




Philadelphia
This residential investment is located in a stable Pennsylvania neighborhood with consistent demand for quality rental housing. The area is supported by strong local employment accessible transportation and a growing base of long-term residents making it attractive for reliable tenancy. The neighborhood has seen continued improvement and increasing investor activity contributing to solid appreciation trends compared to similar markets. These dynamics support both steady cash flow and long-term value growth. With an expected hold period of 5–7 years the investment is designed to deliver consistent annual distributions alongside meaningful property appreciation over time.
Projected returns are estimates only and not guarantees of future performance. All performance figures shown such as Projected Annual Cash Flow, Projected Annual Appreciation, Projected Total Annual Return, and the Projected Value of a $1,000 Investment After 5 Years are based on internal assumptions, historical market data, and third party research. These figures are illustrative and intended to help investors understand potential outcomes; actual performance may differ materially due to economic, market, or property specific factors. Projected cash flows are net of estimated expenses but do not account for unforeseen costs, vacancy fluctuations, or changes in tax or legal requirements. Appreciation projections are influenced by regional market dynamics, interest rates, and macroeconomic conditions, all of which are subject to change without notice.
Historical average home appreciation rates such as 5.0% nationally and 6.3% for the Philadelphia metro area over the past 10 years are based on publicly available data from sources like the Federal Housing Finance Agency (FHFA). These are historical figures, not future projections, and do not imply or guarantee future performance in any specific market or investment. National and regional real estate markets are inherently cyclical and can be impacted by interest rate changes, policy shifts, demographic trends, and local economic developments. Investors should not rely on historical averages as indicators of future returns."