Weekend reading: home truths – Monevator – Go Health Pro

What caught my eye this week.

There is an interesting article in the Financial Times this week that explains that new build properties aren’t as small as we’ve all been led to believe:

It turns out that, rather than shrinking, new homes have become larger.

The frequently used 76 sq m figure is simply wrong and does not reflect the reality of the recent housing market. A housing market analyst tracked the source of this figure to a report published in 1996 that was based on new builds in the 1980s and early 1990s […] the smallest on average of any period.

Unfortunately, the 76 sq m continues to appear in new articles and reports — a true zombie statistic.

Instead, new homes have actually been getting larger and are now slightly bigger, on average, than existing homes.

Apparently Help to Buy – or Help to Buy Bigger, as wags dubbed it – drove the building of more suburban four- and five-bedroom homes, at the expense of fewer city centre flats.

This doesn’t match what I’ve seen in London, of course.

But hey! It’s a big country out there…

Neal Hudson’s article is full of interesting facts. Give it a read if you’re interested in property (and please consider subscribing to the FT if you read a lot of these search links. I do and it’s a treat!)

Breathing space

With Labour aiming to see 1.5m new homes being built – um, someday – I presume this apparent trend for roomier living space will need to be reversed.

Especially as the listed housebuilders’ focus on making bigger ‘executive homes’ targeting DINKYs to rattle around in might be yet another reason why young people find nice no-frills starter flats so hard to snag.

I’m all for higher-density development. Provided the model is classy areas like London’s Maida Vale or Paris’ famously beautiful mid-rise boulevards. Not the high-rise horrors of yesteryear, obviously.

But I suppose that the desirable urban apartment model might face an uphill battle while lockdown – and the near-universal desire for a bit of outdoor space it inspired – is still fresh-ish in our memories?

Have a great weekend.

From Monevator

Reduce tax on savings by parking cash in gilts [Members] – Monevator

UK and Europe dumps on Trump – Monevator

From the archive-ator: How I got mixed up in this FIRE business – Monevator

News

Note: Some links are Google search results – in PC/desktop view click through to read the article. Try privacy/incognito mode to avoid cookies. Consider subscribing to sites you visit a lot.

Bank of England cuts rate to 4.75% but hints at fewer to come – BBC

House prices have hit a new record, says Halifax – This Is Money

Mortgage rates to stay higher thanks to Reeves and Trump – iNews

Iceland’s four-day work week seems to be working out – CNN

Foreign buyers eye Japan’s empty houses, but experts warn of risks – CNBC

The ten fastest-growing scams of 2024 – This Is Money

Is Germany’s business model broken? [Search result] – FT

The US market is top-heavy and expensive – Apollo Academy

Trump 2.0 mini-special

People really hate inflation – The Belle Curve

Francis Fukuyama: what Trump unleashed means for America [Search result] – FT

Presidential terms, recessions, and bear markets – A Wealth of Common Sense

Trump 2.0 and the effect on UK investors – FT

VWRL salutes the new king – Simple Living in Somerset

The psychology of America’s divided politics – The Next Big Idea

Breaking down the election results – Slow Boring

Lessons from the post-Civil War era – Politico

Here’s hoping Trump’s VC supporters have his number – Newcomer

Identity politics isn’t working – Noahpinion

Has the US presidency become a dictatorship? [Podcast] – Freakonomics

Products and services

The trend for ‘copycat’ ETF tickers – Bloomberg via Yahoo

Student loan overpayments reach £80m this year. Are you due a refund? – Which

Open an account with low-cost platform InvestEngine via our link and get up to £50 when you invest at least £100 (T&Cs apply. Capital at risk) – InvestEngine

Why are university tuition fees going up in England, and who’s affected? – Guardian

“I lost £15,500 to a Revolut bank transfer scam” – Which

Is Amex Platinum’s £400 dining credit card worth a look? – Be Clever With Your Cash

Beautifully renovated homes, in pictures – Guardian

Comment and opinion

Slaying some of the biggest passive investment bogeymen – FT

Big inheritances can be a sign of underspending and poor planning – Morningstar

When did this bull market start? – Of Dollars and Data

Mohamed El-Erian: Budget puts Labour on the right track – Guardian

14 money lessons from 40 years of living – Mr Stingy

The great post-Budget pensions rethink [Search result] – FT

Retire without regrets – Harvard Business Review

The ‘happiness plateau’ doesn’t exist – Bloomberg via Advisor Perspectives

Remember, remember – Klement on Investing

Breaking down the magic of portfolio diversification [Nerdy] – CAIA

Naughty corner: Active antics

Was the Polymarket Trump whale smart or lucky? – FT

Bloated balance sheets in Japan – Verdad

Cash! – The Brooklyn Investor

Headlam isn’t right for a UK dividend portfolio – UK Dividend Stocks

No, higher corporate tax rates do not reduce profits – Klement on Investing

Kindle book bargains

I Will Teach You To Be Rich by Ramit Sethi – £0.99 on Kindle

Eat That Frog! Get More of the Important Things Done by Brian Tracy – £0.99 on Kindle

Growth: A Reckoning by Daniel Susskind – £0.99 on Kindle

A Confederacy of Dunces by John Kennedy Tool [Not financial, just a fav] – £0.99 on Kindle

Environmental factors

UK sales of used EVs hit a record – This Is Money

Many of the big indoor farming startups have shut down – PitchBook

Robot overlord roundup

What AI knows about you – Axios

Writes and write-nots – Paul Graham

AI search could break the web – MIT Technology Review

Off our beat

Read more books – Not Boring

What’s behind Big Tech’s return-to-office mandates? [Podcast] – The Verge

How China is like 19th Century America – Construction Physics

How startups stopped being fun – Crunchbase [h/t Abnormal Returns]

What if America keeps getting better? – Drezner’s World

1,100 emails, a 90% open rate, and why people still ghost you – Nerd Processor

Can Starbucks make a comeback? – The Eater

And finally…

“There is no reason to sell a rising stock.”
– Nicolas Darvas, How I Made $2,000,000 in the Stock Market

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