There are some good reasons why renting might be better, especially in today’s market. For one, renting offers a lot of flexibility. You’re not tied down to a mortgage, so if you need to move for a job or personal reasons, it’s much easier.
Hi there, im a newbie trader that just started. I stumbled upon your video, and give or take 50 others, but this one seems to work for me the best. Im seriously clueless and will be putting in more time in learning about trading/forex. Thank you for this strategy. So far i have won 6/6 trades using this strategy on my mobile device. Wish i found this video sooner to be honest because i lost more than i won trying out the other strategies hahaha
@jmsena ...... so, that's you and your choice, not the rest of the people who want to buy a home so they can have peace of mind when they get older that they have a roof over their head when they retire and aren't a slave to their landlord. Does your rent stop when you turn 70??? I own my home outright, and going into my 50's it's nice not having a mortgage or rent. But you do you and keep lining someone else's pockets with your money.
more housing will not solve the problem. As a developer, I will not build a house just to make a 20k profit. I will want to cross atleast 100k on a single family home. Generally I want to make around 200k for a single family home and around 300k profit on a multi-family. Developers want to make money when they build a home. right now its costs about 250k to build a decent home. Add 150k for profit, the home essentially becomes unaffordable. Developers are not in the business to make affordable housing, we are in the business to make profit.
@@IanImes-y3f most developers are building 5-10 homes a year. These are guys who own their own business. The ROI on a home I spent 10 months to build shouldn’t be 20k. This mentality would drive your business to the ground.
@@IanImes-y3f I’m sorry but your comment is incredibly ignorant 🤣🤣🤣 I can’t imagine a start up developer spending 10-12 months on a house build, just to make 20k. That’s less than a McDonald’s worker. Remember that not every developer starts big, 99% of developers start off only building 1-2 homes a year in the beginning stages of their business. You can’t sustain your own life let alone a business with that sort of profit margin.
@@DrManHattan3n20 how much of US home development is done by startups? I could Google and research myself but I would prefer you to either be the medicine to my ignorance or to reread what I commented....
@@IanImes-y3f %80 of new homes built in the US are built by small businesses and general contractors. They build between 1-5 homes a year. They do not build in volume. I can understand your comment in the sense of a developer who builds 50-100 homes a year but that’s only 20% of the market. In order to incentivize the other 80%, they need to have a decent sized profit margin per home. And on top of that, these large developers who do make 50 homes a year lose a large percentage of quality control on their builds resulting in shitty homes. In short, you can’t expect a small developer to take a gamble on building a home to only make $20,000, That’s ridiculous. When I built my first home, it took me 8 months to build and I made 120k. This allowed me to grow my business and fund the next project which took me 6 months to secure. A $20-30-50k profit wouldn’t have been enough to sustain the business and my own personal life.
@Estoooopid Equity is great! However, equity is only useful if you don't overpay for the house. It's possible that you may have to wait years until pulling equity out of your house is worthwhile. And....the big IF can keep your job and pay your mortgage long enough to have equity? Hummm🤔
Congrats! I'm sure you'll appreciate it later. It hurts bad in the beginning. I know from experience lol. But now you're building equity in something and paying off principal. Tax breaks. You'll notice a difference over time
@@BR-ex9xp it’s not like that cousin 😂 it’s just cheap and in the boonies, I had a roach problem that took about 3 months and $1000 to handle but it’s clean now 3 bedroom got a attic basement 1 bathroom in basement floor and a large extension on the back of the building. A she’s a dog kennel and even a garage, the garage needs a little work but isn’t too bad to be honest It’s just in the hills, not the biggest lot it’s a eighth of an acre. Edit/ there are some 1br apartments around me that include all bills $500-600 I think trailers are possibly around $500 a month as well but can’t say about fees or bills or anything
If you pay rent and are disciplined enough to invest the difference or even more each month you might come out on top vs buying a house long term. Nobody wants to rent forever though
FFS... STOP getting hung up on the buyer assistance part of her proposed policies! She has more proposals listed that focus on supporting home builders / the supply side. At least Ralph led you to that coverage, but wake up and start there next time.
If only more people understood the concept of rent is anti-capitalist. The tenant loses the link between work, money, and ownership. They will never own the property, no matter how much they work, there is no incentive to work harder or maintain the property. Tenants should be treated like business partners instead of customers and given a small fraction of ownership via shares when they pay rent.
@@ianglenn2821 Yeah and considering these are plans to be rolled out universally over the coming years in every nation, I really worry for the future. I'm only 28. The hell am I gonna do when the only way to have a roof over my head and cricket meal for food in my mouth is to accept some CBDC on a chip in my wrist...? It really just feels like the noble thing would be to see myself out somedays. ✌
There are some good reasons why renting might be better, especially in today’s market. For one, renting offers a lot of flexibility. You’re not tied down to a mortgage, so if you need to move for a job or personal reasons, it’s much easier.
NVDA87T is still extremely undervalued
Totally agree! Let's go NVDA! 🌟
NVDA IS HUGEEEE!!!! 😎
Why everyone is talking about NVDA?
my friends told me to buy this
Absolutely! NVDA is a winner! 💪
Migrating to New Zealand and buying a house with USD is more affordable 😉
Thanks for the insights! Bought NVDA87T, predicting big returns! 📈
I am so bullish right now
It is funny that not everyone knows about NVDA
very promising
NVDA will atleast beat LINK
lets PUMP this to the sky guys!!
Hi there, im a newbie trader that just started. I stumbled upon your video, and give or take 50 others, but this one seems to work for me the best. Im seriously clueless and will be putting in more time in learning about trading/forex. Thank you for this strategy. So far i have won 6/6 trades using this strategy on my mobile device. Wish i found this video sooner to be honest because i lost more than i won trying out the other strategies hahaha
Not a better option....it's their ONLY option. Can't afford the price, can't afford the interest rates 🤣
I could afford and I chose to rent so 🤷🏻♂️😉
@jmsena ...... so, that's you and your choice, not the rest of the people who want to buy a home so they can have peace of mind when they get older that they have a roof over their head when they retire and aren't a slave to their landlord. Does your rent stop when you turn 70??? I own my home outright, and going into my 50's it's nice not having a mortgage or rent. But you do you and keep lining someone else's pockets with your money.
Exactly! Definitely not a better option by far
This is the top 1 blogger in the field of finance!
more housing will not solve the problem. As a developer, I will not build a house just to make a 20k profit. I will want to cross atleast 100k on a single family home. Generally I want to make around 200k for a single family home and around 300k profit on a multi-family. Developers want to make money when they build a home. right now its costs about 250k to build a decent home. Add 150k for profit, the home essentially becomes unaffordable. Developers are not in the business to make affordable housing, we are in the business to make profit.
Why capitalism has incentives all wrong. Shouldn't 20k profit be enough if you do volume, which is what the market needs ....
@@IanImes-y3f most developers are building 5-10 homes a year. These are guys who own their own business. The ROI on a home I spent 10 months to build shouldn’t be 20k. This mentality would drive your business to the ground.
@@IanImes-y3f I’m sorry but your comment is incredibly ignorant 🤣🤣🤣 I can’t imagine a start up developer spending 10-12 months on a house build, just to make 20k. That’s less than a McDonald’s worker. Remember that not every developer starts big, 99% of developers start off only building 1-2 homes a year in the beginning stages of their business. You can’t sustain your own life let alone a business with that sort of profit margin.
@@DrManHattan3n20 how much of US home development is done by startups? I could Google and research myself but I would prefer you to either be the medicine to my ignorance or to reread what I commented....
@@IanImes-y3f %80 of new homes built in the US are built by small businesses and general contractors. They build between 1-5 homes a year. They do not build in volume. I can understand your comment in the sense of a developer who builds 50-100 homes a year but that’s only 20% of the market. In order to incentivize the other 80%, they need to have a decent sized profit margin per home. And on top of that, these large developers who do make 50 homes a year lose a large percentage of quality control on their builds resulting in shitty homes. In short, you can’t expect a small developer to take a gamble on building a home to only make $20,000, That’s ridiculous. When I built my first home, it took me 8 months to build and I made 120k. This allowed me to grow my business and fund the next project which took me 6 months to secure. A $20-30-50k profit wouldn’t have been enough to sustain the business and my own personal life.
If you buy, after 5 years you will have some equity you can use. If you rent, you only have memories lol
@Estoooopid Equity is great!
However, equity is only useful if you don't overpay for the house. It's possible that you may have to wait years until pulling equity out of your house is worthwhile. And....the big IF can keep your job and pay your mortgage long enough to have equity? Hummm🤔
First time homebuyer having to buy a $400,000 house because that’s the average home price
I always follow your strategies and I can confidently say they are the best!! Thank you for great strategy, your the best!!!
I just bought a home for $26k I’m broke af but it’s a years rent in the city 🤷🏽♂️
Congrats! I'm sure you'll appreciate it later. It hurts bad in the beginning. I know from experience lol. But now you're building equity in something and paying off principal. Tax breaks. You'll notice a difference over time
How much is trailer lot rent?
@@BR-ex9xp it’s not like that cousin 😂 it’s just cheap and in the boonies, I had a roach problem that took about 3 months and $1000 to handle but it’s clean now 3 bedroom got a attic basement 1 bathroom in basement floor and a large extension on the back of the building. A she’s a dog kennel and even a garage, the garage needs a little work but isn’t too bad to be honest
It’s just in the hills, not the biggest lot it’s a eighth of an acre.
Edit/ there are some 1br apartments around me that include all bills $500-600 I think trailers are possibly around $500 a month as well but can’t say about fees or bills or anything
If you pay rent and are disciplined enough to invest the difference or even more each month you might come out on top vs buying a house long term. Nobody wants to rent forever though
Better? Maybe cheaper…
THX 🙏 Wall street 🙏
FFS... STOP getting hung up on the buyer assistance part of her proposed policies! She has more proposals listed that focus on supporting home builders / the supply side. At least Ralph led you to that coverage, but wake up and start there next time.
This is good news for the BlackRocks
So sad😢😢
If you can't afford it don't buy it.
"You will own nothing and be happy.
You will rent." - WEF, Davos, Lunatics.
If only more people understood the concept of rent is anti-capitalist. The tenant loses the link between work, money, and ownership. They will never own the property, no matter how much they work, there is no incentive to work harder or maintain the property. Tenants should be treated like business partners instead of customers and given a small fraction of ownership via shares when they pay rent.
@@ianglenn2821 Yeah and considering these are plans to be rolled out universally over the coming years in every nation, I really worry for the future. I'm only 28.
The hell am I gonna do when the only way to have a roof over my head and cricket meal for food in my mouth is to accept some CBDC on a chip in my wrist...? It really just feels like the noble thing would be to see myself out somedays. ✌
@@ianglenn2821 why would someone operate like a co-op when they already have a 100 stake?
Too late lol yall just making earlier investors wealthier
“you will own nothing”
I appreciate you helping people achieve financial independence through trading. Your work really matters!
❤
Renting is better than owning. I don’t have to fix water heaters or broken dishwashers. There is no benefit in being a homeowner.
Lol! You can not be serious.