|
|
|
|
|
by ThrustVectoring
2661 days ago
|
|
>Unless you're already wealthy, it's difficult if not impossible to have access to a large investment that provides 5x (or more!) leverage. That's wrong - the futures market is easily available if you have $10k, and offers rock-bottom costs for embedded leverage due to arbitrageurs. It varies based on the contract in question, but the two-year treasury futures contract offers roughly 400x leverage. Generally they offer you as much leverage as you can handle before overnight price moves will eventually wipe you out, so you definitely want to use less than they're offering. |
|
But what's your exposure? Home mortgages are almost always non-recourse loans, limiting your losses to your initial down payment.
I don't think speculation in the futures market is a very good justification to the argument that home ownership is in general a poor investment--IME the conventional thinking in economic circles. I stand by my larger point that home ownership is a categorically sub-par investment only for those already with substantial wealth.