|
|
|
|
|
by fsk
3992 days ago
|
|
Actually, it was a bad example. Suppose you spend $1M to produce something worth $100k. You lost $900k. But suppose you borrowed at 0% while inflation was (to use round numbers) 10%. After about 50 years of borrowing at 0%, your $100k is now worth more than $1M. (I'm too lazy to use logs to figure out the exact breakeven point right now.) You made a profit. With 0% interest rates, your investment that destroyed $900k of value was (eventually) profitable. If you can avoid mark-to-market accounting, you can just borrow, wait for inflation, and eventually sell for a profit. When interest rates are less than inflation, a capital-destroying investment can seem profitable. |
|