Duke of Marmalade
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Which is it? It is of corse the former. Your confusion arises because by your definition of risk ratio risk reduces as the risk ratio increases.Re-mortgaging, or re-financing in the ordinary parlance of finance, means to acquire more debt, in turn reducing the asset to liability ratio (taking on more risk).
Instead brendan then continues, using €200k in bitcoin to pay down debt, which is deleveraging the debt (reducing risk ratios, not increasing them as re-mortgaging would do).
Which is it? It is of corse the former. Your confusion arises because by your definition of risk ratio risk reduces as the risk ratio increases.
We are not supposed to speculate on identities but are you sure you are not a bot? You appear to operate 24/7
We are not supposed to speculate on identities but are you sure you are not a bot? You appear to operate 24/7
Water and black tea, I useta luv herYeh, late one last night. An organised 24 hr fast and outdoor sleep to raise money for needy charities.
You must admit it is a bit confusing. But I suppose it does sort of hang together if you let the term "risk ratio" flip flop betwen Assets/Liabilities and Liabilities/Assets.Mary on the other hand had no risk. She did then re-mortgage, and as could be expected, her risk ratio increased.
Regardless of the net € positions being the same (which I have never disputed), if you remortgage (borrow more) your risk ratio of assets to liabilites reduces, not increases as both you and brendan have tried to pawn off.
You must admit it is a bit confusing. But I suppose it does sort of hang together if you let the term "risk ratio" flip flop betwen Assets/Liabilities and Liabilities/Assets.
the "risk ratio" (to use your made up term)
Yes BS, it really is very, very simple.I do admit, writing these things off the cuff in the early am, can sometimes be conveyed in a confusing manner, my bad on this occasion. But considering re-mortgaging your home to take on new additional debt is being flip-flopped with using existing assets to pay down existing debt to apparently mean the same thing, it appears that is the level we are at.
Of course not. How could deleveraging a position be the same thing as leveraging a position?If I pay down some of that debt, or deleverage, using existing assets, as per Brendans example with €200K bitcoin, my net worth worth remains exactly the same at €800K but my 'Total Debt to Total Assets has decreased to 1:4 (thus I consider myself to have less risk). This is not the same as 'effectively re-mortgaging'.
Sorry BS but the term "risk ratio" is not used in finance to describe a leverage ratio.I mean seriously, a "made up term"!!!
To answer the question directly, no I would not think she would be wise to borrow against her home (at any interest rate) for the purposes of investing €300k in a diversified portfolio of shares.
Same question to you, and considering Joe and Mary end up in the exact same net financial position, would you advise Joe, to avail of his €300k inheritance of a diversified share portfolio?
Thanks Shortie
Now, Joe has a family home worth €500k and a €300k mortgage at 3.5%.
He also has a diversified portfolio of shares worth €300k.
Do you think he should sell those shares and pay off his mortgage?
Brendan
We are not supposed to speculate on identities but are you sure you are not a bot? You appear to operate 24/7
In other words, it's not a good idea to borrow money to buy Bitcoin.
I agree, its not a good idea to borrow for bitcoin.
I have bitcoin, I also have a mortgage repayments due to expire on 31.12.2027 as agreed under the terms of the loan.
Attempting a 24 hour fast is no mean feat.
Attempting to comprehend and contribute to this thread appears to be equally challenging.
Attempting to do both simultaneously is quite ambitious! Well done B/S
This thread is about BTC as an investment not as a technology. This is a question for economists and others well versed in the workings of our monetary system. Nobody is questioning that the BTC technology does what its fans say it does.I put my faith in the more technologically savvy Bill Gates and Richard Branson, who I believe would have a much better understanding of the crypto blockchain technology than a 90+ year old equity picking veteran.
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