My friend Django brightened my day with this point about my weighty mortgage:

The other thing I was going to console you with is that, with the markets in the state they’re in, your financial position is actually perfect. [You're] heavily leveraged, i.e. a debt-to-net-worth ratio of close to 1.

The most likely result of a market crash is inflation as the fed pumps ever-more money into the economy… ditto tax relief, etc. In any inflationary situation, the ideal place to be is in debt up to your eyeballs, with the money from that invested in real assets (i.e. not credit card debt), since, as inflation pushes up prices and salaries, the amount of debt relative to income goes down. In the worst-case scenario (China dumps US currency, runs on the dollar, hyper-inflation) your debt becomes meaningless and you get a free house.

Conversely, in that worst-case scenario, the place you DONT want to be is holding bonds, pensions, or other fixed-income instruments (or just dollars) - because if a loaf of bread now costs $10,000, your pension isn’t worth very much.

This is what happened to Germany in the 30s (which they engineered deliberately, to get out of their debts to England and France) or Russia accidentally in the 90s, after they lost most of the countries money to a pyramid scheme.

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