“The house was $275,000 ten years ago and is now $415,000, but the $140,000 difference doesn’t reflect the true increase in value. Value isn’t just about numbers-it’s about purchasing power. What $275,000 could buy ten years ago and what $415,000 can buy today are not the same, so the real value change depends on inflation and what that money is worth in today’s terms.”
House need renovations so the profit is lower. If a renter does nothing, buying a house is better. If a renter puts all the money in indexfunds, the stock market goes up more than a house.
Hey curious about the math on a decade ago to today’s price, with the equity you summed up 222,000$ was that an estimated number, did you leave out any deductions when it comes to the refinancing process, or is it my poor math? 😅 because I keep coming up with 211,000$
i’m only 16 years old but i’m trying to get an early start and help myself by researching but is there anything i can do to get even more started as a 16 year old
I’ll be honest, I had the same goal when I was 16 and if it weren’t for me going to college I would’ve followed through. My best advice is to save every dollar you can, try not to buy stuff you don’t need (I made that mistake a lot at 16 years old) try to live with your parents for as long as you need to. Save enough money for a down payment and over a year over mortgage payments for a safety blanket. I went house poor with my first house because I rushed it. Be patient it’s a long game
I can’t say exactly when it will happen, but a correction in the housing market is inevitable. If Boomers continue to cling to unrealistically high price expectations, many properties could sit vacant as they pass on, leading to oversupply in certain areas and downward pressure on prices. History shows that real estate markets are cyclical, and over time, prices tend to align with what buyers can realistically afford. Buying now, at these inflated levels, could set you up for significant losses. For example, a million-dollar house in my desired area was about half that price just five years ago. Such rapid appreciation is unsustainable. In fact, it’s entirely possible that the same home could drop to $700k or less within a couple of years. At that point, as a relatively high earner, I could then afford the 2000 square foot fixer upper. Questions is, can I justify paying that much for such a modest home that still needs work? Something’s gotta give…
Supply vs demand. It may feel like it has to give but that doesn't make it happen. What if we are in an inflationary period(like now) with more demand than supply.
Up up 2025❤️❤️„I just have to applaud your contents thanks for the continuous update! I'l be forever grateful to you Mrs Maria Andersen, I really dont know how to appreciate you, you changed my life and my family situation $35k biweekly is an amazing gain❤️🥰🥰🥰
Hello, how did you achieve such biweekly returns? I'm a newbie and I'm l've lost a lot of money investing on my own. Please can you advise on how to go about this?
Thank you, I will making necessary changes this year😊
$415k house ? Where ? Cheapest I’ve seen is 800k in Los Angeles County
I bought a townhome in 2023 for $203,500. No regrets as of yet.
Looking forward to buy more , got 2 doors already,
Now you need the rest of the house. 😂
“The house was $275,000 ten years ago and is now $415,000, but the $140,000 difference doesn’t reflect the true increase in value. Value isn’t just about numbers-it’s about purchasing power. What $275,000 could buy ten years ago and what $415,000 can buy today are not the same, so the real value change depends on inflation and what that money is worth in today’s terms.”
House need renovations so the profit is lower. If a renter does nothing, buying a house is better. If a renter puts all the money in indexfunds, the stock market goes up more than a house.
Hey curious about the math on a decade ago to today’s price, with the equity you summed up 222,000$ was that an estimated number, did you leave out any deductions when it comes to the refinancing process, or is it my poor math? 😅 because I keep coming up with 211,000$
I will continue to rent and buy rental properties instead
i’m only 16 years old but i’m trying to get an early start and help myself by researching but is there anything i can do to get even more started as a 16 year old
I’ll be honest, I had the same goal when I was 16 and if it weren’t for me going to college I would’ve followed through. My best advice is to save every dollar you can, try not to buy stuff you don’t need (I made that mistake a lot at 16 years old) try to live with your parents for as long as you need to. Save enough money for a down payment and over a year over mortgage payments for a safety blanket. I went house poor with my first house because I rushed it. Be patient it’s a long game
In US if you have money you can have a life
I can’t say exactly when it will happen, but a correction in the housing market is inevitable. If Boomers continue to cling to unrealistically high price expectations, many properties could sit vacant as they pass on, leading to oversupply in certain areas and downward pressure on prices. History shows that real estate markets are cyclical, and over time, prices tend to align with what buyers can realistically afford. Buying now, at these inflated levels, could set you up for significant losses. For example, a million-dollar house in my desired area was about half that price just five years ago. Such rapid appreciation is unsustainable. In fact, it’s entirely possible that the same home could drop to $700k or less within a couple of years. At that point, as a relatively high earner, I could then afford the 2000 square foot fixer upper. Questions is, can I justify paying that much for such a modest home that still needs work?
Something’s gotta give…
Supply vs demand.
It may feel like it has to give but that doesn't make it happen. What if we are in an inflationary period(like now) with more demand than supply.
And everyone thinks this inflationary period is going away quickly. Why is that? Very possible high inflation is around for many years.
My stepson (47) rents and I own 4 paid-for rentals. Guess who is a millionaire. I talk, the boy fails to hear.
I will be investing in the “Krohn fund” soon 🙏👏🏿👍🙌🏾👊🏽🏆🇺🇸
Up up 2025❤️❤️„I just have to applaud your contents thanks for the continuous update! I'l be forever grateful to you Mrs Maria Andersen, I really dont know how to appreciate you, you changed my life and my family situation $35k biweekly is an amazing gain❤️🥰🥰🥰
Hello, how did you achieve such biweekly returns? I'm a newbie and I'm l've lost a lot of money investing on my own. Please can you advise on how to go about this?
I've followed so many traders over the years, but none have been as consistently as her
Same here the very first time we tried. We invested $2000 and after a week, we recieved $7500. That really helped us a lot to pay up for our bills
Can't imagine earning
$15k, biweekly,
God bless mrs Maria
God bless America❤️❤️
Please do you have any links or information
about her, How do I get to her??