Personal Real Estate Investor Magazine
Post Tags: Andrew-Waite , personal_real_estate , phoenix_real_estate , Real-Estate-Investor-Magazine , real_estate_market , Tucson-MLS , tucson_real_estate
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While waiting to for the Tucson MLS to correct some entries in the July Closed Transactions data I’ve picked up one of my favorite magazines at the Fry’s Magazine section. Personal Real Estate Investor has a lot of insightful information into Real Estate as an investment.
I’ve been reading this magazine for a couple of years off and on. When I first started getting copies it was focused mostly on the Phoenix Real Estate Market. It expanded coverage into the Tucson Real Estate Market sometime in 2006. Now it appears to have gone national in coverage of real estate markets across the country and in other countries as well. My reading has been intermittent at times thus the lack of knowledge to the specific times these changes took place.
Andrew Waite Founder and Publisher
The entire magazine is worth reading. There are a lot of interesting article about various aspects of Real Estate investing.
However, for me the price of the magazine $4.95 is worth Andrew’s Publisher’s Letter in each issue. His insights and analysis of the real estate market in this country is priceless.
I feel like a member of the choir sitting behind him saying “Amen” to almost every sentence and main point. Everyone would and can benefit from Andrew’s insights.
If you are really interested in real estate, as a personal investment or as a real estate investor you owe it to yourself to subscribe to Personal Real Estate Investor. I have found Fry’s to be the best source for this magazine when wanting to pick up a single copy. Check out Personal Real Estate Investor. If real estate is your hobby or profession you will find the articles interesting. You will find Andrew’s Publisher Letters, well thought out and insightful.


August 27th, 2008 at 10:41 am
David: Thank you. I am relatively new to real estate from varying business backgrounds (lawyer, technology sales and systems integration) and publishing technology and investment magazines. We then discovered real estate. We apply normal business measures and find a lot of weird results.
Try this: Wall Street measures 100% of the market each day to update indexes. Residential real estate measures .05 of the total stock each month to impute market value and update market performance indexes.
Any statistician would laugh you out of the room with such an error prone fractional sample, yet the world hangs on every word from OFHEO, Case/Shiller and NAR with a blind traded asset measurement and reporting approach to non-traded assets. “Perishable oranges to Wax apples, indeed.”
Thank you for your great words. Thanks A