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Source: Quora
I don’t see a bubble in most cities. The reason is simple. In most developed countries, prices haven’t actually moved in real terms.
Take the UK. In 2007-2008, prices were at a record in most parts of the country, and not just London.
This was a record adjusted for wages and inflation, and not just in nominal terms.
Between 2008 and January 2021, prices actually fell adjusted for inflation and wages apart from areas like London:
Even with the recent rises, prices haven’t recovered. Take the Nationwide Building Society’s survey:https://www.housepricecrash.co.uk/indices-nationwide-national-inflation/
In 2007 Q4, average UK house prices were £183,959, but that was a long time ago now.
Almost fifteen years of two or three percent inflation adds up. Therefore, in real terms, that is £255,305 in today’s prices.
In 2013 Q1, just before “help to buy”, UK house prices were at £163,056, which was an inflation-adjusted low of £191,902 in today’s prices.
Now prices are £242,709 in nominal terms, which is also £242,709 in real terms of course.
So prices are still 13,000GBP below their all-time, real terms, peak.
Not in London, but on average, across the country.
We see similar trends in the US. Whilst some cities have gone crazy (Like New York), the average US house price last year was about 10% cheaper, adjusted for inflation, than twenty years ago.
Looking at nominal prices is pointless unless you are living in Japan where there is almost zero inflation.
What matters is:
So, I don’t see a bubble yet. However, if the price rises continue, then one might form.
That might happen as people who are working from home want more space, and are, in some cases, using the savings from the commute to upgrade their house.
Source: Quora
The biggest ones are
Here he is in his own words:
What is interesting about Bezos is he was often underestimated for years, unlike somebody like Gates or Musk, partially because he played the long game and doesn’t have a very imposing personality.
Source: Quora
Nobody can predict the future. Just look at the year we have just had.
What I would say is that few people realize how good the present is.
Let me give you a simple example
1945 = about half the world’s population were living in absolute poverty of $2 a day or less (adjusted for inflation of course)
1980 = About 40%
1990 = About 30%
Today = 9%-10%
In 1945 the richest countries had a GDP per capita of about $6,000-$7,000 adjusted for inflation.
Now average countries, mid-income countries, like Thailand have such levels of income or slightly higher.
It took thousands of years to bring half the world’s population out of poverty by 1945.
It has taken just thirty years to reduce the poverty rate from 30% to 9%-10%, after the fall of the Iron Curtain.
This is a great book to read about the subject
You can see the author give an interview here:
He also has a website here – HumanProgress
Some stats from the interview and online website
The author also makes the point that even in areas like the environment, believe it or not, there has been a lot of progress.
The US, UK, and many other countries are more green, clean, and environmentally conscious than before.
That doesn’t mean everything is perfect. Whilst most poorer and middle-income countries have gotten much richer, a few extreme cases like North Korea and Venezuela, have become poorer.
Whilst war and conflict have reduced a lot, there was Iraq and many other conflicts.
Moreover, it hasn’t been an easy twenty years for younger people in Western and even developed Asian countries, even though most younger people have benefited from better healthcare, education, technology, and tolerance.
The world has definitely become much easier for minorities, women and gay people.
The biggest two reasons people don’t understand how things have improved is
There are two directions the world could go in in the future:
The world GDP today is about 84 trillion. If the world grows at the same level it has done since 1945, world GDP will be about 600 trillion in 2100, adjusted for inflation.
You can only imagine how better life will be if that happens. In comparison, if growth falls to 0.1% per year, which was the historical average, world GDP won’t reach such levels for thousands of years.
Source: Quora
To invest in “everything”, reinvest dividends and do it forever.
What do I mean by everything? I mean the entire global stock and bond market.
For example, if you are American, have the following portfolio
Or some variant of the above. This approach has had an 100% historical success rate if:
That doesn’t mean it always will in the future, but if it doesn’t work in the future, that means we are in trouble as a species, if even our most innovative companies aren’t getting more profitable over a 50 year period!
Dividend reinvesting is important. Take the graph below. It seems like the S&P500 has vastly outperformed the UK FTSE 100 which has been stagnant for twenty years?
Well it has. Now let’s add dividend reinvestments and things don’t look too bad for the FTSE:
Even the much maligned Japanese stock market has been up if you reinvest dividends.
Time is another key component as the two graphs below show:
Add 40% bonds and you get these results:
The issue is, everything wanted to buy the Nasdaq in 1999 and China in 2006. Few wanted to buy the Nasdaq in 2002, or buy in 1999 “forever”.
Moreover, too many people confuse a decline and a loss. If the markets fall and you need to wait months or even years to see a full recovery, that is nothing to worry about.
In fact, it means that if you have fresh money to invest, you are buying in at a good price, and you can rebalance your portfolio away from bonds towards stocks.
So, emotional control is one of the keys to investing success. It is ironically the fear of losses, which causes more losses!
Many people keep money in the bank due to this fear, with a 100% chance of losing out to inflation.
This is a huge loss that will compound over time, but it feels more emotional due to the lack of fluctuations.
You will notice all the figures above are for inflation-adjusted losses, and the right portfolio hasn’t lost even on this measurement, long-term.