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by aidenn0
1911 days ago
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It's also valid because the real-returns of investments typically exceed the gains on housing[1] and you tie up a minimum of 20% of the value of your home when you buy. 1: This gets complicated because (at least in the US) most people don't leverage their investments at a 5:1 ratio, but do leverage their home value by that much. |
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In markets where people want to live. Owning a couple acres around the far-flung suburbs of Seattle or DC will net you some good money.
No one is buying housing in Gary, Indiana. Floods have annihilated many towns around the Mississippi River, and there is plenty of real estate in Detroit and New Orleans that sure as hell ain't gonna exceed the S&P 500 anytime soon.