And the ASX averages 9.8% per annum
ASX or ASX accumulation index?
ASX accumulation index at around 10% makes sense.
4% dividends, 3% inflation, 2% productivity, 1% something else
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And the ASX averages 9.8% per annum
yes i would! (but only if i can leverage my money in the case above)
put it this way - would you rather earn:
a) 7% profit on $600k turnover
b) 3.5% profit on $2.5mil turnover
economies of scale in action
(obviously i would prefer 7% ... but 3.5% is still good in my books as long as it is on a grand scale)
.
But what happens when populations decline?
.
20 years from now there will be major infrastructure works around Badgerys Creek. Guess where my money will be.
My question right now is, where to put it between now and 10 years from now when I go hard in the new airport district.
2114: 512 million median .
I don't really understand, how can it be 8.5%? What about interest to be paid to banks, maintenance, management fees etc? Even if the properties are neutrally geared that still means a gain of 3.5% not 8.5% unless I've completely missed something here
That is about 3.5% per year growth. Practically the inflation alone
15%??When inflation is running at 15% per annum (or 27% UK 1970s) then of course prices go up.
I generally ask how much a bottle of coke costs to understand the cost of living in other countries.I like the Mars bar index, how many mars bars did it take to buy a house in 1980 vs now? (Mars Bars are 11% smaller now, so has to be factored in)
I generally ask how much a bottle of coke costs to understand the cost of living in other countries.
15%??
When inflation is running at 15% per annum (or 27% UK 1970s) then of course prices go up.
You said
That is what caught my eye. I thought we were in Zimbabwe for a second
When inflation is running at 15% per annum (or 27% UK 1970s) then of course prices go up.
Doesn't mean to say you get any richer though.
I don't even know the cost of a bottle of Coke here in Aus...never buy it, except for the occasional "do" at home when we need some soft drinks for the kids.I generally ask how much a bottle of coke costs to understand the cost of living in other countries.
PriceProperty doubles every 10 years!
I generally ask how much a bottle of coke costs to understand the cost of living in other countries.
The other day I paid $4.80 for a 600ml 'buddy' size Coke from 7-eleven.
Great wages in Australia, but the cost of living is ridiculous. At this rate there will be two kinds of coke I can't afford instead of just the one.