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  1. You could look at a community that does this sort of thing (like the private investor club or the 506 investor group) and use their analysis to make investment decisions, or just learn how they do it.

  2. The 506 group where accredited investors discuss, evaluate, and share due diligence on alternative investments. Group members get exclusive access to lower minimums, lower fees, and better terms with experienced sponsors. Access to unique alternative investment deal flow including.

  3. A 506 investor group consists of accredited investors pooling resources to participate in private placements under Rule 506 of Regulation D, allowing them to invest in non-public securities without SEC registration.

  4. I joined 506 and Private investor club groups and recommend them - YMMV but I think they are great resources. Since then I’ve made investments into 3 Multifamily focused funds, a manufactured housing/self storage fund, office/Multifamily fund, two debt funds.

  5. There are investor groups which exist where you can learn about other sponsors and collectively review/discuss deals. I've been a member of the 506 Investor Group for a while, and have learned immense amounts of information. There's no mandatory membership dues or any costs. No sponsors are allowed to join - it's solely made up of individual ...

  6. Mar 11, 2024 · Be alert to red flags of fraud. Guarantees, unregistered products, overly consistent or high returns, complex strategies, missing documentation, account discrepancies, secrecy and pushy salespeople are all cause for concern. Practice spotting persuasion tactics that scammers use, and always exercise healthy skepticism.

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  8. Jul 27, 2021 · Fraudsters may solicit investors by impersonating a registered investment professional and generating a fake version of a public report using the professional’s name and CRD number (to learn more, read this FINRA Investor Alert).

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