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by spacemark
752 days ago
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>Let's ignore future cash flows and how those are invested, just consider the initial investment of $20k. But that's only a tiny piece of the money you will spend on the house and ignoring this will obviously lead you to a false conclusion. Anyway, you don't have to agree with the numbers. I can link you to articles where Warren Buffet also points out the same thing, but you don't have to believe him either. Or you can Google rent vs buy calculators and do the full picture math yourself, if you're really that interested. An 11% return will always beat a 4% return eventually, no matter what the initial conditions are. The question is just when. |
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No, it won't. I already gave you a very simple and easily verifiable scenario where that 4% return will beat that 11% return because of leverage. If you don't even accept that hypothetical, then you must be arguing just for the sake of arguing.
> But that's only a tiny piece of the money you will spend on the house and ignoring this will obviously lead you to a false conclusion.
That simple example was not supposed to be a realistic model of the world. I'm fine expanding the simple example step by step into a fully realistic model of the world. But there's no point going there if you refuse to accept very basic arithmetic facts in the simple example.