As long as you have cashflow to support your tangible assets, you are fine. That's where things go awry.. not having the cash to service the loan, empty home, etc. |
More of a boomer thing. |
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32yo millennial who is, I guess, "wealthy"
NW over 3M and 10% of my net worth is in home equity (primary residence), the rest in the markets. We'll see who comes out ahead 30 years from now. I have absolutely no interest in managing properties, the up keep, taxes, etc. You can get lucky for sure, but real estate is a slog and in many instances not nearly as liquid. Liquidity is gold. My portfolio is as boring as you can get..ETFs |
And how would you prefer corporations to raise capital? |
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OP illustrates the danger of growing up on NYT "three people did a thing, let's explore this MEANINGFUL NEW TREND" articles.
Nobody cares that you got out of the market. -Millennial with rental units and a brokerage account |
| I thought stocks were tangible assets - owning part of a company. |
Valuation is a lot of BS. Look at Trump. |
Mixing of concepts here. |
| Yes the stock market is for old people, in other words, the cohort that has amassed the most wealth. |
Make a profitable product, earn money and invest as capital. |
LOL. Gotta love the ignorance. |
lol easiest way to spot someone with no money or clue how the financial world works |
Stocks and bonds are most definitely tangible assets. PPs like to use terms that they don't understand the definitions of. |
How do you make a profitable product with no money? |
Millennials investing for the last 12 or so years of course would think real estate is a great investment. Thinking it's immune to any downturn is also a pretty spot on millennial blind spot. |