Home Blog

Recalculating the Iran War’s Impact on the Global Economy


Editor at large Adi Ignatius talks to analysts at ING Bank about how they’re revising their forecasts.

Citi Easy Deals Program Ending Soon


Citi Easy Deals program is ending on May 17, 2026. There have been issues with the program lately, so not a huge surprise to see it going.

For those that don’t know Citi Simplicity, Diamond Preferred cardholders get access to Citi Easy Deals where they have a discounted gift card each day. The popular/good deals have always sold out quickly. 

Hat tip to readers RG, Stuart, jmagg

Natural gas prices in Texas are negative and producers burn it off while shortages loom elsewhere



A quirk in global energy markets has created a stark geographic divide between the haves and the have nots, as a glut of natural gas in West Texas has produced negative prices while shortages loom over Europe and Asia amid the U.S. war on Iran.

Over the past week, spot prices at the Waha gas trading hub in the Permian Basin fell as low as -$9.75 per million British thermal units, with expectations that it could hit -$10 when pipeline capacity tightens as operators perform seasonal maintenance later this year, traders told Bloomberg. 

That’s because drilling in the prolific Permian Basin yields both oil and natural gas. But while an extensive network of pipelines exists to bring crude to market, there’s less infrastructure to transport natural gas, creating bottlenecks and localized surpluses.

As a result, negative gas prices aren’t that unusual in West Texas, and have been that way more often than not so far this year. But last week saw the lowest weekly average Waha spot price on record.

Since negative prices mean producers have to pay to someone to take the supply off their hands, excess natural gas is often burned off, and so-called flaring events this season are at five-year highs.

Despite the upside-down price environment for West Texas drillers, they aren’t expected to pull back production because oil is lucrative enough to offset losses from gas.

And the recent spike in crude since the U.S.-Israel war on Iran started makes oil even more profitable. West Texas Intermediate has shot up 47% to nearly $100 a barrel in the last three weeks.

By contrast, other parts of the world have seen natural gas prices surge due to disruptions from the Iran war. Tehran has retaliated by largely closing off the Strait of Hormuz, through which 20% of the world’s oil and liquified natural gas flow.

Iran also attacked Qatar’s Ras Laffan Industrial City, damaging two LNG production trains that will impact about 17% of the country’s LNG exports—and repairs may take up to five years.

While most LNG from the Middle East goes to Asia, the supply shock will ripple through global markets as Asia and Europe compete for the remaining gas.

European benchmark gas futures jumped as much as 35% on Thursday to about 70 euros per megawatt hour, or more than $20 per million BTUs, double their prewar levels.

While that’s far short of the record 345 euros per megawatt hour seen in 2022 after Russia invaded Ukraine, the latest price spike comes at a sensitive time for Europe. After heating demand drew down gas inventories during winter, countries must now restock supplies this summer.

In Asia, the situation is so dire that countries have already started looking ways to ration energy, such as implementing four-day workweeks and working from home.

A prolonged closure of the Strait of Hormuz could send LNG spot prices in Asia above $30 per million BTUs in the summer from $26 this spring, analysts told Bloomberg. And if it remains shut in six months, the price could even top $40.

Some countries in Asia are even turning to coal to generate electricity, returning to their 2022 playbook. The Thai government, for example, has already ordered coal-fired power plants to operate at full capacity. Utilities in Bangladesh have also boosted their coal consumption.

South Korea and Taiwan, which produce much of the world’s semiconductors, have signaled they are preparing to rely more on coal.

“Asia is in full price competition, with any country that can switch from gas to coal doing so,” Henning Gloystein, a managing director for energy at Eurasia Group, told the New York Times.

 

10 years of investing | my exact portfolio & how much i've made 📈



now this is a story all about how,
five bucks grew into six figures somehow

in this video, i’m breaking down the good, the bad, & the ugly of my 10-year investing journey. plus i’ll show which accounts i use, the exact stocks/etfs/crypto i’m invested in, and how much i’ve made from dividends and market growth! thanks for watching, and happy investing!! 🤑💸💚

❕❕❕MY ANNUALIZED RETURNS (IRR based on deposit dates)❕❕❕

📈 Acorns (opened Nov 2015): 11.01% annualized
📉 Public (opened Feb 2021): –4% annualized (lol)
📈 Roth IRA (opened Mar 2020): 13.67% annualized
📈 HSA (opened Jul 2023): 21.14% annualized
📈 SEP IRA (opened Aug 2023): 21.33% annualized
📈 Solo 401k (opened Jun 2024): 18.45% annualized
⚡ TOTAL STOCK PORTFOLIO: ~16.3% annualized (Weighted)

Crypto – first buy in 2018: 23.88% annualized

TIMESTAMPS
0:00 hi, intro 🙂
0:43 why i’m making this video
2:03 DISCLAIMER: THIS IS NOT FINANCIAL ADVICE!!!!
2:27 the start of my investing, or non-investing, journey
5:28 my investing awakening
7:19 my very first investment!
7:25 how much i made in my first year of investing
8:15 my first crypto purchase
9:30 how much i made after 5 years of investing
11:00 nothing to do with investing, just want you to see zeke being a freak
13:33 how much i invested in 2023
14:28 how much i invested in 2024
15:15 acorns brokerage & results
18:57 public brokerage & results
23:04 my investment strategy for my retirement accounts (boglehead method)
23:46 roth ira holdings & results
26:33 hsa holdings & results
27:57 sep ira holdings & results
28:57 solo 401k holdings & results
31:01 crypto holdings & results
32:31 the grand reveal: how much i’ve made after 10 years of investing (See full annualized return breakdown in description)

*****************************************************************************

💵 SUPPORT MY CHANNEL & EARN CASH BACK / BONUSES 💵
**I personally use every tool below to manage my finances or earn extra money. I’m NOT sponsored by any of these apps or brands, but I may earn a small reward if you use my links. Thank you so much if you choose to support me!!**

🌳 YNAB – GET 64 DAYS FREE. My go-to budgeting software. Use my link for a 34-day trial + 30 days free after subscribing:

🤳 ATTAPOLL – GET AN INSTANT BONUS. My favorite way to earn cash via surveys. Claim your sign-up bonus:

⛽ UPSIDE – EARN CASH BACK ON GAS. Get a bonus boost on your first fill-up: (Code: ALYSSA72655)

💰 RAKUTEN – GET A $50 REBATE. Spend $50 online and get $50 back! Claim your boost:

🤑 ACORNS – CLAIM YOUR $5 BONUS. Invest your spare change automatically. Start with $5 here:

*MY FAVORITE CHASE CARDS FOR TRAVEL POINTS AND CASH BACK:*
**I use these credit cards for travel rewards and cash back. I will be rewarded if you are approved with my links. Please spend responsibly!**
💳 CHASE SAPPHIRE – EARN 125K BONUS POINTS (Reserve) or 75K BONUS POINTS (Preferred) to fund your next trip when you apply and are approved here:
💳 CHASE FREEDOM – EARN UP TO $500 CASH BACK EACH YEAR. Apply here:

🚀 BETTERMENT – EARN A .5% APY BOOST on your savings! Use my link to boost your interest earnings for 3 months:

(FYI – I’m a client of Betterment and, if you fund a new account, I receive compensation for this referral. You can see what others say about Betterment in reviews in the App Store and Google Play Store.)

🤑 GEMINI – GET FREE CRYPTO. Trade $100+ to unlock your crypto bonus:

*****************************************************************************

🚨 DISCLAIMER: This video reflects my personal experience only. I’m not a financial expert, and nothing said should be taken as financial advice. Always do your own research before making any financial decisions.

source

576,000+ Borrowers Still Stuck in Student Loan Repayment Plan Backlog


Key Points

  • A court filing shows 576,609 borrowers remain stuck in a repayment plan processing backlog, down from 1.4 million in July 2025.
  • New online IDR applications are processing in 3-7 days for most borrowers, but older applications submitted in early 2025 remain trapped in the queue.
  • Department of Education staffing cuts and the upcoming July repayment structure changes threaten to slow progress further and create new processing bottlenecks.

More than 576,000 federal student loan borrowers are still waiting for their student loan repayment plan applications to be processed, according to a recent court filing (PDF File). 

That number is a significant drop from the 1.9 million borrowers stuck in the backlog as of April 30, 2025, but it signals that hundreds of thousands of people remain in limbo and the situation could get worse before it gets better.

The filing also revealed that 88,170 borrowers who applied for PSLF buyback are still awaiting processing. 

Given that nearly 7 million borrowers in SAVE are going to have to change repayment plans soon, this backlog is concerning to say the least.

Would you like to save this?

We’ll email this article to you, so you can come back to it later!

New Applications Move Fast, But Old Ones Are Stuck

There is some good news for borrowers applying for income-driven repayment plans today. Generally, new online IDR applications submitted through StudentAid.gov are processing in roughly 3-7 days for most borrowers. The system, when it works, moves quickly.

The problem is with older applications. Borrowers who submitted IDR applications in early 2025 (many during the chaotic period surrounding the SAVE plan litigation and the beginning of negative credit reporting) are the ones still stuck in the backlog. 

Many of these applications were filed using paper forms, and often require manual review, servicer coordination, or resolution of data discrepancies that automated systems cannot handle.

If you submitted a repayment plan application recently and it processed within a week, that is the current norm. But if you applied months ago and have heard nothing, you are likely one of the 576,000 still waiting.

And many of these borrowers are simply having their applications denied, leading to more confusion.

Suddenly moved out of SAVE forbearance, now on “income based” with no information
by
u/melysandre in
StudentLoans

Staffing Cuts And SAVE Plan Fallout

The backlog reduction from nearly 2 million to 576,000 is real progress, but the pace of that progress is now at risk. The Department of Education has cut nearly 40% of it’s staff, many of whom directly affect loan servicing oversight and handle programs like PSLF buyback. 

At the same time, the demise of the SAVE plan has created widespread confusion. The SAVE plan settlement has officially been signed off by a judge, but the final timeline to change repayment plans is still unknown.

Many of those borrowers are now applying for other IDR plans, which is adding new volume to a system already struggling to clear existing applications.

The new repayment system set to take effect in July 2026 add another layer of uncertainty. As borrowers scramble to understand their options and switch plans ahead of the deadline, servicers will face a surge of applications on top of the existing backlog.

What This Means For Borrowers Trying To Switch Repayment Plans

For borrowers currently trying to switch repayment plans, the best option is simply submit a new online application. The turnaround time is running 3-7 days for most borrowers.

However, there are still some exceptions to the rule, and existing applications are still struggling to get out of the queue.

Borrowers who are stuck in forbearance while waiting for plan processing should be aware that those months do not count toward forgiveness under IDR and only the first 60 days of processing count for PSLF. 

That makes the backlog more than a paperwork delay — it can cost borrowers real progress toward loan forgiveness.

Don’t Miss These Other Stories:

@media (min-width: 300px){[data-css=”tve-u-19d073ee141″].tcb-post-list #post-77141 [data-css=”tve-u-19d073ee147″]{background-image: url(“https://thecollegeinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Education-Secretary-Linda-McMahon-Outside-150×150.jpg”) !important;}}

576,000+ Borrowers Still Stuck in Student Loan Repayment Plan Backlog

576,000+ Borrowers Still Stuck in Student Loan Repayment Plan Backlog
@media (min-width: 300px){[data-css=”tve-u-19d073ee141″].tcb-post-list #post-77247 [data-css=”tve-u-19d073ee147″]{background-image: url(“https://thecollegeinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Ninth-Circuit-Court-of-Appeals-150×150.jpg”) !important;}}

200,000 Borrowers Await Ninth Circuit Ruling on $12 Billion Student Loan Settlement

200,000 Borrowers Await Ninth Circuit Ruling on $12 Billion Student Loan Settlement
@media (min-width: 300px){[data-css=”tve-u-19d073ee141″].tcb-post-list #post-77114 [data-css=”tve-u-19d073ee147″]{background-image: url(“https://thecollegeinvestor.com/wp-content/uploads/2026/03/Spouse-150×150.jpg”) !important;}}

Spousal IRA: How Non-Working Spouses Can Still Save for Retirement

Spousal IRA: How Non-Working Spouses Can Still Save for Retirement

Editor: Colin Graves

The post 576,000+ Borrowers Still Stuck in Student Loan Repayment Plan Backlog appeared first on The College Investor.

Bond Yields Near Highest Levels of the Year, Will Mortgage Rates Follow?


It’s been a topsy-turvy couple weeks for the markets, leading to wild swings in stocks, bonds, and mortgage rates.

The driver has been the Iranian conflict, which has also led to unprecedented movement in the price of a barrel of oil.

In fact, the cost of a barrel nearly doubled, briefly hitting $120, up from $65, prior to the strikes in Iran.

It has since settled down quite a bit, hovering around $85 a barrel, which is still a $20 premium compared to levels before the strikes.

The big question is will it be a short-lived affair, or the start of something bigger?

The answer may determine what happens to mortgage rates, especially important during the spring home buying season.

Will Things Get Worse Before They Get Better?

While oil prices are no longer at their peaks, 10-year bond yields are back above 4.20% and not too far from their 2026-highs around 4.29%.

If they stay there, or move even higher as this all unfolds, there’s a chance mortgage rates will revisit their highs as well.

The highest point for the 30-year fixed this year was 6.21%, according to Mortgage News Daily.

We saw those levels in late January and early February, before mortgage rates moved lower and lower, and finally slipped under 6%.

Unfortunately, that move was very brief and followed by the Iranian strikes, leading to an immediate jump in mortgage rates.

Really, it couldn’t have come at a worse time given the spring home buying season was kicking off an we were finally celebrating sub-6% mortgage rates.

Now we’re back in the teens again and the 5-handle mortgage rates seem like a distant memory.

This despite another jobs report miss last week that would normally send mortgage rates plummeting.

In other words, instead of an even lower 5-handle for the 30-year fixed, we’re back to being firmly in the 6s again.

How Mortgage Rates Could Fall Back Below 6% Again

Enough of the doom and gloom. We know mortgage rates are higher today than they were a week or so ago.

But in reality, they’re only a little bit higher, perhaps .125% to .25% compared to those sub-6% rates.

On a $400,000 loan amount, a 30-year fixed rate of 5.875% would only be $64 cheaper than a rate of 6.125%.

So big picture, it’s really not enough to dissuade someone from buying a home, at least when it comes to monthly payment.

Sure, it’s another headwind and it’s not as low as it was, but if you’re walking away from a home purchase over $65, you probably weren’t that serious to begin with.

Of course, being hesitant to move forward if you’re worried about geopolitics and the state of the world is another issue entirely.

Now here’s some good news to think about. This oil price spike could be very transitory.

If things settle down and ships can begin moving through the Strait of Hormuz again, we’ll get back on trend.

That trend prior to this mess was moderating inflation and cooling labor, which collectively got us those 5-handle mortgage rates to begin with.

In other words, we can focus on the core economy again and stop obsessing over geopolitics.

The key though will be finding a resolution sooner rather than later since we’re in the thick of another spring home buying season.

And prospective home buyers are likely growing tired of setback after setback.

(photo: k)

Colin Robertson
Latest posts by Colin Robertson (see all)

The Hidden Tax of Translation Layers in Growing Companies



The more distance between experts and executives, the slower and less accurate decisions become.

Anthropic, Solana, Bitcoin Miners, SpaceX : FTX’s Visionary Bets That Bankruptcy Liquidated


In the fast-paced and unpredictable ecosystem of cryptocurrency and venture capital, recent social media discussions have highlighted the extraordinary investment foresight demonstrated by Sam Bankman-Fried, the disgraced founder and former CEO of collapsed crypto exchange FTX. This, even as its founder’s legal troubles continue to cast a long shadow.A widely shared update drew attention to an early allocation of $500 million into artificial intelligence leader Anthropic.

The original framing attributed the move directly to Sam Bankman-Fried and estimated its current worth at roughly $70 billion, generating shock and debate across platforms.

Community clarifications quickly adjusted the narrative: the stake actually belonged to FTX itself, representing about an 8 percent ownership slice.

The position was fully liquidated during 2024 bankruptcy proceedings for $1.3 billion.

At Anthropic’s latest reported valuation near $380 billion, that same portion would theoretically stand at approximately $30 billion today—still representing an enormous return but notably lower than the initial viral claim.

A proxy account associated with Bankman-Fried even highlighted how bankruptcy lawyers once described the holding as “worth nothing” before its sale.

This discussion quickly evolved into a deeper examination of the exchange’s overall track record.

Another high-engagement post argued that FTX stood among the sharpest investors in the entire crypto and technology landscape.

The analysis compiled a range of strategic bets that aligned remarkably with surging market trends.

A $1 billion position in the Solana blockchain ecosystem, for example, would now equate to roughly $5.1 billion.

Holdings in the Robinhood fintech platform, initially valued at $648 million, could reach about $5.7 billion.

Further examples included a $100 million commitment to the Sui network, potentially worth $1.2 billion today; $1.15 billion in Bitcoin mining operation Genesis Digital Assets, now estimated at $3.5 billion; and $700 million routed through K5 Global into SpaceX, translating to around $3 billion in current terms.

Taken together, these positions suggest the exchange’s $4.7 billion investment base might have expanded to $52.5 billion in today’s market—an unrealized uplift of nearly $48 billion.

The portfolio spanned cutting-edge artificial intelligence, layer-1 blockchains, traditional brokerage platforms, crypto infrastructure, and space technology, perfectly positioned for the multi-year bull run that followed the firm’s implosion.

Yet these hypothetical windfalls are inseparable from the scandal that defined FTX’s end.

The capital deployed came from customer deposits rather than proprietary funds, resulting in fraud convictions, the exchange’s dramatic failure, and ongoing restitution efforts.

Bankruptcy administrators sold assets—including the Anthropic stake—well before peak valuations, prioritizing creditor recovery over long-term holding.

Online commentary frequently underscores the irony: had operations remained compliant and sustainable, superior investment choices might have fully repaid victims while still delivering outsized gains.

These conversations serve as a stark reminder of venture capital’s high-stakes nature in emerging fields.

They underscore the thin line between visionary strategy and ethical failure, while reigniting debates around regulation, leadership accountability, and the true cost of financial misconduct in crypto. As artificial intelligence and digital asset valuations climb higher, the FTX story clearly remains a cautionary tale about the difference between spotting winners and safeguarding the capital entrusted to you.



2 Quantum Computing Stocks With as Much as 162% and 197% Upside, According to Certain Wall Street Analysts


Quantum computing stocks have arguably been among the most volatile in the market. Some of them, in 2022 and 2023, fell to penny stocks. But perhaps due to excitement over artificial intelligence (AI), or investors seemingly realizing that quantum technology might actually be achievable, the stocks skyrocketed in late 2024 and 2025, in some cases generating returns of 10x or more.

Lately, these stocks have been crashing, though Wall Street still sees immense potential. Here are two quantum computing stocks that have upside of as much as 167% and 199%, respectively, according to certain Wall Street analysts.

Image source: Getty Images.

1. Rigetti Computing — 162% upside

Quantum computing is believed to be the next major iteration of computing, similar to how AI is the next major innovation in software development. While computers run on the foundation of bits, the smallest unit of digital information, quantum computers operate on qubits, which can process information simultaneously, unlike bits, which process information sequentially.

This gives quantum computers the ability to process information much faster, and researchers believe quantum computers could one day compute calculations well beyond that of even today’s most advanced supercomputers.

Rigetti Computing (RGTI 3.44%) has already designed several quantum systems and currently expects to release its 108-qubit system at the end of the first quarter. According to management, the system has achieved a two-qubit gate fidelity of 99%, a measure of accuracy. The ultimate goal of quantum computing companies is to one day commercialize these systems and make them as ubiquitous as traditional computers.

Rigetti Computing Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(-3.44%) $-0.53

Current Price

$14.88

Rigetti’s stock is down roughly 32% this year, but Wall Street analysts still have high hopes for the stock. Of the 10 Wall Street analysts who have issued research reports on the company in the past three months, eight have a buy rating, while two have a hold rating, according to TipRanks. The average one-year price target implies nearly 117% upside. However, the highest price target implies 162% upside.

This rating came from Mizuho Securities analyst Vijay Rakesh in early March, who lowered his price target from $50 to $43 but reiterated his buy rating. In a research note, Rakesh wrote that Rigetti missed revenue estimates in its fiscal fourth quarter but remains on track with its product roadmap. Rakesh still expects Rigetti to capture 10% of the quantum computing market and has the stock trading at 9 times his projected revenue for the company about 30 months from now.

Investors should understand that investing in Rigetti is a pure bet on quantum computers achieving their potential and commercializing. Rigetti currently generates very little revenue and hundreds of millions of dollars in losses. I would keep positions very small and speculative right now.

2. IonQ — 197% upside

IonQ (IONQ 2.10%) is another quantum computing company that set a world record for error rate last October. Using prototypes, the company achieved a two-qubit gate fidelity of over 99.99%, which is higher than the previous world record of 99.97% set by Oxford Ionics in 2024. IonQ acquired Oxford last year.

IonQ plans to use this technology as the basis for its 256-qubit system, which it hopes to demonstrate sometime this year. The stock is down about 28% this year, but Wall Street analysts are still bullish.

Of the 10 Wall Street analysts who have issued research reports on the company in the past three months, eight have a buy rating, while three have a hold rating, according to TipRanks. The average one-year price target implies roughly 91% upside. However, the highest price target implies 197% upside.

IonQ Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(-2.10%) $-0.67

Current Price

$31.23

Rosenblatt Securities analyst John McPeake maintained a buy rating and $100 price target on the stock, with his latest report coming in late February. McPeake, in his research note, cited industry leadership, a high-fidelity rate, strong revenue in 2025, and a strong cash position to continue funding the company.

It’s true that IonQ has much more revenue than Rigetti, with $130 million in 2025, which is over 200% year-over-year growth. The company is still generating significant losses but has nearly $2.4 billion of cash and short-term equivalents.

Still, trading at a market cap of over $12.3 billion, the stock is a similar bet to Rigetti, which is why I would apply the same advice I gave about Rigetti stock to IonQ.

How to Pick Mutual Funds the RIGHT Way | Amit Jain’s Step-by-Step Rulebook | FWS 80



If you need help with your finances, fill out this short form:


In this episode of Finance With Sharan, Amit Jain — a globally certified investment professional with 12+ years of experience in global capital markets and Co-Founder of Ashika Global Family Office Services (advising UHNI portfolios of ₹100+ crores) — walks us through how to pick mutual funds (and ETFs) when there are 4000+ schemes staring back at you. Amit cuts through the noise with practical rules: an age-based allocation mantra, why past performance doesn’t equal future potential, and how to hunt for mispriced quality stocks inside index universes like the Nifty 200. He also explains when an advisor’s fee can actually earn you 5–10% extra return versus DIY mistakes, and why ETFs used smartly reduce fees and volatility.

Amit shares concrete numbers from recent market snapshots: large-cap category spreads, small-cap swings, the typical mutual-fund breadth and why a concentrated list of 6–10 quality names can create alpha. He describes his process of screening, then selecting schemes that overweight those names and why theme + right weightage matters more than brand name of the AMC. We also dig into global opportunity sets, the role of REITs, and when being in cash makes sense while waiting for micro-opportunities. With experience leading a Reliance Capital Group company at a young age and a career built on studying market cycles and asset-class rotations, Amit brings a grounded, real-world perspective to simplify even the most complex investing decisions.

If you want a practical, no-fluff guide to simplify your equity allocation, fewer funds, clearer themes, and how to avoid being penny-wise and pound-foolish, this episode is for you. Hear Amit’s real examples and the closing playbook: pick quality, price it right, allocate with conviction, and don’t confuse past returns for future outcomes.
Listen, note down the age-mantra, and tell us which part helped you the most.

Checkout Coursera-

1.⁠ ⁠AI Courses Landing Page :

2.⁠ ⁠Coursera Plus Annual Subscription Promo Landing Page :

Subscribe:
The 1% Club:
YouTube:
Instagram:
LinkedIn:
Sharan Hegde:
Instagram:
LinkedIn:
Twitter/X:

Sharan Hegde is a personal finance creator & founder of the 1% Club, simplifying money, markets, and mindset for India’s next generation of wealth builders.

Brolls credits


Timeline:
00:00 — Precap
01:55 — How to Actually Evaluate a Mutual Fund
02:38 — Is Now the Right Time to Buy Stocks?
05:15 — Kya AAPKA Mutual Fund each mai Sahi hai?
07:50 — Should Retail Investors Pick Stocks on Their Own?
09:00 — Is Paying Commission to an Advisor Worth It?
10:52 — Picking the Best Mutual Funds 101
18:45 — The Most Underrated Investment: ETFs
21:04 — Which Countries Should You Invest In for Higher Returns?
23:53 — Why Europe’s Economic Growth Has Stalled
27:50 — Amit’s Take on Real Estate as an Investment
30:20 — His Advice for Investing in the Near Future
33:45 — Final Thoughts

source