As a young man, I was told that I should buy a house, better than renting and then one day it would be mine.

Now, on the precipice of selling that property, I find this with the deed, sold in 1955 for £1665. I’ve now received an offer for slightly over 100X, but is it worth anything more today than back then? It is still a 3 bed semi, or had the GBP has effectively lost 99% of its value over that same period. The house’s value has not gone up, you’re simply being paid less. More interesting still, since I bought in 2006, the rate of increase has been about 1.6%, maybe offset by some rent, but not accounting for all I spent on it.

This was not a good store of value although a good year where I lived by myself with my dog, particularly as it made me realise being a slave to the bank wasn’t how I saw my future. Once it’s sold, have a good idea how I will store the value of all those years as a landlord.

Your house is a consumable, it is not a store of value. Mortgages can be viewed as cheaper ways to rent off the bank, not a way to save. Save your time value in something that doesn’t need painting or have its boiler fixed. Nfa, but also, you do you. 🫡🙌 #bitcoin (not a picture of my actual house)

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And .gov taxes are in % so a double whammy

Stolen through house price inflation, then taxed on the “profit” of what remains.

Tell the when your hatred of the government began………

Mr. Charles Boycott. what a peculiar surname

Could be Geoff's dad🤔.

Hey Dug! Your post got me curious so I looked into the actual value shift of your home over time: in 1955 1 British Pound was worth $2.80 US, as we all know at the time Gold was pegged to the dollar at $35/oz so gold was £12.50/oz.

Today, Gold is exchanged at £2340.48/oz.

£2340.48 / £12.50 = 187.24

100(%) / 187.24 = 0.534(%)

So the British Pound has lost 99.466% of it's value against gold over 70 years, or an approximate average of 7.2% a year (0.928^70 = 0.00535 (0.535%) value remaining).

Since you said you received an offer for just over 100x the 1955 purchase price, we can find it's current value lost over time.

£1635/£12.50 = 130.8 oz of Gold.

£1635 * 100 = £163,500 approximate current valuation.

£163,500 / £2340.48 = 69.86 oz of gold.

69.86 / 130.8 = 0.534 (53.4%)

So after 70 years your home can be exchanged for only 53.4% of the gold originally used to pay for it. Revealing a true loss of value of 46.6% over the last 70 years, or about 0.0089% lost against gold every year (0.9911^70 = 0.5348). 🖖🙂

Thank you for this, was wondering about how the gold unit of account would work as well. Crazy figures, going to be keeping my value in a bitcoin battery 🔋 moving forward.

Never hoped for a stable/lower bitcoin price in all the time I’ve been in Bitcoin than between now and when it completes.