She is 23 years old and have a budget to buy a new house for $4-6 million. Like wtf?
When I was 23 I lived on $200 per month 😁
https://x.com/Linahuaa/status/1980531996884627637?t=PJjvvlbBPRXvSIAyRLdaNQ&s=19
When I was 23 I lived on $200 per month 😁
https://x.com/Linahuaa/status/1980531996884627637?t=PJjvvlbBPRXvSIAyRLdaNQ&s=19
X (formerly Twitter)
LinaHua (@Linahuaa) on X
Chinese own homes because they consume less, save more, and are
only-children with parents and two sets of grandparents supporting them financially.
But housing in China is CRAP.
There are many things to shill for about China, but housing ain't it.
Obviously…
only-children with parents and two sets of grandparents supporting them financially.
But housing in China is CRAP.
There are many things to shill for about China, but housing ain't it.
Obviously…
BLACKROCK DRAWS BITCOIN WHALES INTO WALL STREET
Big Bitcoin holders are shifting funds into Wall Street ETFs after July’s rule change allowing tax-free, in-kind Bitcoin transfers. BlackRock has converted over $3 billion so far, with Bitwise and Galaxy seeing rising demand. The move lets investors hold Bitcoin through traditional brokerage accounts—enabling loans, collateral use, and estate planning. Many are drawn by the security, convenience, and legitimacy of the financial system, even as it brings Bitcoin’s biggest players back into traditional finance.
(@WalterBloomberg)
Big Bitcoin holders are shifting funds into Wall Street ETFs after July’s rule change allowing tax-free, in-kind Bitcoin transfers. BlackRock has converted over $3 billion so far, with Bitwise and Galaxy seeing rising demand. The move lets investors hold Bitcoin through traditional brokerage accounts—enabling loans, collateral use, and estate planning. Many are drawn by the security, convenience, and legitimacy of the financial system, even as it brings Bitcoin’s biggest players back into traditional finance.
(@WalterBloomberg)