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Greater Toronto home sales up 9.4% in June as board predicts price growth could come




The Greater Toronto Area continued to see higher home sales last month compared with a year ago even as new listings slowed.

IB Business Management Unit 5 Summary: Operations Management



This video covers all the key concepts you need to know as part of Unit 5: Operations Management as part of the IB Business Management syllabus. At the end of the video, we will share with you the next steps you can take as part of your study routine depending on your familiarity with the content. Looking for more help with BM? Check out diplomaly.org for practice case studies, videos on response structures and more or get in touch with us for personalised help!
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TIMESTAMPS
0:00 Intro
0:19 Unit 5.1: Role of operations management
0:42 Unit 5.2: Production methods
2:04 Unit 5.3: Lean production & total quality management (HL Only)
4:16 Unit 5.4: Location
5:47 Unit 5.5: Break-even analysis
10:42 Unit 5.6: Production planning (HL Only)
14:48 Unit 5.7: Crisis management & contingency planning (HL Only)
16:42 Unit 5.8: Research & development (HL Only)
18:53 Unit 5.9: Management information systems (HL Only)
21:55 Exam strategy
22:55 What’s next?
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Two Months of Paramount+ For $0.99 Per Month (Works For New & Returning Customers) + $10 Portal


Update 7/3/26: There is also promo code SAVE992MPREM. Code isn’t mentioned on portals though. 

The Offer

Direct link to offer (our affiliate link)

  • Paramount+ is offering two months for $0.99 per month

The Fine Print

Looks like portals are offering up to $10, Topcashback is $9.09 but specifically mentions the $0.99 trial working. Not sure if portals will trigger for existing users or only new users. Gone are the days of the free promo codes unfortunately. 

How a third-generation Texas oilman transformed an organic farming company into a nuclear startup


Nearly a decade ago, third-generation Texas oilman Doug Robison was plotting his retirement and the sale of his petroleum company when a trip to his children’s alma mater, Abilene Christian University, changed his career trajectory—at an atomic level.

He heard a brief talk from Rusty Towell, the director of the school’s Nuclear Energy Experimental Testing lab (NEXT), on the potential of next-generation, molten-salt nuclear reactors for affordable power to lift much of the world out of poverty. Robison was sold. “I met him in the back of the room and said, ‘What would you do if you’re fully funded?’ I asked him three times, and he wasn’t ready for the question.” Two weeks later, Towell offered Robison a rough plan. “I said, ‘You’re funded. Let’s go.”

Robison’s $3.2 million research donation kickstarted the effort and news spread. Then-U.S. Energy Secretary Rick Perry—and former Texas governor—sent a team to Abilene to study the research. In 2019, the Department of Energy offered fuel and salt in support of the project if they agreed to build a test reactor. ACU volunteered to host it.

“I held my hand up in the room and said, ‘I’ll fund it,’” Robison said. ACU President Phil Schubert took Robison aside, asking, “Do you have any idea how we’re going to do this?” Robison replied. “Phil, I don’t have a clue.”

A few months later, Natura Resources was born as a next-generation nuclear startup, aiming to build smaller reactors using new technologies for cooling and other functions. Robison took the defunct corporate shell of an organic farming company he’d started in the 1980s—Natura—and turned it into the startup, even if it’s technically over 40 years old. “It’s a transition from organic agriculture to advanced nuclear,” Robison told Fortune with a laugh, adding that they both still involve clean energy.

Since then, Natura has grown, as has its university alliance—more than 150 researchers from ACU, the University of Texas at Austin, Texas A&M University, and the Georgia Institute of Technology.

They plan to bring the first reactor, MSR-1, online in 2028 in Abilene. The Nuclear Regulatory Commission approved the construction permit in 2024. A 100-megawatt commercial reactor is planned for West Texas’ Permian Basin or near Texas A&M in Bryan by 2032.

Natura joined the Trump administration’s ambitious Nuclear Reactor Pilot Program—involving 10 companies initially—to achieve criticality on at least three test reactors by the Fourth of July—the same date the administration ends subsidies for wind and solar projects.

Natura is not one of the three meeting that goal this weekend, but it hardly matters.

Leaders of the pack

Natura is focused on bringing its test reactor fully online by 2028—even if 2026 was an early goal—and building up a supply chain to scale up commercially in the 2030s. Late last year Natura bought the advanced nuclear development company, Shepherd Power, from energy technology and manufacturing firm NOV—partnering with NOV in the process.

“What we’re trying to prove more than anything is showing that we can actually build a reactor system,” said Natura chief operating officer Jordan Robison, who is also Doug’s nephew. “There is a difference between a criticality test and building a full reactor system.”

Achieving criticality is the milestone when a nuclear reactor sustains its first chain reaction. It’s a key milestone, but the reactor is not operating continuously and producing electricity. An operating reactor is safely generating power over a long period.

In fact, none of the perceived leaders of the next-gen nuclear race achieved criticality in Trump’s pilot program. In addition to Natura, Google-partnered Kairos Power, Bill Gates-backed TerraPower, Sam Altman-backed Oklo, or Amazon-backed X-energy are all focused on building nuclear reactors for utility-scale grid power and hyperscalers. And Natura will need to attract more outside funding to scale up as well.

The three that announced criticality successes by July 4 are all focused on smaller microreactors to power industry or military bases, and not initially utility-scale power. They are Antares Nuclear’s Mark-0 at the Idaho National Laboratory, Valar Atomics’ Ward 250 at the Utah San Rafael Energy Lab, and Deployable Energy’s Unity reactor, also at the Idaho National Lab.

All the aforementioned are developing next-gen nuclear technology for small modular reactors (SMR) or even smaller microreactors. So-called Gen IV reactors rely on non-water coolants—traditional nuclear plants use light-water reactors—such as liquid metals, molten salts, or high-pressure gases. They’re designed for inherent safety with reactors that cannot physically melt down even if all power is lost.

But speed is of the essence, especially with the burgeoning AI data center boom and their thirst for more power. The Trump administration already is easing and streamlining the regulatory processes for SMRs. That’s why Natura already has plans lined up to build its commercial reactors with Teledyne Brown Engineering in Alabama, and for on-site design and construction to be led by Zachry Nuclear, Doug Robison said. Speed and scale matter.

Unlike traditional reactors that use highly pressurized water, molten salt reactors dissolve the nuclear fuel directly into a liquid salt mixture. The molten salt serves as both the coolant and the fuel carrier. High pressures are not required and, if something does go wrong, the nuclear fuel is trapped in the salt. “It’s radioactive, but it’s contained,” Doug Robison said. “Molten salt reactors I believe are the most eloquent of the solutions.”

“Our reactor is sitting in the middle of Abilene right across the street from a dormitory,” he added. “The reason we can do that is because we don’t operate under pressure. We never lose containment.”

Oil and gas roots

Next will come the process of proving the viability of the reactors to investors, hyperscalers, and utilities. There’s a lot of noise and Natura will need to separate itself from the pack, Robison said.

“There’s probably close to 100 projects out there now because there’s so much money flying around,” he said. “With data centers and AI, people are talking hundreds of billions of dollars. That’s going to attract a crowd.

“Coming from the oil and gas background. I’ve never seen a [blueprint] drawing of a drilling rig. Either you have a rig or you don’t,” he continued. “If you don’t have a rig, you’re not drilling, so you don’t have any production. There’s nothing to talk about.”

That will change when the Abilene test reactor comes online, he said. Only a small handful of companies are actually building next-gen reactors right now.

“Our levelized cost of electricity, we think, will be competitive with natural gas, which means we can deploy power onto the grid at a cost that is competitive in the marketplace without subsidies and mandates,” Robison said.

Now Natura must prove it. “We need to derisk to the point when the financial industry says, ‘Now, we believe it.’ When they did it in the Permian with oil, when that money hit the table, everything changed. Steel mills opened up. Fracking mines opened up to provide sand. An industry was stood up, and we made the nation energy independent. That’s exactly what we’re doing now.”

But Natura isn’t stopping at electricity.

Robison is eyeing West Texas’ Permian Basin as the first potential site for a commercial reactor because—in addition to the rising electricity needs—the Permian also has a growing problem with handling the chemically polluted water extracted during oil and gas production.

The heat generated from the reactors can be used to desalinate water, Robison argued. Natura already is working with NGL Energy Partners, which has a large water solutions business.

At least one-quarter of the world’s population doesn’t have access to clean drinking water, he said, but Natura will start in Texas.

“We can generate clean power. And we solve the air emissions issue in the Permian Basin. We start solving the water problem, and we return usable water to the inventory of Texas,” Robison said. “Check, check, check.”

How Much Real Estate Do You Actually Need to Be Free?


How many rental properties do you need to retire? A lot fewer than you think.

When people start investing in real estate, they think they need 20, 50, or even 100 rental units to build wealth, retire early, and secure financial freedom for themselves and their families. This is not the case…and it’s not even close.

The average American only needs eight—yes, eight—paid-off rental properties to retire with six figures in annual cash flow. But that would take decades to pay off, right? Not quite. Within just around a decade, you could go from zero rentals to a paid-off portfolio, giving you financial independence via passive income from a small, powerful rental property portfolio.

Henry is walking through the math, how to get to financial freedom faster, and the strategy he uses to recycle the same down payment so he doesn’t need to wait years to buy the next rental.

Your financial freedom is just eight rental properties away. What are you waiting for?

Henry Washington:
All right, so today we’re going to talk abou t something that I genuinely believe in because it did change the trajectory of my life and it’s simpler than most people think it is. Now, it’s not easy, but it’s definitely simpler than most people think it is. And that idea is you only need eight rental properties to be completely financially free. So to be able to control your own time, having eight properties is all you need. What’s going on everybody? I’m Henry Washington, host of the BiggerPockets podcast and today we’re talking about how to actually generate financial freedom through owning rental properties. I believe this is why a lot of people start looking into investing in real estate, but I haven’t really seen it broken down into exactly how many properties you need for that to be a realistic reality for you and in what timeframe you can reasonably expect for those properties to be producing enough income for you to truly be financially free.
So by the end of this video, you’re going to understand exactly what it looks like to be financially free, how the math works and how you can actually get there. Most people never start and so this is your first step to getting on your way to financial freedom. Now before we jump into the details here, I want to define financial freedom or financial independence because in all reality, financial freedom is a little different for each person. Everybody’s got a different financial background. Everybody has different goals. But for the sake of this video, I want to give it a generic definition so that we can use it as a reference point as we go through the details of how to get to eight properties. So I am simply defining financial independence as when your monthly income from your assets exceeds your monthly expenses. In other words, you know what it costs you to live month in and month out.
And if you don’t, then you should. That’s prerequisite number one. Financial independence is being able to have enough money to pay for those expenses without you having to show up at a job. So this means we are trying to replace our income that we have les control over with income that we have more control over. If you have a job, your income is based on things that are not in your control. It’s based on decisions your boss makes. It’s based on decisions the company you work for makes. It can be based on what’s happening in the economy. It can be based on whether or not your customers for your business are purchasing your product or service. A lot of these factors you have absolutely no control over. So you’re one bad quarter away from potentially being laid off and it’s completely out of your control.
If you replace that income with income from assets that you do control, in this case we’re talking about real estate, it gives you a lot more freedom and sense of comfort. You can control how much rent you charge. You can control what kinds of assets you buy. You can control where you buy those assets. You can control how much leverage you want to buy those assets with. You get to control so many of the factors of that piece of property. And so the money that comes into your bank account each and every month has a lot more to do with the decisions that you’re making than the impact of decisions that other people are making. One of the other control factors is not only are you controlling who lives in your property, but you’re controlling how you monetize and when you monetize that property. You get to decide when you rent it.
You get to decide when you sell it. You get to decide if and when you refinance it. All of these decision points that directly impact money are made by you. So having control over your income allows you to have comfort and comfort allows you to have some freedom. So I truly believe that financial freedom, a key component of that is the control piece because freedom comes with peace of mind. And the more control you have over an asset, the more comfortable you can be with the amount of income that it’s producing. Why real estate? Why is real estate the best vehicle for financial freedom? First and foremost, we all understand that real estate generates income while you own it. People think about the cashflow that an asset produces. So when you buy an asset and you rent it out, the rent hopefully covers all of your expenses and then pays you a little bit of money every month.
And so it’s generating income for you without you having to do a lot of work. Now it is not a completely passive investment strategy. I’m in no way saying you’re going to have to do absolutely nothing and just wait for money to show up in your mailbox. It does take some work and some effort, but it does not take a 40 hour a week work effort like a day job takes. So it is a much more passive income stream. Some of the other factors that make real estate the best option for generating financial freedom, it’s a very proven business model. It has been around for decades and decades and decades and it has been done essentially the same way the entire time. Technology has come around and made a lot of the processes involved in owning and operating real estate easier, but at its core, how to do it has not changed.
You find an asset that you can buy at a discount or under its value. You add value to that asset either by renovating that asset or by repositioning that asset and then you monetize that asset at its new higher value. And that monetization could be rent, it could be selling it, it could be Airbnb. It’s all of the exit strategies that we’re thinking about. But at its core, it’s just about finding an asset, buying some value, adding value, monetizing at its new highest value. We don’t have to guess if investing in real estate leads to building wealth. We have decades and decades of data that proves that it does. You just have to follow the right blueprint. You have to be careful. Yes, it is risky. I’m not saying it’s a foolproof plan. It is going to depend on your ability to operate your business properly.
But if it is all done properly, we have tons of data showing that this will lead to building wealth. It can lead to monthly income.
One of my favorite reasons why real estate is the best investment vehicle to get you to financial freedom is because it pays you multiple ways. Yes, cashflow is awesome, but in my opinion, cashflow is not even the most important way that your real estate pays you. The real wealth building and wealth generation comes from appreciation. That is your property increasing in value over time and your property debt getting paid down by not you, by a tenant. Those two ways that real estate pays you compound because you have someone in there paying down your asset and simultaneously you have time working in your favor because real estate in general goes up in value over time. So these two things work at the same time. Debt goes down, value goes up and you’re really starting to build wealth through those two ways that real estate pays you.
So those are my favorite two ways that real estate pays you. That’s why people say the longer you stay in the game, the more wealth you build. And that’s just because time is your friend when you own real estate, because historically real estate goes up in value and historically your tenants are paying down your debt at that same time. That’s why people look up and realize, oh wow, I have a huge net worth because I’ve owned property for 10, 20, 30 years. And then the last way real estate pays you is through tax benefits. Yes, your real estate is going up in value over time, but the government doesn’t see your physical real estate as something that is appreciating. It actually sees your real estate asset as something that is depreciating and technically they’re right. It is a physical building. So yes, on paper, your asset goes up in value, but the government gives you a tax deduction for the depreciation of that asset.
So that again, helps you keep more of your money in your pocket because you get to get a write-off every year just for simply owning a physical building. And then on top of that, there are more advanced tax strategies that you can use like accelerated depreciation. There is a tax benefit that real estate investors can leverage where you can take all of the depreciation that the government says that your property is going to have over time and you can accelerate all that depreciation and take it upfront in one year allowing you to get a big tax deduction. Now we have tons of other videos on this topic throughout the channel and on the podcast. So if you want to learn more about those strategies, go and check out some of those videos. The point that I’m trying to make here is real estate is the best way to build wealth.
Yes, because it pays you cashflow, but also because the property appreciates over time at the same time as your tenants are paying down your debt and then the government gives you a tax break for owning it. That’s four ways that real estate puts money in your pocket and we haven’t even talked about paying off the house yet. Okay. Okay. I get it. You’re all sold on real estate. I understand. That’s why you’re here watching bigger pockets in the first place. I don’t need to convince you, but I just want to set that baseline. And now I can hear you all saying, “I get all that, but where do I get all this money to buy a house? Real estate’s expensive. I hear you. You’re not wrong. Let’s talk about it. ” First, let’s think about how much money do you actually need to get started.
Now, I’m not going to sit up here and tell you that you can do this with absolutely $0. That is not true. One of the things I always say about real estate is you can absolutely buy real estate with little to none of your own money. You can 100% finance a property, not put any money down and then be able to own that property. There are tons of strategies for you to be able to do that. It doesn’t mean that you should do that, but it is possible. It is not possible, however, to own and operate real estate with no money. You have to have money to own real estate, even though you don’t need money to necessarily buy real estate. Does that make sense? Just think about it from this perspective. If you pay $0.00 to buy a property 30 days after you buy it, because you bought it on leverage, you didn’t use any cash.
30 days after you buy it, what comes due? The mortgage payment. That money’s got to come from somewhere. Let’s say you buy a property with zero money down and day two of ownership, the air conditioner goes out. It’s going to cost you $8,000. That money’s got to come from somewhere. So you need money to operate real estate. You don’t necessarily need money to buy it, but for the sake of this video, we’re going to keep it very simple and think of things in terms of like a conventional loan. Typically, a conventional loan is going to require you to have about 20 to 25% down to purchase a property. So in other words, if you’re buying a $200,000 rental property, you’re looking at about 40 to 50 grand that you have to put down just to own that property. And remember, I said you’re going to need some money to also operate that property.
So for a $200,000 rental property, I would say you need to budget somewhere between 20 and 30% of the purchase price to be able to own and operate that property. So somewhere between 40 and $60,000. Now I understand that’s a lot of money. I can hear you now. You’re not wrong. I’m not going to pretend it’s not a lot of money, but I’m not going to sit up here and lie to you and tell you that you can do this with absolutely nothing. And that number seems high, but it is achievable for a lot of people just through saving. So you can set up some sort of savings account and allocate a percentage of your income every single month into that account and start to save up so that you can have these cash reserves. Now, there are tons of methods that you can use to find and buy property without spending a ton of your own money.
So you may not even need all of that cash for the down payment. That’s going to depend on how you’re going to choose to find properties, what kinds of assets you’re going to choose to find, what methods are you going to use to find them, right? That’s a much more detailed conversation. But in general, try to save up between 20 and 30% of the property’s purchase price and that will ensure that you have enough money to at least get started if you have to go a conventional route. The next thing people are concerned about is, “Man, I got to save up 20 and 30% eight times because we’re talking about eight single family homes is what you need to be able to replace your income and become financially free.” And the answer to that is no, you don’t need to save up eight down payments.
You need to save up your first down payment. And then we’re going to use the strategy that we all know and love. And if you don’t, you get to learn a little bit about it today and that is the Burr method. The Burr method is where you buy a property, you rehab that property, then you rent that property out, then you refinance that property and then you refinance it, you pull your cash out that you use to buy the property and when you pull that cash out, you can repeat the process. So we’re going to build a portfolio of eight properties by recycling the cash that we use to buy the very first one. This can be done. And a litle bit later, I’m going to share with you the timeframe in which I think this can be reasonably executed. I think what you’ll find is that timeframe really isn’t that long in the grand scheme of thinking about how long you would normally have to work your normal nine to five until retirement.
So to recap, the goal is to take your down payment, use that to buy an asset. You want to buy that asset at somewhat of a discount. The goal is then to add some value to that asset via renovations. And then once that asset is now worth more money, you can rent that property out and get good rents and then you execute what’s called a cash out refinance. And that means you’re going to take out a loan for the new higher value of the house, allowing you to pull some of that cash out to pull out that 30 to $50,000, put it back in your pocket, and then you repeat the proces by going to find another property that you buy at a discount. And the goal is you do that until you hit eight properties. Now there’s a lot of detail that goes into all the steps of the BRRR method.
And I’m not trying to gloss over all of that detail in this video. We only have so much time, but I do understand this is going to require you being able to find a deal at a discount. It’s going to require you being able to renovate that property or manage your renovation. It’s going to require you to find the right lending relationships and it’s going to require you to be able to have processes in place to be able to do it over and over again. But that’s the game. That’s what we’re signing up for. Again, I said this would be simple, not easy.
So why is eight properties the magic number? Why not five or 10 or 25? Well, it’s just a simple math problem. Think about it from this perspective. During the first phase, you’re going to be acquiring the properties. So you’re going to be executing that BER method like I was talking about. You’re going to be buying properties, renovating, renting them out. And after you rent them out and you refinance it, you’ll have a new loan amount and you should be, if you’ve done this correctly, pulling in a net cashflow of somewhere between, let’s call it two and $400 a month per house. If you’ve done this great, that’s what you can expect. Two to $400 a month if you have a leveraged property. So if you build up to eight at two to $400 a month, that’s about $1,600 to $3,200 a month in cashflow for your portfolio.
Now, is that enough to replace your day job? Probably not, but it’s still great supplemental income. Phase two is now we have to focus on paying off those properties because remember I said you’re bringing in $1,600 to $3,200 a month in leveraged cashflow, but our goal is to get to unleveraged cashflow. And so instead of making 200 to $400 per month, you’ll be making somewhere between $1,000 to $1,500 per month of cashflow. That is a substantial increase from the two to $400 a month. So let’s take the average. Let’s say you’re bringing in about $1,300 per month per property of cashflow that puts just over $10,000 per month of unleveraged cashflow in your wallet. Now that is enough for you to live comfortably in most parts of the country. Again, financial freedom looks different for everybody based on their goals, based on their lifestyle. So if you live a more expensive lifestyle or you live in a part of the country where it’s more expensive to live, then you may need a little more than eight.
Or if you live in a place that is not as expensive to live or your monthly expenses aren’t as high in this area, then you may not need eight properties. But on average for most Americans, $10,000 per month is a reasonable monthly income to cover your expenses and eight properties based on all the math I’ve just shared with you will get you just that. So how long should this take? As you start to pay off that first asset, that’s when you really start to accelerate this plan. And so based on the math that I’m looking at, it should take you anywhere between eight to 12 years to get your assets paid off. And that’s if you’re aggressively paying them off. That’s applying all of your cashflow that you’re getting from your portfolio to one property at a time. In other words, we’re going to do the debt snowball method, but we’re going to do it with paying off our mortgages.
So if you take the houses, pick the one you want to start with, focus all of the additional cashflow that you’re getting to paying off that mortgage more quickly. Once that one is paid off, you take all the new cash flow plus what you’ve been paying on that one and you add it to the next one. You do that snowball effect for eight to 12 years and you’ll look up and you’ll have a paid off portfolio. Eight to 12 years is a long time. I’m not going to pretend like it’s just a flash in the pan. But if your goal prior to this was to work until you’re 65 and you’re in your 30s right now, well, that’s pretty fast. Eight to 12 years isn’t that long. Now, is it going to be uncomfortable? Yes. Are there going to be hiccups in the plan? Sure.
Things are going to break. It’s going to cost you more money than you expected to fix some things. It’s going to take you a little longer. That’s why we give you the window of eight to 12 years. Nothing is going to go perfectly. You are going to have some bumps in the road, but if you follow this plan and you execute on this plan, I think you can reasonably expect to be in a place where you get to choose if you want to go to work or not in eight to 12 years. That’s pretty amazing. And I don’t know any other asset class that allows you to be able to get there in the same timeframe with the same amount of work. Now, if you’re in this boat of thinking, “Henry, I ain’t got eight to 12 years. I don’t want to take that long.” Well, I’d push back on you and say, “Why not?
” But I get it. Some people just want to go faster or some people need to go faster. Maybe you’re a whole lot older in your journey than someone who’s 30 and you’re still trying to build up enough properties to be able to not have to work anymore. If you need to go faster, are there ways to do it? Yes, but it’s going to require you to bring in a new or a different income stream. Here are some examples of ways that people who are in the real estate space generate additional income. Like I said, I flip houses. Some people wholesale houses. Some people are real estate agents. Some people become house inspectors. Some people become home appraisers. Some people become lenders or work for a lender. Some people go and work for a brokerage. Maybe they don’t actually sell homes, but they work within a brokerage because they have the experience of owning their own real estate.
There are tons of income streams that you can leverage in the real estate space that you now are gaining experience in because you’re building your own portfolio. Look into those things, look into the skillset that you have and pick some sort of income producing strategy that you can generate income with a little bit of time and then you can take that additional income and you can pay off properties. We interviewed a guy recently on the BiggerPockets Podcast, Neil Whitney, he drove Uber to generate extra income. He had his day job and his wife told him, “You can’t spend our money on real estate.” So he had to go drive Uber to generate the money that he wanted to use to invest in real estate and he is now paying off his properties. So this is something you can absolutely do. You just have to figure out a way to go and produce more active income if you want to speed up this process and get there sooner than eight to 12 years.
I know that wasn’t some magic pill and if you were watching this because you think you were going to get some magic pill, then you probably haven’t been watching BiggerPockets for too long because we try to be very realistic with you about how you can truly get to financial freedom. My goal with this video was to show you that it is still absolutely possible and that real estate is still, in my opinion, the best way for you to get there, but I want to be real with you about the timeframe. Again, the goal is to get to eight pay it off houses. How do we do that? We use the Burr method. We find an asset that we can buy at a little bit of a discount. We add value to it, we rent it out, we refinance it, pull out our cash. Once we pull out our cash, we go and do it again.
We do that until we get up to eight properties and then we take our additional cash flow, our leveraged cashflow, and we start to pay off one asset at a time. Snowball method of paying down these assets. After eight to 12 years, you should have the majority of those assets paid off and you should be sitting with somewhere between seven and $10,000 a month in unleveraged cashflow. If this episode resonated with you and this is a path that you want to start to go down, we would love to hear more about it. So please drop us a comment down below, give this video a like so we can continue to send you more amazing content like this directly to your algorithm. And if you want to dive deeper into any of the topics that we covered in this video, like the Burr Method, finding deals, analyzing deals.
We’ve got episodes and videos on all of it. We’ll try to link some of those below in the show notes. Thank you so much for tuning in to this BiggerPockets YouTube video. We’ll see you on the next episode of the BiggerPockets Podcast.

 

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Japan taps Cognition’s ‘Devin-kun’ as legacy code, shrinking workforce opens market for AI coding


Japan—famously slow to adopt digital technologies common across the developed world—has become a surprisingly fast adopter of AI, as it confronts both a shrinking population and aging digital infrastructure built on legacy code. 

“Japan was our first or second most popular country in terms of user engagement overall,” said Russell Kaplan, president of Cognition AI, the San Francisco startup behind AI coding tool Devin, in early June. 

The East Asian country has the world’s oldest population, with almost 30% of its residents over the age of 65. Japan’s working-age population is projected to decline by over 30% between now and 2060. The decline leads to a shortage of programming talent: In 2023, Japan’s Ministry of Economy, Trade, and Industry (METI) estimated that the country would face a shortage of 789,000 software engineers by 2030. 

Cognition AI is making Japan the first step in its Asian expansion, opening a Tokyo office in April; it will follow with making Singapore its Asia-Pacific headquarters later this year.

The firm is betting that Japan will be the ideal proving ground for AI-powered software engineering. “The needs are real, especially in critical infrastructure and government,” Kaplan said. “The country is running on aging infrastructure with a declining workforce.” 

The efficiency gains could be immense. Faced with a national IT compliance mandate, Sapporo’s city government needed to modernize over one million lines of legacy code, which Kaplan estimated would have normally taken 200 engineering months of work. Using Devin, Sapporo’s engineers completed it in roughly a quarter of that time.

Even before Cognition officially launched in Japan, Devin was already going “viral” in Japan. “There was a debate of what the correct honorific for Devin was,” Kaplan said, referring to the suffixes attached to names to designate social hierarchy. 

“What the community settled on was Devin-kun.”

Japan’s bet on U.S. AI

Japan has become the preferred beachhead for U.S. AI companies eyeing global expansion. OpenAI and Anthropic both opened their first international offices in Tokyo. Microsoft, Alphabet, and other hyperscalers have committed billions to Japanese data centers. Japan was also the second country to secure access to Anthropic’s powerful Mythos model, with three of its largest banks—MUFG, Mizuho, and Sumitomo Mitsui—among those granted entry through Project Glasswing, a program to help key companies and critical institutions fix security vulnerabilities. (This access was quickly shut off after the U.S. barred all foreigners from using the model in mid-June.)

While South Korea, Singapore, and other regional economies have made sovereign AI a priority, Japan seems to be more comfortable sticking with U.S. AI, due to the country’s investment and close relationships with American AI labs.

Courtesy of Cognition AI

“Japan has disproportionately invested in working closely with U.S. companies to influence the roadmaps of those companies to meet local domestic needs,” Kaplan said. One of OpenAI’s biggest investors is Softbank, the massive Japanese telecoms company run by tech booster Masayoshi Son.

AI could present an opportunity for Japan to integrate its digital systems with the rest of the world. Kaplan suggested that low English proficiency “has led to a bit more isolation for some businesses in Japan.” Yet AI’s native multilingualism chips away at that barrier. Japanese engineers can work with Devin entirely in Japanese while collaborating through the agent with teams on the other side of the world. 

AI coding reaches Asia

Cognition AI, founded in 2023, is best known for its AI coding tool Devin. The tool operates as a full AI software engineering teammate: Give it a task, and it codes, debugs, and deploys code autonomously inside the tools an engineering team already uses. 

Devin was one of the earliest instances of “AI employees,” or agents that are fully integrated into workplace tools like Slack that employees can assign tasks to without resorting to constant prompting.

In late May, Cognition raised more than $1 billion in a new funding round that valued the startup at $26 billion, more than doubling its valuation from a September 2025 round. The company’s annualized run rate reached $492 million at the time of the raise, up from just $37 million a year earlier.

Cognition AI’s coding tools, to some investors, pose an existential threat to existing programmers and software engineers, particularly in countries like India, a traditional hub for back-office work. The prospect of AI agents performing that same work at a fraction of the cost has rattled investors. Shares in Infosys, Wipro, Tata Consultancy Services, and HCLTech have all fallen between 30% and 40% over the past 12 months. 

But Kaplan isn’t worried about India’s ability to adapt to AI. “On the ground in India, the job of an engineer can become more fun and impactful. Suddenly you have someone who has been working by themselves on a specific part of a project, and they’re getting a promotion where they have a whole team of AI agents working for them.” Kaplan said. “The companies we work with are using productivity gains to become more ambitious.”

One of Cognition’s more unexpected growth markets is Malaysia. The country’s capital, Kuala Lumpur, has become a regional software engineering hub, driven by a large English-speaking talent pool, lower operating costs, and proximity to the rest of Southeast Asia. Kaplan described the engineers his team encountered there as among the most skilled in the world at managing AI agents.

Cognition has launched what it calls an Applied AI Engineering program in Malaysia, which identifies top engineers who excel at directing agents and training them to be able to teach entire teams on how to work effectively with AI.

Kaplan is also looking closely at South Korea and Australia as possible Asia-Pacific expansion markets. 

Cognition’s expanding presence is uncovering another benefit. Compute, the processing power that AI systems run on, is a finite resource; Kaplan says demand at Cognition is doubling roughly every seven weeks. But geographically diverse teams allow compute to be used during off-peak hours on Wall Street and Silicon Valley. “When people are at work in Japan, people in New York are asleep,” Kaplan said. “There’s a lot of efficiency you get as an AI company working that way.”

Trump says housing bill is ‘fine’ but still holds off on signing



President Donald Trump said a bipartisan housing bill he has refused to sign was “fine,” seeming to suggest it could become law even as he has withheld his signature in a bid to secure a voter identification law he sees as a bigger priority.

Processing Content

“The housing bill is fine. There’s a lot of Democrat points in there that I don’t even think are good, but it’s fine,” Trump said Thursday in a CNBC interview. “But I’ve made the case I’d rather not sign anything until we sign the Save America Act.”

Trump abruptly canceled a signing ceremony for the housing bill last week, withholding his approval to raise pressure on Senate Republicans to change their chamber’s rules and approve a separate voter identification measure.

READ MORE: Housing bill expected to become law — sooner or later

Even though the president has not committed to signing the measure, House Speaker Mike Johnson sent it to the White House on June 29. Trump has 10 days, excluding Sundays, to either sign or veto the bill. If he does neither, it will become law after that 10-day period. 

Trump in the CNBC interview did not directly say what course he would take.

Scrapping the signing denied lawmakers in both parties and Trump himself the chance to highlight major legislation that seeks to address voters’ concerns about high costs of living. Those economic concerns are the dominant issue before the November midterm elections in which Trump’s Republican Party faces an uphill battle to retain control of Congress.

Earlier this year, Trump signed two executive orders to ease regulations in a bid to increase the US supply of homes — one which aims to bolster access to mortgage credit and another that targets environmental rules to speed up development.

Trump has struggled to convince voters that his administration is addressing high costs for housing, utilities, health care and groceries — and rival Democrats have been winning key elections by focusing on affordability. The Iran war exacerbated voters’ poor perceptions of the economy, with the closure of the Strait of Hormuz spiking oil and gas prices.

Asked about the housing bill on Monday, Trump dismissed the legislation as “so unimportant” compared to the voter identification bill. Trump has for months pressed lawmakers to approve the Save America Act, which would create strict ID requirements for voters. GOP leaders have said they lack the support to approve that measure or any rule changes. 



European NATO allies replace most U.S. force cuts, commander says




European NATO allies replace most U.S. force cuts, commander says

70″ Insignia Class F50 Series LED 4K UHD Smart Fire TV for $299.99 on Amazon



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