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> I just turned 30 and do well for myself as an employed consultant, but I wouldn't consider buying the dip, unless the dip is at least ~100% of the current market prices (which I don't see happening, but who knows). You wouldn't buy a house unless it was essentially free? A dip of ~100% means prices at ~0% their current level. > Going in debt for 30-40 years has zero appeal for me, it just seems like a terrible move. Debt on its own doesn't matter so much. You already know that you will need to live somewhere for the rest of your life, so that expense is unavoidable. The question is whether you want the amount of that expense to fluctuate according to the market, or if you want to lock in a steadily-decreasing expense with a 30-year fixed rate mortgage (steadily decreasing in real terms, because $100 in 30 years will be worth $50–60; yes, property taxes are likely to increase, and maintenance will move with the market, but mortgage interest and principal will decrease in real terms). > Even if someone gave me a million Euros, I wouldn't spend 600k of those on a house and then another 300k on renovations, that seems like a terrible waste of resources. With that kind of money, you can buy three small companies in Germany, or stop worrying about retirement, etc. $1.05 million is hardly enough to live on. That's just $35,000 per annum. It's not nothing, and I surely wouldn't sneer at a gift of $1.05 million, but it wouldn't let me retire today. |
So is $1mi. For a lot of countries, this is money you could retire on.