| ▲ | ndriscoll 7 hours ago |
| Do you live in a home you own with no mortgage? Do you have a fully electrified home, only EVs, and enough solar to run those things? You can make real concrete capital investments instead of abstract financial ones to reduce your required living/"operating" expenses, insulating you somewhat from the state of financial markets. |
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| ▲ | Anonyneko 7 hours ago | parent [-] |
| This doesn't seem to work very well in economies where housing isn't constantly appreciating like crazy (I'm not from the US)... |
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| ▲ | ndriscoll 6 hours ago | parent [-] | | It does if you're paying for that housing (either rent or mortgage payments). People invest into stocks while simultaneously holding a liability (e.g. they need to somehow come up with payments to continue living somewhere, or to continue having heating/cooling/lights). If you think all of the financial investments available to you might crash, and your source of income may evaporate in a correlated event, you can instead put all of your money into minimizing your liabilities. The goal is not to see your home value increase--you're not trying to sell it. It's to secure everything you need to have the standard of living you want by owning those things. |
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