Rubberroad ☂️

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Rubberroad ☂️

Rubberroad ☂️

@rubberroad

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Japan Katılım Mayıs 2018
134 Takip Edilen221 Takipçiler
Rubberroad ☂️ retweetledi
Aakash Gupta
Aakash Gupta@aakashgupta·
Japan is the only major economy where a house loses 50% of its value in 10 years and hits zero in 22. By government statute. The reason 9 million homes sit empty has nothing to do with "overlooked opportunity." Japan's tax code charges 6x more property tax on vacant land than land with a structure on it. Owners keep rotting houses standing because demolishing them triggers a tax penalty. The akiya crisis is a tax distortion, not a buyer's market. The renovation math is where most foreigners get wrecked. A $15,000 house in Kyushu needs $30,000-$80,000 in renovation. Japanese banks won't give you a mortgage without permanent residency or years of employment history in Japan. You're paying cash for a structure the Japanese government officially considers worthless. Then the resale trap. If a house was hard to sell in the first place, selling it again later is equally difficult. Rural Japanese land doesn't appreciate. The population in these areas is declining so fast that some villages will literally cease to exist within 20 years. You're buying into a market where your only potential buyers are other foreigners who saw the same viral tweet. One guy who actually made it work, a Swedish model turned renovator, spent $110K total on purchase plus renovation for a single property. It brings in $11K/month in short-term rental revenue now. But he learned Japanese, moved there full-time, built community relationships for years, and got a minpaku license that caps rentals at 180 days per year in most areas. The Italy comparison tells the real story. Those €1 homes came with mandatory renovation commitments of €15,000+ within three years or the town claws back the property. Japan's version is gentler but the underlying dynamic is identical: governments paying people to repopulate areas that economics has already abandoned. The opportunity is real for a very specific person. Someone who wants to live in rural Japan, speaks or is learning Japanese, has cash, and treats the purchase as a lifestyle decision with a negative expected financial return. For everyone else reading this as a real estate arbitrage, the 9 million empty houses are empty for a reason.
Alessandro Palombo@thealepalombo

Japan has 9 million abandoned houses. By 2038, it's projected to be 1 in 3. Many of these sell for near-zero prices. The government covers 30–75% of renovation costs. Japan also places no restrictions on foreign property ownership, identical rights to citizens. Only a very specific profile would consider this. But there’s a lot of similarity to Italy's €1 home schemes, which were dismissed as gimmicks and are now attracting serious buyers to villages across Sicily and Sardinia. Japan's abandoned house market is a real entry point for people willing to look past the obvious. In Kyushu, you can also find move-in ready houses for $15,000–20,000 in towns with hot springs, fresh seafood, and Shinkansen access. I will be exploring later this year personally, but quality of life in Japan looks to be incredibly high. Is this one of the most overlooked property plays in Asia right now?

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Rubberroad ☂️
Rubberroad ☂️@rubberroad·
@thealepalombo What's not mentioned is that property in Japan are more like a car in that it depreciate in value. The house itself will run down to zero in 30 years, each year valued less and less. The land in remote areas aren't worth anything especially in those remote locations
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Alessandro Palombo
Alessandro Palombo@thealepalombo·
Japan has 9 million abandoned houses. By 2038, it's projected to be 1 in 3. Many of these sell for near-zero prices. The government covers 30–75% of renovation costs. Japan also places no restrictions on foreign property ownership, identical rights to citizens. Only a very specific profile would consider this. But there’s a lot of similarity to Italy's €1 home schemes, which were dismissed as gimmicks and are now attracting serious buyers to villages across Sicily and Sardinia. Japan's abandoned house market is a real entry point for people willing to look past the obvious. In Kyushu, you can also find move-in ready houses for $15,000–20,000 in towns with hot springs, fresh seafood, and Shinkansen access. I will be exploring later this year personally, but quality of life in Japan looks to be incredibly high. Is this one of the most overlooked property plays in Asia right now?
Alessandro Palombo tweet mediaAlessandro Palombo tweet mediaAlessandro Palombo tweet mediaAlessandro Palombo tweet media
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Rubberroad ☂️
Rubberroad ☂️@rubberroad·
@nicrypto also worth noting Bitcoin custody solutions charge around 0.60% so very tempting to switch
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Nic
Nic@nicrypto·
Morgan Stanley just launched the cheapest Bitcoin ETF on the market. 0.14% annual fee. BlackRock charges 0.25%. Fidelity charges 0.25%. Every major competitor charges more. The largest wealth manager in the US just entered the Bitcoin ETF race and opened with the lowest price in the room. Morgan Stanley has $1.9T in AUM and 15,000 financial advisors. That's a distribution channel BlackRock doesn't have. The institutionalisation of Bitcoin just got a new chapter.
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Rubberroad ☂️
Rubberroad ☂️@rubberroad·
@ZynxBTC hate to say it but it's a good option for trusts that don't want to deal with custody solutions. They're way more expensive too
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TFTC
TFTC@TFTC21·
Claude has been down for almost 5 hours for many users. This marks the longest stretch of a service interruption for the company. Ever.
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Rubberroad ☂️
Rubberroad ☂️@rubberroad·
@naduuurn Allow me to introduce you to the discovery app(s). Health, Bank, Insure
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nadine
nadine@naduuurn·
Why is the Woolworths apps one of the worst apps in the world
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The Journey Man
The Journey Man@JM_speakss·
Borrow $71,000 today at 7.5% interest. Instead of buying Bitcoin outright… Buy $STRC. It currently pays about 11.5% annually and pays monthly dividends. That means the asset is paying you 4% more than your borrowing cost. Let’s do the math. $71,000 in STRC $8,165/year in dividends. Your loan costs you $5,325/year. That leaves roughly $2,800/year profit. Now take that spread and buy Bitcoin every month. The bank finances the asset. The asset finances the Bitcoin. If STRC stays at par and the dividend holds… You’ve basically turned the banking system into a Bitcoin DCA machine. Sometimes the simplest trades are the most powerful.
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Alistair Milne
Alistair Milne@alistairmilne·
Bitfinex's daily volume is highest its been for >1 year Someone, or several parties, are hoovering up coins over there (Small premium of ~$100 due to zero trading fees)
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Rubberroad ☂️ retweetledi
Crypto Rover
Crypto Rover@cryptorover·
💥BREAKING: Coinbase announces 3.5% rewards paid in $BTC for holding $USDC.
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Serenity
Serenity@aleabitoreddit·
Silver ended the day down over 28.54% Here's why Silver / $SLV crashed today: Jan 13th: CME shifted from fixed-dollar margin to percentage based margin. This scaled collat requirements with contract value, effectively capping leverage as it goes higher. The capital required to maintain a single COMEX contract increased in tandem, creating an environment where even minor price drops would trigger massive margin calls. Jan 27th: CME had increased the maintenance margin percentage twice this week to ensure "adequate collateral coverage" amid extreme volatility. This forced leveraged positions to liquidate their long positions or post substantial additional capital. There were five margin hikes within nine days that created a "coiled spring" of potential selling pressure. Today: Western markets focused on the Federal Reserve, but the new Fed chair likely did not play much of an impact as this is just noise. Pricing dislocations happened in Asian markets. UBS SDIC Silver Futures Fund traded at 36-64% premiums over SHFE contracts. And this was the main source of silver exposure in China. On January 30, the Shenzhen Stock Exchange implemented an emergency full-day trading halt for the SDIC Silver LOF. This suspension created a "liquidity trap" for Chinese institutional and retail traders. Unable to liquidate their domestic holdings, these participants were forced to dump $SLV and COMEX futures to raise cash or hedge their exposure. TLDR: The $SLV crash of January 30, 2026 today was not a failure of silver's fundamental value, but a failure of the "paper game" that dictated price discovery. CME hiking margin requirements repeatedly and the China liquidity trap led to cascading margin liquidations that caused selloffs of leveraged positions. Other events such as the Fed chair was likely known awhile, looks to be "narrative noise" regarding what actually happened. Today was a "Paper Game" failure and leverage used to trade it was systematically wiped out by exchange rules.
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Serenity@aleabitoreddit

Anyone know what happened to $SLV? This flash crash is wild.

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Gorilla
Gorilla@CryptoGorilla·
Bitcoin is back above 90k Can’t wait to watch it drop $4000 in 6 seconds at US open
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Rubberroad ☂️
Rubberroad ☂️@rubberroad·
@alistairmilne my theory is that on 10/10 those that were on the other side of the liquidation event and have huge only are selling out and reducing their holding. They're massively over allocated.
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Alistair Milne
Alistair Milne@alistairmilne·
There's a rumour that part of the BTC selling / overhang was due to 'criminals' rushing to swap their ill-gotten BTC for ZEC to avoid it being frozen on exchanges ... so decided to look at inverted ZEC vs BTC to look at the inverse correlation Might have been part of it? ZEC went from $1bil market cap to $12bil
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Joe Carlasare
Joe Carlasare@JoeCarlasare·
During my time in bitcoin since 2015, sentiment has never been worse imo. Today, I talked to a friend today who has held since 2017. He is seriously considering selling his entire position 7 figure position. He didn’t even think about selling in 2022 at the FTX bottom. This really feels different.
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Alistair Milne
Alistair Milne@alistairmilne·
Bitcoin is either: - a beach ball forced underwater while all other assets and money supply are at or near ATHs or - a canary in the coal mine signalling all markets are due to crash imminently
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Vinny Lingham
Vinny Lingham@VinnyLingham·
Absolutely incredible how on weekends, the Bitcoin price is so stable. Pretty impressive for a market that nobody controls…
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Rubberroad ☂️ retweetledi
𝔊𝔥𝔬𝔰𝔱
𝔊𝔥𝔬𝔰𝔱@_0xghost_·
Coinbase announced they will be doing stock trading. Reading between the lines what this means is a) no one gaf about crypto anymore, b) they can’t generate enough fees & revenue from crypto trading alone & c) the experiment of onboarding more to dex trading isn’t working.
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Simon Dixon
Simon Dixon@SimonDixonTwitt·
@WatcherGuru Now do stablecoin withdrawals too and that really changes things.
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Watcher.Guru
Watcher.Guru@WatcherGuru·
JUST IN: Financial giant 'Interactive Brokers' to allow brokerage accounts to be funded by crypto stablecoins.
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