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Rents fall as new completions surge and demand slows, but rebound expected: CMHC




Canada’s housing agency says rental prices have fallen amid an influx of new completions and slower population growth, but demand in major cities is expected to grow in part due to improving affordability. Canada Mortgage and Housing Corp.’s mid-year rental market report says increased supply competition from new builds is driving asking rents lower, particularly …

Navy Federal Credit Union (NFCU) cashRewards Credit Card: $250 Bonus and 1.99% APR On Balance Transfers


Update 6/8/26: Deal is back (ht B2)

Original Post 1/3/25:

The Offer

Direct link to offer

  • Get a sign up bonus of $250 when you spend $2,500 or more within 90 days of opening a new cashRewards card from Navy Federal Credit Union.
  • Also, get a 0% 1.99% intro APR on balance transfers for 12 months and no transfer fees.

Offer expires March 31, 2025.

Card Details

  • Card earns either 1.5% cash back or 2% cashback on all purchases: those with credit line above $5,000 will get 2%
  • No annual fee
  • No foreign transaction fee

Our Verdict

Personally I’d have preferred the expired offer of $300 bonus on this card (plus Walmart+ membership which this current offer doesn’t have). But I thought it worth highlighting this offer for those who have interest in the 0% APR on balance transfers – something uncommon. (We occasionally see 0% on purchases, rarely on balance transfers.)

I’ll add this to our list of 0% APR cards. Just keep in mind that carrying a balance on a personal credit card can have big negative impact on your credit score.

It’s not necessarily worth using this card after you get the sign up bonus as there are other credit cards that offer a higher rate on everyday purchases, but the sign up bonus might be attractive to some people. NFCU is also offering a bonus of 40,000 points and Amazon Prime membership on the Flagship rewards card.

Navy Federal is only available for military and veterans – full eligibility information can be found here (plus family members. Even if they are deceased). Learn more about Navy Federal credit cards in the post Navy Federal Credit Union (NFCU) Credit Cards: List, Best Cards & Things You Must Know.

Hat tip to reader Oscar

A Biden-era study told Americans to drink less alcohol. The Trump admin ‘sidelined’ the research



A study commissioned by President Joe Biden’s administration to investigate alcohol-related health harms was released independently on Tuesday, after President Donald Trump’s administration decided not to feature the researchers’ findings in new dietary guidelines as it faced pushback from the alcohol industry and a congressional committee.

The findings of the study, in the Journal of Studies on Alcohol and Drugs, were in line with years of research, saying that health risks go up with just one drink a day and no level of alcohol has a protective effect on mortality. Even levels considered “moderate” raise the risk of premature death and more than 200 diseases, including heart disease and cancer, researchers found.

The new study was one of two government reviews meant to help inform the new dietary guidelines. Released earlier this year, the guidelines advised consuming “less alcohol for better overall health.” The authors of the independently released study say that didn’t provide detailed practical advice about the risks of drinking.

One of the officials involved in the study commissioned by Biden’s Democratic administration accused Trump’s Republican administration of “sidelining” the research — an allegation the Trump administration denies.

Robert Vincent, a former Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration alcohol policy official who led the yearslong effort, made the accusations in an editorial published alongside the study. Vincent was laid off last year as part of a government reduction in force.

“The challenges confronting alcohol policy today are not rooted in scientific uncertainty,” Vincent wrote. “What remains contested is whether evidence will meaningfully inform policy when it conflicts with commercial interests.”

The dispute over the study underscored the increasingly tense relations between the medical and scientific community and the Trump administration, which has questioned or ignored longstanding science in its policymaking, fired a slew of veteran scientists from the federal workforce and cut scientific grants that proponents say help keep the U.S. at the forefront of medical innovation.

Industry and congressional Republicans pushed back on the study

After the study’s researchers released a draft report last year, the alcohol industry mobilized against it, launching campaigns to discredit its work. The House oversight committee also criticized the study, releasing a report earlier this year that called it “fraught with bias” and accused the study authors of having predetermined conclusions based on their past research and affiliations.

Emily Hilliard, a spokesperson for the U.S. Department of Health and Human Services, denied any notion that the study wasn’t considered.

HHS and the U.S. Department of Agriculture “reviewed the study alongside the broader body of available scientific evidence and followed the established process for developing the 2025–2030 Dietary Guidelines for Americans,” she said. “The Guidelines are informed by the totality of the scientific record, not any single report or analysis.”

Vincent told The Associated Press in an interview that the researchers were thoroughly vetted for conflicts and the findings were scientifically sound. He said that while he was in the Trump administration, he was “asked to kill the study” but did not. HHS didn’t immediately respond to that claim. The department said the Substance Abuse and Mental Health Services Administration wasn’t involved in the review or the clearance of the study for publication.

Amanda Berger, senior vice president of science and research for the alcohol trade association the Distilled Spirits Council of the United States, said in an email to the AP that the congressional committee’s findings showed the study was “irretrievably flawed.”

Findings support more forceful alcohol intake recommendation

The Trump administration earlier this year released new dietary guidelines that advised consuming “less alcohol for better overall health.” The researchers said that they don’t dispute that advice but that their findings support a more detailed and forceful recommendation that current adult drinkers consume one drink or fewer a day.

“I’m glad that they had a message that corresponds with our science, and that is that less is best,” said Dr. Timothy Naimi, director of the University of Victoria’s Canadian Institute for Substance Use Research and one of the study’s authors. “But giving people quantity information is necessary to make a truly informative guideline.”

The study differed from the other research commissioned by the government to help inform the dietary guidelines on the issue, which said moderate alcohol use was associated with a decreased risk of mortality from all causes but also an increased risk of some diseases.

Priscilla Martinez-Matyszczyk, one of the authors of the new study and a deputy scientific director at the Public Health Institute’s Alcohol Research Group, said their study didn’t look at mortality from all causes but instead examined mortality specifically attributed to alcohol to avoid confounding factors.

Martinez-Matyszczyk also addressed an issue raised by Centers for Medicare and Medicaid Services Administrator Dr. Mehmet Oz in his explanations of the new guidelines: that drinking is “a social lubricant that brings people together” and that even though not drinking is preferred, being social has health benefits.

“I don’t know of any studies that have teased out the social effect from the health effect,” she said.

Research aligns with other recent findings

The new findings are “in line with the latest science that basically shows less is better when it comes to health,” Naimi said.

For example, a 2019 study in Lancet found that moderate drinking slightly raised the risk of stroke and high blood pressure and offered no protective effects on health.

Moderate drinking was once thought to have benefits for the heart, but better research methods have thrown cold water on that idea. Older studies compared groups of people by how much they drink instead of randomly assigning people to drink or not, so they couldn’t prove cause and effect. When researchers adjusted for things like education levels, income and health care access, the benefits tended to disappear.

About half of Americans age 12 or older had a drink in the past month, researchers said, making it the most commonly used addictive substance in the U.S. One drink is the equivalent of about one 12-ounce can of beer, a 5-ounce glass of wine or a shot of liquor.

___

The Associated Press Health and Science Department receives support from the Howard Hughes Medical Institute’s Department of Science Education and the Robert Wood Johnson Foundation. The AP is solely responsible for all content.

You’re Renting Your Lead Flow. Here’s What It’s Costing You.


If your largest paid channel disappeared tomorrow, platform shuts down, algorithm changes, cost doubles, your pipeline is gone inside 30 days.

If that’s true, you don’t have a Growth Engine. You have a rented pipeline.

This is the situation most founders are in. Paid ads on two or three platforms. Paid social. Maybe a paid directory. When the credit card stops, the leads stop. The business has revenue but no predictability. It has a dependency.

Owned vs rented

An owned channel is one you control. You decide who’s on it, what reaches them, when. No platform change can touch it.

A rented channel is one someone else controls. You pay for access. You play by their rules. When the rules change or the price goes up, you adjust or you disappear.

The difference compounds over time. A business that builds owned channels for 5 years has compounding value. A business that rents for 5 years has 5 years of expenses. Same spend, completely different position.

The four owned channels

Email

Email has been declared dead roughly once a year for 15 years and keeps working anyway.

A founder who builds a qualified email list over 5 years has direct, reliable, owned access to their audience at zero marginal cost per send. No paid channel comes close to that math.

The list has to be qualified, built from people who asked to be on it. It has to be used consistently. And it has to be treated as a content surface, not a sales channel. The same principles that make content work apply here: genuine point of view, useful, specific.

Most businesses underuse email because it feels unfashionable. That unfashionability is the tell. The channels that feel unfashionable and still work are the ones smart operators quietly compound in.

Referral systems

Referred prospects arrive pre-trusted. They close faster, they’re less price sensitive, and they’re more likely to refer others. Most small businesses have no referral system. They have referrals that happen accidentally.

A real referral system has 3 parts: a specific ask, made at a specific moment, with a specific easy path for the referrer to take. All 3 are necessary. Most businesses are missing at least 2.

The ask needs to be made. Customers don’t refer unless asked because it’s not obvious to them that you want referrals. The moment matters: right after a customer experiences something good is when the ask lands. And the path needs to be easy enough that referring requires almost no effort.

Partnerships

Non-competing businesses that serve the same ideal client are the most underused lead source in small business marketing.

An accounting firm’s ideal client also needs a business lawyer, a financial planner, a banker, an insurance broker. Each of those providers has a list of the same customers. Two or three real partnerships beat 20 casual ones.

A structured partnership has named partners, defined criteria, a regular rhythm of contact, and a way to track what’s being exchanged. Partnerships are work. They compound once they’re real.

Direct relationships

Networking, speaking, association involvement, in-person participation. The oldest channel in the book, and it still produces the highest-intent leads in most categories.

A prospect who hears the founder speak at an industry event arrives at the buying conversation miles ahead of where a paid lead arrives. The trust is largely pre-built.

Direct relationships don’t scale the way email or content scale. They scale with founder effort. Founders who invest in them consistently find that the Growth Engine runs mostly on relationships 2 years in.

Where paid actually belongs

Paid works when it amplifies something already working. If the content is converting organically, paid can extend its reach. If the messaging is landing, paid can get it in front of people it otherwise wouldn’t reach.

Without those foundations, paid produces expensive activity that doesn’t convert. Every founder has seen that at least once.

The healthy ratio for most small businesses: roughly two-thirds of new customer flow from owned channels, one-third from paid amplification. A business running the opposite ratio is fragile, even if the current economics look fine.

One thing to do this week

List every lead source that produced revenue in the last 12 months. Mark each one owned or rented. Count the ratio.

If rented is more than half, the Growth Engine is the priority. Start with the owned channel closest to working but undeveloped. That’s usually email or referral.


The Growth Engine is step 5 of a seven-step system I’ve been refining for over 20 years. The full framework is in my new ebook, “7 Steps to Small Business Marketing Success.” Get it at dtm.world/7steps.

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We Have 1-2 Months Before the Economy Begins to Break


Dave:
Are we screwed? I know it’s just a blunt question, but it’s worth asking, right? Is the economic picture in the US worse than the media is letting on? My guest on the show today, real estate investor, analyst and friend of the show, J Scott, thinks so. He thinks there is trouble lurking in the economy right now that could lead us into a global recession. But at the same time, he remains bullish on real estate and the value of holding onto hard assets through good times and bad. J is one of the smartest investors I know he is up to date on the entire global economy and he offers great insight into what’s happening right now. And in this episode, J and I discuss how the conflict in Iran has only started to hit our economy and prices, how rising prices could ripple across the globe and of course what we should be doing to not just protect ourselves, but to continue to grow and prosper.
This is On The Market. Let’s get into it.
Everyone, welcome to On The Market. I’m Dave Meyer. On the show today, we have a frequent repeat guest, J Scott. If you don’t know J, he’s written several books for bigger pockets on flipping on negotiating on recession proof real estate investing. And of course he is the co-author of one of my books, Real Estate by the Numbers. J has been investing for more than two decades in both residential and commercial real estate and is just an excellent student of the global economy. And today on the show, we’re getting his take on what’s going on right now and what you should do about it, because I’ll give you a little bit of a spoiler. He’s not thrilled. He thinks there is a lot of trouble coming to the global economy, but he still is excited about real estate and he’ll explain why and he’ll also explain what he thinks we as residential real estate investors or retail real estate investors should be doing about it.
So let’s jump into my conversation with J Scott. J, welcome back to On the Market. Thanks for being here.

J:
Thanks for having me, Dave. Always love coming back.

Dave:
Yeah, always a pleasure. Well, I want to just jump right into it. I saw on social media the o day, you were on someone else’s podcast. I’m not sure who it was, but the clip was you just saying, “I think we’re screwed.” And then you went on to give a very intelligent explanation as to why you think we’re screwed.

J:
I don’t think I used the word screwed, but something a little bit similar

Dave:
To that. I don’t want him to bleep it out. So I’m trying to give the feeling of what you were saying, but whether you call it screwed or something a little more profane, is that really how you feel, I guess about the economy or were you talking about the housing market? Maybe elaborate a little bit on that.

J:
I’m specifically talking about where I believe the economy and not just the domestic economy, but the global economy is headed based on what is currently going on in the Middle East. I’m a little concerned that Americans kind of have their head in the sand and I’m not saying that this is anybody’s fault other than potentially the media because we’re not really being given any information that should lead us to believe that anything bad is likely to happen other than what’s already happened. We’ve already seen prices start to go up, a little bit of inflation. We’ve seen gas prices go up a good bit, but there’s no indication that things would necessarily get worse based on reading mainstream media or just kind of following social media.

Dave:
What are you seeing that is not being reported in the media that has drawn you to the conclusion that things are going to get worse?

J:
Yeah. So everybody’s probably at this point familiar with the fact that we’re in a little bit of a tiff with Iran in the Middle East and this little body of water called the Strait of Hormuz is basically being closed down half by the US, half by Iran, but essentially there’s very little ship traffic through that straight. What a lot of people probably also know is about 20% of the world’s crude oil goes through that straight. So the fact that it’s shut down means that we’re losing about 20% of the world’s crude oil. What a lot of people don’t realize is it’s not just crude oil that gets shipped through the straight. And while that may be the big ticket item that we think about when we think about supply chain issues, the rest of the world relies on a whole bunch of other things and we rely, frankly, on a whole bunch of other things as well.
One of the big things that goes through the straight is liquefied natural gas. So basically another form of energy. We don’t use a lot of it here. We actually export a lot

Dave:
Of

J:
It from the US, but much of the world uses LNG more so than crude oil for their energy needs and for their manufacturing needs. And so the supply chain issues with LNG are not just going to hit their energy supply chains and demand for things like gasoline and car power and that stuff, but it’s also going to hit their manufacturing, which means it’s going to hit us because we import a lot of stuff from Asia and Europe. Secondarily, there are things like sulfur, nitrogen based fertilizers, which go into food. Basically if fertilizer is not shipping through the strait, that means that any crops that are going into the ground over the last couple months and the next few months likely aren’t going to get the fertilizer and the nutrients they need to form strong crop yields

Dave:
This

J:
Year. And when we have smaller crop yields, what does that do? It dries up the cost of food. So I think we’re likely going to see food inflation over the next six to 12 months as those crops that should be yielding large supplies of food are yielding much smaller supplies of food. Then we have things like helium. A lot of people are probably concerned they’re not going to get their balloons for their birthday parties, but it’s actually worse than that. We use helium for a lot of our silicon manufacturing for a lot of our data center development. And so not having helium supply is going to hinder the technology sector tremendously. And keep in mind, we do have some inventory of these things sitting on the shelf. So there’s a couple months generally of inventory of things like sulfur and aluminum and helium and fertilizer.
But once we work through what’s sitting on the shelf, once we work through our reserves, again, like oil, we do have strategic oil reserves. So we’re able to kind of keep filling this leaky bucket to a point where we don’t really necessarily notice the upcoming shortages, but at some point we’re going to work through all of the excess inventory that we have. We’re going to work through all of our strategic reserves and at that point there’s going to be nothing left. And we’re going to go from having a little bit of inflation, a little bit of gas price increases to seeing severe shortages that could cause a significant spike in both of those things.

Dave:
I think what our audience should hopefully understand is that even though Americans are somewhat insulated from these things, right, a lot of the fertilizer we use in America might not be passing through the strait of hormones, but we import a great amount of food that is impacted by that fertilizer shortage. And so just as an example, fruits and vegetables, fast fruits and vegetables, a lot of them are imported from countries that might be impacted by this shortage of fertilizer. I think just yesterday there was an article in the Wall Street Journal that said our strategic petroleum reserve is at the lowest it’s been, I don’t know, in decades, in a long time. Since

J:
1983.

Dave:
Since 1983, there you go, 43 years. So those things, you read them and you’re like, right now, we’re what, three months into this situation with Iran, normal life hasn’t been impacted that much. So what’s the delay and why haven’t we felt it as much as you think we will in the future?

J:
Well, keep in mind that for anything that’s going by boat and all the stuff that’s going through the straight, we’re not measuring time in hours or days. It’s not like throwing stuff on an airplane and when the airplanes stop, your supply stops overnight. It takes from the day that a ship is loaded in Iran or Qatar or Saudi Arabia or wherever it is and sent through the strait, it takes about six to seven weeks for that boat to actually hit some piece of land where that raw material, whether it’s again, crude oil, LNG, sulfur, whatever it is, is unloaded sent off to refineries if it’s crude oil. If it’s sent off to refineries, it’s going to spend between one and three weeks before actually getting through the refinery getting turned into some type of fuel that we actually use, whether it’s gasoline or jet fuel or some other type of energy that we actually use, then it might get shipped somewhere else and then it ultimately gets used.
So we’re talking about from the day the straight shuts down to the date that we actually start seeing supply chain stoppages, could be two to three months, could be even longer than that. Generally speaking, the last boat that docked after leaving the straight docked on May 5th.

Dave:
So we’ve really only had a month of disruption at the point of production

J:
We’ve had a month of disruption at the refineries.

Dave:
At the

J:
Refineries, yeah. Or at the point of transport for other raw materials that don’t go through any refining stages. And so how long does it take between a boat docking, offloading its raw materials and that actually getting in the hands of a manufacturer or a consumer that needs to use it? We’re probably talking another four to 12 weeks. And so the general rule of thumb is we’re probably okay until somewhere between July and September, depending on the expert that you listen to. It’s somewhere between July and September that we start to see significant shortages much greater than what we’re seeing now. Estimates are that the strategic oil reserve in the US sometime in early to mid July is going to hit that point that the government declares a critical shortage of crude oil at which point they can’t keep sending oil out from the strategic reserve.
They have to keep some for some major catastrophe. So at some point, probably in early to mid July, we’re going to see the US who is now currently, and in general is, but by far the largest producer and exporter of crude oil right now basically have to stop supplementing that crude oil with anything from the strategic reserves.

Dave:
And that’s what’s keeping gas prices where they are right now, right? We’re releasing supply onto the market from strategic reserves to keep gas prices relatively low. And I know they are high, but they would be higher if we weren’t doing that. And so we might see, according to J, and again, no one knows the exact date, but sometime over the summer should the straight remain closed, which we’ll talk about in a minute, we’ll see gas prices probably go up, probably going to have negative impact on the stock market. That starts to cascade a little bit. All right, everyone, we got to take a quick break, but J and I will be back right after this. Welcome back to On the Market. I’m here with J Scott talking about the global economy. Let’s jump back in. In the US though, J, from what I’ve read, it does seem like we are a little bit more insulated than the rest of the world because we are producers of LNG.
We are producers of crude oil. The United States has come a long way in terms of energy independence over the last decades. And so are we going to start seeing other countries start to see these shortages sooner?

J:
So certainly we’ve already seen that. If you look at certain refined crude, so specifically jet fuel, Europe is already canceling a significant number of their commercial airline flights because they’re out of jet fuel. It was, I believe, either Japan or Vietnam that has gone to a four day manufacturing week because they don’t have the raw materials and the energy they need to be at full production on manufacturing. And so yeah, Europe and Asia are already getting hit. And again, the delay between the time they get hit and the time we start to see the impact is generally weeks to months because a lot of their stuff is shipped over here by boat. And so we’re not going to notice it necessarily right away. Now in terms of the US’s oil needs, we use a significant amount of oil. We do produce enough oil in the US almost to cover our own needs, not quite.
Even if we could use all the oil that the US produces, we’d still need to import some to fully cover the demand in the US, but the bigger issue is that keep in mind the US doesn’t produce oil. The US doesn’t sell oil. Private companies produce and sell oil. And so unless the government were to step in and say, ExxonMobil, you need to start selling your oil to Americans at some regulated price. What’s ExxonMobil? What’s BP? What are they going to do? They’re going to continue to sell oil to the highest bidder. And historically, the highest bidder are other countries. And so if ExxonMobil isn’t forced to sell in the US, they’re going to continue to export. 70% of the oil that we use or that we refine in the US that turns into gasoline that we use in the US is coming from the Middle East because our refineries are designed to refine basically this type of crude oil called heavy sour crude and that’s the stuff that comes from overseas.
It’s not designed to refine the light sweet crude that we produce in the US. Could it? Certainly it could. If Exxon wanted to take all the crude oil coming out of the US, put it through our refineries to refine it to the type of gas that we use in the US, they certainly could, but there’s little incentive to do that because they’re going to get a higher price elsewhere. And secondarily, those refineries are going to be much less efficient trying to refine that type of oil so the yield that they’re going to generate, the cost to generate that oil is going to be significantly higher. So are there things that we could do that the government could do to basically ensure that we don’t have the types of gas shortages we saw back in the 1970s? Certainly, but it would spike prices because we are seeing less efficient refinery capacity and it would also require the government to step in and tell private companies, “Hey, you’re going to be forced to sell domestically even if it means hurting your profit margins.”

Dave:
So it does look like prices are going up for gas and for energy. And as everyone knows, energy goes into everything. It’s an input cost for pretty much everything, manufacturing, construction, plastic, whatever it is, right? Those costs will go up if energy costs go up. Now, J, obviously the trillion dollar question here is, does the strait of hormones open? And although I’m tempted to ask you to forecast, we just don’t know. It’s impossible to know. So let me just ask you this. If the straight of hormones opened today, do you still think we’re screwed or do you think there’s still time where things could get back to normal working order and we can avoid the type of global recession it seems you’re indicating could happen?

J:
Yeah. Well, let me start with, I’m certainly not an expert on global supply chains of energy and other things. So a lot of what I’m saying is coming from what I’m reading from those who are experts on those things as well as economists who kind of forecast what the impact on the economy is likely to be. General consensus is that if the straight open today, we’re probably at least through 2026 before we start to see supply chains normalize and prices come down, that being energy prices and commodity prices, general inflation. So we’re likely going to see higher inflation and high gas prices at least through the end of the year into 2027, even if things were to resolve today. That said, if things were to resolve today, we likely wouldn’t see the cliff that we are likely heading towards again, sometime between July and September.
But if we don’t see the straight open in the next couple months, we are likely going to hit that cliff. And instead of seeing kind of a linear increase in gas prices, a linear increase in inflation, we’re likely to see a step function increase. We’re likely to see a big jump in input costs, a big jump in export cost, a big jump in import costs, and a big jump in commodity and energy costs. So I think we have a month, maybe two months before we get into a situation where we are almost certain to see a global downturn, a global recession. If we can get things open in the next month or so, I’m not precluding a global recession. I think there’s still a very real possibility that we see a global downturn, but we probably won’t hit that cliff. We’ll basically just see another year of high costs.

Dave:
I got it. Okay. So if the straight were to open today, we’d have a gradual increase in cost that could drag on the economy, maybe tip us into a recession, but maybe not. We’ll see, but straight stays closed for another month or two, probably a global recession. What does that look like? How does that play out across the economy? A lot of people my age, I’m a millennial. The last real kind of big recession we had was 2008. That was a big financial crisis. That was a global recession that hurt. Are you talking about something like that or does this look a little different?

J:
I think it looks a little different. I think it looks closer to what we saw in 2020.

Dave:
Okay. That supply shock kind of thing.

J:
Yeah. Now that supply shock was a little bit different. We actually had too much oil. We saw a major decrease in oil production, which led to the shutting in or the closing down of a lot of oil wells that led to higher energy costs over the next couple years. So it’s a little bit different, but it was the same type of supply and demand shocks that we saw in 2020 that basically is going to lead to shortages in certain things. We saw in 2020, you probably remember we had shortages of things like, and they might have been artificial shortages, but they were shortages of things like toilet paper and certain food supplies. I think this time around we would see something similar, but they wouldn’t be artificial shortages. They would be real shortages. And the bigger question isn’t so much how badly do the supply chains get impacted, but how do Americans respond to that?
For those who remember the 70s, and I was very young, but I have a slight recollection of the 70s of sitting in car lines and gas lines for hours on end. My parents still tell me about how we were allowed to get gas on Tuesdays or Thursdays and other people were allowed to get gas on Mondays and Wednesdays and back then it worked itself out. I’m not convinced today that we are in a cultural place where those types of shortages and those types of strains on the system would be received as well as it was 40 years ago.

Dave:
So what does that mean? Just like you mean societal unrest or just that people stop spending?

J:
I think it could be a little of both. Certainly everybody talks about, are we heading towards $200 a barrel gas or gas prices likely going to 10 or $15 a gallon? I actually don’t think that’s the case. I think what we’re going to see is demand destruction long before

Dave:
That.

J:
And by demand destruction, I mean people stop filling up their tanks. People stop traveling, people stop spending money on anything that goes up significantly in value because they simply can’t afford it. And that’s what pushes us into recession. I think globally we’re going to see this demand destruction again around oil and around a lot of other commodities that lead to a global recession simply because people can’t afford the prices, wages aren’t going to grow fast enough. And then you have to think about what are the second order effects there. You think back to what happened in 2020, we had to print a lot of money to basically keep people alive, to basically keep people from starving and not being able to pay their bills. If we see something similar here, we could see another spike in currency printing, a spike in the M2 money supply, which ultimately is going to hurt the country in other ways over the next five to 10 years.

Dave:
I mean, that’s a little scary. And I guess the thing I was thinking about as you were saying this, J, is like it’s not like the US economy is great right now, at least in my opinion. I’ve done a couple of shows on this recently, GDP useful number, but doesn’t really reflect what’s going on with ordinary Americans. If you look at what’s going on, real wage growth is now negative, meaning that inflation is growing higher faster than wage growth. So people spending power in general already going down today that is happening. Savings rate just took a big no stive recently and unemployment data came out today. Labor market’s looking relatively strong, but you see consumer sentiment, lowest it’s been in 70 years. I think people are just tired of inflation. It’s not the worst economy we’ve had in 70 years, right? Certainly not, but people are upset because they’re worn down.
And I just think another inflation shock, like you said, could be just really detrimental psychologically. And is that the thing that finally gets people to stop spending? Maybe because consumer spending remains resilient. People keep spending, but delinquencies on credit cards are going up. Some cracks are starting to show and if you’re right, if the state stays closed, maybe that is the thing that finally pushes us into a real recession.

J:
Yeah. Keep in mind that when we talk about the economic cycle, economic expansions leading into a recession and back to expansion, that cycle that repeats over and over and over, that cycle is typically driven by debt.
We go through a recession, we come out of a recession, people have had their houses foreclosed on, they’ve gone into bankruptcies, they’ve lost money on their credit cards. Credit card companies have eaten those losses and we basically get to start over with a clean slate. Everybody has a whole lot less debt. The economy heats up because people can borrow again because they’ve kind of shed all that debt that they had grown before the recession. At some point they accumulate too much debt and they can’t keep spending and that’s when the next recession starts. Well, if you look at the data, we haven’t had a real recession, like you said, since 2008 and debt numbers, debt data is looking extremely concerning. We’re over $18 trillion in consumer debt with over $1.2 trillion in credit card debt. Just to put that into perspective, in 2008, Americans only had about 800 billion in credit card debt, which means we have 50% more credit card debt today than we had in 2008.
Wages haven’t grown 50%. So from an inflationary, from a real debt standpoint, Americans are in much more debt today than they were back in 2006, seven and eight before we went into that, obviously the Great Recession.

Dave:
And delinquencies are going up. Actually, I did a show on this the other day, but the only place the debt looks fine is with mortgages actually right now in terms of delinquencies, but auto loan delinquencies are going up. Student loan delinquencies shop back up after an artificial low, but credit card delinquencies are going up.

J:
Businesses saw more bankruptcies last year than in any year since 2010.

Dave:
Businesses too. Yeah. So it’s not just consumer debt. Yeah. You see what’s going on with private credit just yesterday. Some of the biggest private credit funds are seeing redemption rates at like 10, 15%. It’s not great. So one more question on this and then I do want to move on to some of the housing stuff, but if the straight open today … Again, I’m just trying to read the tea leaves like everyone else trying to understand what’s going on, but it does seem like the fastest path to opening the straight would be to allow Iran to implement a toll. That seems like what they want and I don’t think that’s good. I don’t think anyone really wants that. But if that were to be the solution, it wouldn’t go up as much as if the straits stayed closed, but then would we just expect higher gas and fertilizer and helium prices indefinitely?

J:
Yeah. So if you actually run the numbers, Iran’s been talking about a toll of one to $2 million per ship going through the straight. If you look at the amount of inventory, whether it be crude oil or LNG or other stuff that each ship transports, it works out to a few percent. So it basically increases transportation costs through the straight or cost of the goods on the boats through the straight of a few percent, three to 5%. Will that likely translate to higher prices? Yes. It’s not going to double prices, but that’s certainly a concern. I don’t like talking politics. I’m not an expert on-

Dave:
International negotiations.

J:
Exactly. But if you think back to the playbook of the last time we had a major dispute with Iran, it was back in the ’70s and it was basically there were hostages involved and there were other things involved, but it was also oil. And the strategy that Iran employed back then was they basically didn’t negotiate or capitulate until two days after the election in 1980. Basically, Jimmy Carter was in office, they wouldn’t talk to him, they wouldn’t negotiate with them. They kind of dragged things out for a year and a half. Two days after the election, Reagan gets put into office and the American hostages got released. So basically Iran used it as an opportunity to drive political sentiment and there’s talk that there was backroom negotiations with Reagan and his team to basically help him win the election. Whether that’s true or not, the reality is that the Iranians realized that they had political leverage despite the fact that they might not have military or actual hard leverage.
And who knows, it could be the same thing today. It may be that the Iranians realize that things will get worse both for them and the rest of the world and that’s something that they’re willing to settle for if it means basically changing the outcome of the election in November. And so again, I’m not a military or geopolitical strategist, but I have been reading a lot of people who believe that it’s likely that this isn’t going to get resolved before November.

Dave:
All right, everyone. We’ve got to take one more quick break, but I’ll be back with J and his advice for real estate investors right after this. Welcome back to On the Market. I’m Dave Meyer. I’m here with J. Scott today talking about the situation in Iran and how the impacts of the closed strate moves could ripple throughout the global economy and even impact real estate here in the US. Let’s get back into our conversation. All right. Well, let’s turn now, J, to talk a litle bit about real estate. And let’s just assume for now we go into this global recession. Again, an assumption we don’t know for sure, but if the state stays closed, I think it’s a reasonably likely scenario, right? What does that do to housing? Let’s talk about residential first, then we can go to commercial.

J:
So it’s not unprecedented for a big recession to impact housing. We saw it back during the Great Depression in the 1930s. We saw it after 2008, but historically speaking, and you and I have discussed this before, we’ve had 36 recessions in the US in the last 160 years, 34 of them have not impacted housing. 34 out of the 36 real estate either went up, stayed flat, or went down no more than 1.5%. So there are only two cases where that happened. Whether it would happen this time, whether we would see a major hit to housing values this time, I don’t know, but statistically speaking, housing is more tied to inflation than it is to recession. As long as we’re seeing inflation, we tend to see housing prices in this country go up. And if you kind of map those two lines next to each other, there’s a very, very clear trend over the last 125 years that says housing values track inflation.
And so the bigger question for me isn’t are we going to have a recession, but are we going to continue to have inflation in this country? And if the answer there is yes, if we’re likely to see inflationary pressures over the next five to 10 years, I think it’s safe to say that housing isn’t going to collapse. Is it going to grow significantly? I don’t know. I don’t think for the next few years we’re likely to see significant growth in the housing market. We still have affordability issues. That trend line for housing values is still a good bit above the trend line for inflation, but I don’t see a major collapse coming in most scenarios.

Dave:
Yeah, I tend to agree. I did a show, I went deep into this about inflation and housing prices and how they’re related. If you want to go, you could go check this out. I think this released in April. There’s different types of inflation in the US. We have supply side inflation, which is kind of what we’re seeing now, which is less correlated with home price increases. It doesn’t mean that it’s negatively correlated and that they go down, but it doesn’t necessarily drive prices up as much. Demand pull inflation is really what we see when there’s a really hot economy. And so that’s why personally, if there’s a recession, I don’t really see prices going up unless we see money printing. Like you said, if we get in this scenario where the economy is stagnating and we need to either do some sort of infrastructure spending or government spending and they’re going to print money to do that, whether we see it in the form of stimulus checks, I don’t know.
But if that M2, just so everyone knows, M2 monetary supply is just a way to track the amount of dollars circulating in the economy, if that goes up again Asset prices will go up. There’s a very strong correlation for that. So that’s where I see the big thing to watch for if you’re curious about housing prices is do we either see A, money printing or B, another form of money printing, which is just quantitative easing. If we start seeing the Fed buying mortgage-backed securities again, we’ll see housing prices go up.

J:
The way I think of it, and I agree with you, but the way I think of it that might be helpful to some people and for anybody that wants to dig in more, go read Milton Friedman, who was an economist back in the ’70s and ’80s who very much espoused this belief. Inflation long-term, not day-to-day, week to week, or even year to year, but inflation long-term is driven by one thing and that’s the money supply. If we print more money, we’re going to see inflation. And the reason why I say it doesn’t necessarily correlate day-to-day or year to year is just as an example, 2008, we printed a ridiculous amount of money in 2007, eight, nine, 10, QE, stimulus, but we had exceptionally low inflation through the 2010s. And it surprised a lot of people. A lot of people said, “How do we print this much money and not see inflation?” Well, the money printing is going to lead into inflation, but that could take five, 10, 15, or even 20 years.
So long term, if you want to see the trajectory of inflation, you look at the M2 money supply and you can see based on how much money we flooded into our economy over the last 20 years, since 2008, we’re going to see a good bit of inflation through the next 10 or 15 years at least. But that inflationary trend is going to be more linear. Again, we’re not going to see big spikes. You print a lot of money in 2008, doesn’t cause a big spike in 2010. It just causes inflationary pressure over the next 10, 20, 30 years. But from that trend line, that kind of linear flat trend line upwards, we’re going to see a lot of spikes and those spikes are being generated by the other side of inflation, what you mentioned, the supply side of inflation. So we remember 2021, 2022, 2023, when we saw a big spike in inflation, a lot of people like to think that that was from the money printing.
Don’t get me wrong, all the money we printed in 2020, 21, 22, 23, 24 till today, that’s going to impact inflation. But the big inflationary spike that we saw in 2021, two and three, that was related to supply chain pressures. The inflation that we’re seeing today, we’re printing a lot of money today. We’re going to continue printing a lot of money, but that’s not what’s leading to the inflation that we’re seeing today. The inflation we’re seeing today is supply-based inflation. And so at the end of the day, the big spikes that we see are related to supply chain issues. It might be related to short-term demand issues, but long-term, the inflation that we see is going to be related to the money that we print. And the fact that we’ve literally doubled our money supply, we’ve doubled our national debt over the last 10 years means that long-term, regardless of what we see today, tomorrow, next year, five years from now, over the long term, we’re going to see significant inflation in this country.
Which leads me to believe that in the long term, again, five, 10, 15, 20 years, we’re going to see real estate prices continue to trend up in a healthy way.

Dave:
Interesting. A couple of things there. One, for people to try and understand, I agree with you, J. I think the money printing in COVID absolutely contribute to inflation, but think about cars. Car prices went up so much during COVID. Used car prices were as expensive as new cars and it’s because of the chip shortage. Manufacturers did not have enough chips to create new cars that created less supply. People were flush with cash. They wanted to buy new cars. They wanted to buy used cars and so they bid up the prices of cars. That’s like how a supply shock works. It’s too much money chasing too few goods. And so that is what we can see. One thing, J, I’ve been thinking about is your point about printing money and how it impacts inflation for the long term is well taken. And you said we had low inflation during 2010.
One thing I keep thinking about is the way we track inflation in the United States. We have two measures that we usually look at, the CPI, the consumer price index, the PCE with personal consumption expenditures. They don’t measure asset prices. They do not look at the stock market. They do not look at housing prices. They do not look at Bitcoin. I understand why they’re tracked separately, but could you say, because when I look at the 2010s in retrospect, I did not realize this at the time, but I look at it as retrospect, could we just see that the effects of the money printing from the great financial crisis is that money just poured into asset prices and that’s why assets are so expensive right now?

J:
Yeah. I don’t have the exact date on me, but in the last few years, I’ve seen a number of empirical studies that have basically concluded that the vast majority of money that has flowed into the economy over the last 15 to 20 years has gone directly into asset prices that you can see a very, very strong correlation. Again, I’m not claiming causation or that they’re the exact same, but very strong correlation between the amount of money that’s been printed and the value of our equities markets, our stock markets and other hard assets going up. And so there are a lot of people out there, a lot of smart people out there who believe that essentially what’s happening is we’re printing all of this money, it’s circulating through the economy. At some point it’s getting into the hands of people that don’t need that money for everyday expenses.
They don’t need or care to be spending that money and they just sock it away in investments and hard assets. And that’s kind of the problem is that all of this money may be going to the lower 80, 90%, but eventually they’re spending it. Eventually it gets into the hands of the top 10 or 20% and those top 10 or 20% don’t need that money today. So what do they do? They put it into the market and they basically pull it out of the economy. It’s still in the economy in theory, but it’s not being circulated. We don’t have that M2 velocity of money through the economy, which is really, really bad for those in the lower 50% or even the lower 90% these days because it means we’re not seeing as high wage growth. We’re not seeing basically that money being recirculated down to them so that they can continue to spend it.
It’s just being pulled out of the economy and that’s why the rich are getting richer and everybody else is suffering these days.

Dave:
Yeah. Well, super insightful, J. Thank you. What do you do about it? We’re all real estate investors trying to figure out just how to help our pursue financial dependence, secure our nest egg. What’s your advice?

J:
I think my advice is the same whether we’re going through the best of economies or the worst of economies. Buy as many hard assets as you can and hold on because long term that’s where the value is. I’m a big believer that real estate is the best risk adjusted investment on the planet. You can make the case that the S&P 500 is pretty good if you look at all the data through today.

Dave:
It’s been very good recently. You can

J:
Make the case that gold is good. So I don’t care if you’re putting your money in gold or the stock market or real estate, but put your money in some hard asset that actually is likely to retain and grow its value. Number two, I’m a big believer that when we have a lot of economic turmoil, the best strategy is diversification.
Don’t put all your eggs in one basket. If the economy’s booming and you want to put all of your money in the stock market, you can make a better case for that. But when it’s possible that we could see a downturn, we don’t know what’s going to get hit the worst. 2008, it was real estate. 2001, it was the stock market. I mean, different things get hit differently in each downturn. And so just given that the fact that we could see a downturn in the near future, I think diversification’s the right strategy. Diversify asset classes. If you’re investing passively, diversify with operators, diversify in locations, diversify in exit strategies, durations, diversify across risk. Basically just put your money in so many different places that even if something go down, other things are going to hold their value or may even go up and you’ll be happy.

Dave:
What about folks who are in the beginning of their investing career and who maybe have one property? How do you diversify or how do you think about it when you don’t have more capital to allocate to different asset classes?

J:
If you’re early on, you just have to be more discriminating. You have to make sure that the purchases that you’re making are better deals that are more likely to succeed. One of the reasons I love real estate, active real estate is because we have some control over it. If things aren’t working out exactly the way we want, unlike the stock market where we just have to sit back and 9:30 every morning, we log on and see if the market went up or down. With real estate, if it’s going down, what can we do to actually impact it and help our investments? So that’s one of the reasons I love real estate. Anybody out there that’s starting out, find that next great deal, manage it closely and grow your portfolio over time. And keep in mind, the one thing I love about real estate is as long as you’re not going to lose that property, there’s never been a 10 year period in the United States where single family real estate values have gone down.
So statistically speaking, it’s pretty certain that if you don’t lose your property over the next five or 10 years, you’re going to make money on that property. So that’s my advice. If you’re starting out, don’t stop. Too many people think this is the wrong time to be investing, but investing when everybody else is terrified is the best time to be

Dave:
Investing. Yeah, it is. Yeah. And you could still do it conservatively. We talk about this on the show frequently. To J’s point, hold onto it. It requires cash flow. It requires cash reserves and ideally it requires buying below current comps, like making sure that you’re buying with some built-in equity. Those are the ways that you protect yourself and you will make money on that if you can just hold onto it. And so I think it’s just about buying strong fundamentally sound assets. And the good news, in my opinion, is like better assets are coming on sale. And so you can find better things to buy. You just have to be patient and persistent.

J:
And there’s less competition these days, which is a great thing. My business partner mentioned yesterday something that we don’t think about enough. Not only is there less competition and we normally think of this as a bad thing, but the competition that we have these days is stronger than it was a couple years ago. We don’t like strong competition, but the reality is there’s some benefit to weeding out the weak competition. It was the new investors, the ones that didn’t know how to underwrite deals that were offering ridiculous amounts

Dave:
On

J:
Properties, properties that we couldn’t touch because people who didn’t know what they were doing were offering 10, 20, 30% over what we were willing to offer. So there is some value in the weaker competition getting weeded out

Dave:
And being

J:
Stuck with the stronger competition because those are the folks that are reasonable that you can potentially beat out for good deals.

Dave:
All right. Well, J, this was a lot of fun. Thank you so much. I really appreciate you being here. Any last thoughts here?

J:
Keep up with the economy, keep up with the data. Don’t get too comfortable because things could get rocky over the next few months. Stay disciplined, stay focused, invest in hard assets, good assets. And no matter what happens, I think we’ll all come out the other side a lot better for it.

Dave:
Thank you so much, J. If people want to connect more with you, where should they do that?

J:
You can go to jscott.com, letter J, S-C-O-T-T.com. I do a couple times a week economics newsletter that you’re welcome to sign up for if you want to track the economy and what’s going on there.

Dave:
Awesome. Thanks again, J. And thank you all so much for listening to this episode of On The Market. We’ll see you next time.

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Acorns Referral Bonus: Earn Up to $1,100 for Referring Friends


Acorns Referral Bonus: Earn Cash for Referring Friends

Acorns is back with another lucrative referral promotion. These offers change frequently, with the required number of referrals and bonus amounts varying from one promotion to the next. In some cases, users can earn hundreds or even thousands of dollars for successfully referring friends to the platform. Let’s take a look at the current offer.

Offer Details

For this promotion:

  • Earn a $1,100 bonus investment
  • Refer 4 friends using your unique referral link
  • Friends must sign up between June 8, 2026 and June 14, 2026
  • Friends must complete their first investment of $5 or more by June 28, 2026
  • Friends must be new Acorns customers and maintain their accounts in good standing
  • Bonus investments are typically deposited within 30-45 days after eligibility is confirmed

Acorns Referral Bonus 2026

New to Acorns?

If you don’t already have an Acorns account, you can sign up using my referral link.

Acorns is an investing app that helps users save and invest automatically through recurring deposits, Round-Ups®, and managed investment portfolios. New customers can often earn a $5 signup bonus when opening an account through a referral link and completing the required funding requirements.

The service isn’t free, however. Acorns plans currently start at $3 per month, so it’s best suited for those who plan to actively use the platform and take advantage of features such as automated investing, retirement accounts, checking, and educational resources.

If you’re considering opening an Acorns account anyway, using a referral link can be an easy way to earn a small bonus while also supporting Danny the Deal Guru.

How the Acorns Referral Program Works

Acorns regularly sends referral offers to existing customers. The requirements and bonus amounts can vary significantly from one promotion to another.

Generally, you will need to:

  • Share your unique referral link with friends.
  • Have the required number of friends open and verify new Acorns Invest accounts.
  • Ensure they complete the required initial investment before the deadline.
  • Receive the bonus once all eligibility requirements have been verified.

Guru’s Wrap-up

Acorns referral offers can be extremely lucrative, especially when the company runs promotions requiring just a handful of successful referrals. 

The biggest challenge is finding eligible friends who have never previously opened or started an Acorns account. If you have friends or family interested in investing, it may be worth sharing your referral link and seeing if you can qualify for the bonus. The promotion window is short, so you will probably have to nudge your friends to get things done quickly.

Americans pull $47 billion in equity from their homes in 1Q


American homeowners removed 2% more equity from their properties year-over-year in the first quarter, the most for the three-month period since 2021, ICE Mortgage Technology found.

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It estimated $47 billion in equity was withdrawn in the quarter, down from $49 billion in the fourth quarter but up from $46 billion in the first quarter of 2025, according to data from the June ICE Mortgage Monitor report.

While the use of second lien products had a slight majority in terms of how equity was accessed, the period also saw significant percentage growth in cash-out refinancings.

The number of borrowers taking a cash-out refi grew 18% compared with the first quarter of 2025, to about 234,000, with the group withdrawing a total of $22 billion. This was up 2% from a year ago, with an average of $93,000 per borrower.

Meanwhile, 248,000 homeowners opted to tap equity via a second lien, withdrawing $25 billion, a gain of 1%.

The “lock-in effect” for pandemic-era borrowers whose rates are still well below the current market, drove the growth in second lien products. Nearly two-thirds of the home-equity product volume in the first quarter came from borrowers who took out a first mortgage between 2020 and 2022; a total of 3.9 million people who have a mortgage of those vintages added second liens, ICE Mortgage Technology said.

But the cash-out borrowers came from a broader range when it comes to their original loans. Nearly half of them got their last first lien in 2023 or later, while one-quarter was from the 2020-2022 period.

Rates for second lien home equity lines of credit fell to 6.6% in March, which ICE said was the most attractive for the product since late 2022. The average introductory HELOC rate fell slightly below the prime rate, which it attributed to increasing aggressive lender competition for this business.

The data does not include any home equity product originated as a first-lien. It only includes loans with an existing first which now have a second lien as determined through linking McDash data from ICE with public records.

When it comes to extracting equity, historically cash-out refinances have led the way, said Andy Walden, head of mortgage and housing market research for Intercontinental Exchange.

“We’ve been in kind of the most predominant second-lien era that we’ve seen over the last 20 years,” Walden said in an interview. “Since 2022, it’s been running above 50% seconds for all the reasons that you expect, trying to hold on to those low rate firsts that they took out in ’20 and ’21.”

Right now, the market is at the higher end of the spectrum in terms of second lien utilization.

The high point was in the third quarter of 2024 at 58%, with the first quarter of this year at 54% second-lien share. Historically, the split was around 60%-40% in favor of cash-out refinanices, Walden said.

Home equity lending activity is likely to slow going forward. This is in part because home price growth has been slowing, meaning less of it can be tapped, Walden said.

It’s worth keeping an eye on rates for second-lien products. Many HELOC lenders index these loans to the prime rate. When the Federal Open Market Committee changes the Fed Funds Rate, many banks will in turn raise or lower their prime rate by the same amount.

Latest bets regarding the FFR have shifted to a 70% probability that short-term rates will be increased if and when the FOMC votes to make a change, Walden pointed out.

This will put pressure on HELOC rates. Looking at the spreads for HELOCs right now they are slightly below prime on average, “so they’re already being aggressive,” Walden pointed out. An increase by the Fed could eat into home equity lending growth.

But the spread between HELOCs and the 30-year fixed could remain relatively tight, which could keep homeowners more interested in second lien products rather than cash-out refis, ICE said.

ICE noted rising interest rates since the end of February has reduced the number of borrowers who have a financial incentive to refi to 1.8 million as of May 21. This compared with 5.4 million during a brief period when the 30-year fixed fell under 6%.

In current conditions, the 30-year FRM would have to fall below 6.25% to drive a meaningful rebound in refi volume. For the week of June 4, the 30-year was at an average of 6.48%, according to Freddie Mac.

Cash-out refi apps had a 65% share in late May versus those homeowners seeking new mortgages for rate-and-term reasons. This particular dataset ICE is able to obtain from its Encompass loan origination system and thus can see the rate lock activity on a timelier basis.

ICE uses Mortgage Bankers Association weekly application survey and then takes the Encompass rate lock data to make its determinations.



Google Parent Alphabet Is Issuing More Shares. Time to Sell?


Google parent Alphabet (GOOGL 1.26%) (GOOG 1.14%) made a decision that seemed unthinkable until recently. It announced it will issue $80 billion worth of shares, a move that will slightly dilute its stock.

On the surface, the move seems hard to believe. As of the end of the first quarter, it held $127 billion in cash, and its digital ad business generated over $64 billion in free cash flow over the trailing 12 months.

That situation forces investors to confront this investment thesis head-on. Do the massive capital expenditures (capex) spending and share sales mean investors should sell the communications stock, or should they continue to hold shares in the Google parent?

Image source: The Motley Fool.

Alphabet’s capex spending

Despite Alphabet’s tremendous financial resources, the capex spending seems concerning on the surface. The company pledged to spend between $175 billion and $185 billion in capex in 2026 as it seeks to compete in the artificial intelligence (AI) market. This is after it spent $91 billion in capex last year.

Nonetheless, before panicking, investors should put the share sale into perspective. Alphabet’s market cap is almost $4.5 trillion. This means that the $80 billion should increase the share count by under 2%. Considering that the stock rose by around 120% in the last year alone, the added shares may escape the notice of most investors.

Alphabet Stock Quote

Today’s Change

(-1.26%) $-4.64

Current Price

$363.67

Moreover, Alphabet has likely increased capex spending so dramatically because it seems to be paying off. As previously mentioned, the company generated more than $64 billion in free cash flow over the last year, a figure that subtracts capex spending. One year ago, when capex spending was considerably lower, the company generated almost $75 billion over the previous 12 months.

Additionally, yearly revenue growth rose from 12% in the first quarter of 2025 to 22% in Q1 of 2026. This includes a revenue increase for the AI-focused Google Cloud from 28% in Q1 2025 to 63% one year later. Amid such improvements, investors may want to consider the benefits of the capex spending before reacting to what are admittedly massive cash outlays.

Should investors sell Alphabet?

Given the effects of higher capex spending, investors should not only hold their Alphabet shares but also consider buying some of the newly issued shares. Indeed, spending up to $185 billion in capex in one year and issuing shares to pay for it may not comfort investors when viewed in isolation.

Fortunately, Alphabet still has everything one looks for in a long-term winner. The spending seems to have already generated rapid revenue growth, persuading investors to overlook somewhat lower free cash flows.

Ultimately, considering that the benefits of the capex spending appear to outweigh the massive costs, it seems the company has made a prudent decision by issuing shares to raise capital.

Gen Z interviewer slams her generation’s ‘attitude’ after candidate dialled in from their phone



It’s no secret that Gen Z often gets slammed for, in the words of Sister Act star Whoopi Goldberg, not “busting their behinds” at work quite like previous generations did. Despite struggling to land entry-level roles, bosses have accused them of showing up late to the interview, refusing to put in any overtime for screening tests, and ghosting recruiters. Now, even a Gen Z hiring manager is backing the bosses slamming her generation.

“I fear that the people who say that Gen Z aren’t getting jobs because of their attitude are slightly accurate,” the 23-year-old who goes by @Sopharoch posted in a TikTok video that’s now gone viral. 

LA-based Sophie Rocha works in marketing for Gen Z career platform Home From College—and because of the nature of her employer, she’s regularly on the other side of the hiring table, interviewing candidates from her own generation.

But one recent interview pushed her over the edge.

“I interviewed a candidate last week, and they showed up on the call on their phone,” Rocha slammed, adding that their reasoning was “it’s not that serious” because it was a first-stage interview. 

The candidate then gushed about the job’s remote setup before openly admitting they had no intention of ever working from home—instead revealing they’d use the policy to work full-time while on vacation.

“I don’t know if that’s something that you want to say in an initial interview, like, hey, I’m actually going to be lollygagging in Europe, so I won’t be paying attention to this role,” Rocha added. 

To add further fuel to the fire, the candidate demanded more money and made clear they expected the role to simply be handed to them—a level of entitlement that left Rocha speechless.

“Then they complained about the compensation, and then said, I know that you’re probably not interviewing anybody else for this position, so I’ll just expect to hear back and start Monday,” Rocha concluded incredulously.  “I’m sorry, what?” 

Gen Z really are the hardest to work with—even managers of their own generation say they’re difficult

Rocha isn’t the first Gen Z-er to reach management ranks and then complain about her generation’s shortcomings.

Resume Genius asked hiring managers which generation is the most challenging to work with, and 45% pointed to Gen Z, the generation born between 1997 and 2012. Most shockingly, even 50% of Gen Zers admitted that their own generation is the most difficult to manage. 

Another study found that nearly three-fourths of managers consider Gen Z the most difficult to work with, and many bosses get frustrated with their new hires regularly. Only 4% of respondents said it was never difficult to manage Gen Z.

And they’re not just complaining about the latest generation of workers; 65% of the bosses surveyed have put Gen Z at the top of their firing list before any other generation. Over half of respondents had already sacked a Gen Zer, and 12% said they fired one less than one week after a start date. 

A separate study pointed to a lack of initiative, unprofessionalism, poor communication skills and general unreadiness for the workplace as top reasons for firing Gen Z grads just months after hiring them. 

Being late to work and meetings often, not wearing office-appropriate clothing, and not using language appropriate for the workspace were specific examples used of this.

In the end, it’s making hiring managers more reluctant to hire the next generation of workers. Instead, most studies concluded that bosses are hiring more millennials as a result.

Career advice from a Gen Z hiring manager: ‘You should be joining every interview from a computer’

In a series of follow-up videos, Rocha shared some tips for young job seekers on how to not “totally bomb” their shot at landing a role,“ since Gen Z apparently don’t know how to act in interviews”.

“Apparently, this is controversial, and the main reason why that video went viral, but you should be joining every interview from a computer, not your phone,” she stressed.

Failing that, for young people who don’t have a laptop or desktop, she recommended setting up your phone sideways so the video appears horizontal on the hiring manager’s screen—leaving them none the wiser.

“And do not touch it throughout the interview,” Rocha added. “I don’t want to be on FaceTime with you.”

Other tips included showing genuine interest in the company, making sure you take up no more than 50% of the conversation, and answering any questions in under 2 minutes. Essentially, an interview should be a back-and-forth, not a monologue.

“If you notice that you’re dominating the conversation, stop talking, because that means that you’re rambling,” Rocha said. 

“The tell me about yourself question is not an invitation for your life story,” she added.

The advice Rocha gave that got the most hate in the comments section was to thank the hiring manager for their time with a follow-up email.

Although the topic of thank-you notes is quite contentious (with some arguing that candidates shouldn’t have to do more free work, and it adds to a hiring manager’s already full plate), Rocha insisted it’s “just polite”—and even an ex-Meta recruiter agrees it’s a green flag. 

“It really takes two seconds, and clearly, according to my last couple of videos, people aren’t sending them, so you will stand out if you send a thank you to your interviewer after you get off the call,” Rocha concluded.