercial build in Edmonton. Now I have nothing to do with commercial build or commercial properties. That’s kind of so outside my heart.

Host | 20:50

And do you mean multi-family and grocery commercial? No, i mean like an actual, like office building, plaza, plaza.

Guest | 20:55

Plaza, kinda, you know more like a Plaza where you could. It’s suited for a medical office space or a veterinary clinic or something like that, for something like those. I have nothing, no business with that, but hey, it’s gonna. You know, i would take the chance, because all I’m doing is connecting with a few people. Like I’m talking to a veterinarian this week to see if she would be interested in potentially looking at working together on this right, because you never know where it could go. But I think it’s a fine line, though Like I’m constantly evaluating to make sure that I’m not looking at it as a shiny ball, because if I do that then I’m not gonna.

You know, progress in what I know best which is residential real estate per se, and how do I make sure that it kind of, you know, helps my goals? So like that’s what I’m evaluating is like making sure that this is going to help me advance closer to my goals faster in some way, shape or form. So that’s why I’m just gonna shoot the puck and see what happens, right. So before the conversation I’m gonna have with this veterinarian in Edmontonville established he’s got two practices right now and probably looking at growing again.

So I just reached out in my network, you know, asked who knows someone who might be interested in some sort of a medical space. And they asked me hey, would you be open to talking to a veterinarian who’s been looking to expand?

Host | 22:20

And like you have.

Guest | 22:21

So let’s see, So it just you just never know where a conversation could take you. So always be open to things like that, but be mindful that we have to be always be in alignment with our goals and make sure that doing this or making this a success is going to help us advance closer to our goals, kind of thing, yeah, and you don’t want it just to be a distraction that you’re stumbling through.

Host | 22:44

Now, obviously you’ve talked about growth And I think, when it comes to investors, they almost become addicted to being the number of doors you know, or a certain amount. But I heard a question recently that I found really interesting. It was you know what’s your freedom number, you know at what point and what value of your portfolio do you think would identify that for you, meaning like maybe that’s when you would lose your career as a pharmacist and just focus on this, or you could start, you know dialing back and just you know traveling the world and living life, or whatever it may be. But what would that freedom number be for you?

Guest | 23:16

That’s a that’s an interesting question And you’re right, I am big time addicted to that growth element And I feel like that number will always be growing. Right now it’s a $50 million portfolio, but I know by the time I get to the 50 or closer, i just need bigger goals and, you know, to really dodge me and get me up from bed in the morning kind of thing get me excited And I think that number is always going to be growing because I think there’s a lot of people, a lot of lives we can impact.

Of course, we start with our own immediate family first, right, like taking care of them, like meaning your retirement, your kids’ education, your immediate support for your kid, whatever it is that you want to do for your kid, for example Yeah, we take care of that. And then we start kind of expanding outwards, like who else can be impacted, and that’s what kind of drives us And I feel that number for me is going to be always growing.

And getting out of my career. You know, let’s just say it’s coming soon, right? It’s not a firm timeline I’ve set on that, but I feel like I have to. I only have some. We all only have so much time in a day. So I feel like I want to get to real estate investing full time Relatively soon, kind of things.

Host | 24:31

It’s definitely coming, yeah, but that number is always going to be growing right now You can understand that, because I feel like you have those immediate needs where you’re taking care of your family, your extended family, maybe friends and things like that. But then, as things grow, you start thinking about your legacy and your generational wealth and the things that you’re doing now that could literally support your grandkids and your great grandkids and people down the line and stuff like that, and that kind of an impact that you can have, not only, maybe, within your family, but beyond that. So I think for entrepreneurs it’s. You know, everyone has that sense of purpose and fulfillment. That, again, is what drives us every single day, right? Yeah, i guess when you think back to before you got started on this journey, is there anything that you would have told your former self? now, knowing what you know?

Guest | 25:18

Ah, that’s an interesting question And I think that it would be take more chances and not really overanalyze. I think I was stuck in analysis processes a lot And I think it’s you just can’t know it all. You cannot know it all, like when I go by a property and you know this is what I’m speculating, the rent would be, this is what I’m speculating, the returns would be, all that stuff. That’s all the speculation. There’s no way to nail that down and say this is what it will exactly be. So that’s you know. One thing I feel like I sometimes have been stuck in my journey in a little bit of analysis, paralysis And that feeling where you know you feel like your car’s stuck, your wheels are spinning, you’re not really moving forward.

I think we all need to just you know be open to taking our chances. Yes, you know, there are opportunities where you just you know you will fall on your face And I have fallen onto my face multiple times, we all have And it’s okay, because you will either win or you will learn, and that learning is worth something too.

Host | 26:31

Yeah, and that’s kind of the perfect segue to my next question. So you have a favorite quote that you’d like to share that could motivate some of our audience.

Guest | 26:40

Big time. I have this favorite one that I actually have posted on my wall too. I’ll just read it So I say exactly if someone says you can’t do it, do it twice and take pictures. That’s my favorite quote of all times And it’s got a like. I’ll share a picture with you. It’s a gorilla with like a crown and like a big gold chains in his neck, kind of thing. It’s pretty cool.

Host | 27:04

That’s awesome. Yeah, i know, i love quotes because they always resonate so strongly right And depending on where you’re at in your life, there’s certain things that you’re like just gives you a sense of perspective in different ways, right? So thanks for sharing all of your learnings. Is there anything else that you wanted to leave with anyone who’s watching right now?

Guest | 27:20

No, I would say that if anybody is interested in Edmonton at all in any way, shape or form. If you’re looking at investing in Edmonton, i love to support others in their journey. It’s not just about you know, partnering or you know, let’s kind of work together. I love to truly give back my time and support others in the community. So I just want to, you know, put that offer out. If there’s anybody interested in Edmonton at all, even remotely interested, or just want to know, i would love to, you know, set up some time with you and, you know, show you what it is that I’ve done, what has worked for me, and then you can, you know, pick and choose and I can even potentially help you, guide you in terms of you know what would make most sense for you, depending on where you’re at in the journey.

Awesome, and where can people find you? Facebook, instagram are, i would say, my two social media platforms that I’m quite active on but absolutely can share my I’ll leave your handle in the comment below.

Host | 28:19

And make sure. Thank you for joining us for today. It’s been so amazing just hearing about your experience and all your lessons, and obviously for everyone that is watching. Thank you for taking the time today And if you’ve liked what you’ve watched, make sure you subscribe to Serena Holmes, realtor, and on social we’ll be sharing everything on Inspire to Invest podcast. Thanks for joining us. Thank you again to our sponsors, Honeybee Development Group and Synergy Mastermind, for bringing you this episode of the Inspired to Invest podcast. The views represented on this podcast are for general information only and does not constitute investment or other professional advice or an offering of securities. The host and guest featured on Inspire to Invest make no representations as to the performance of any particular investment. Should you decide to make an investment, you are responsible for conducting your own review and analysis. It is recommended that you obtain independent legal accounting and tax advice from licensed professionals.

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