The person you bought the house off ends up with it...dont they?
Unless it falls again.
And if it goes up in value, they "copped a bargain".
The person you bought the house off ends up with it...dont they?
No more than they end up with £20k if it’s sold on for £120k.The person you bought the house off ends up with it...dont they?

Yes they always have it no matter what you do with your new houseNo more than they end up with £20k if it’s sold on for £120k.
If you buy a house for £100k and sell it for £80k, who ends up with the 20 you lost?

Depends if they came to you for advice!!I wonder how many people, every day, liquidate their retirement funds in order to draw a pension. Some of them have the sense to sell a slice every year, or every quarter, as the time draws near.
Tesla down another 10% today, I see.
Tough for the people who had already sent their forms off.
I wonder where things will be in another month.
No. The unit of currency may as well be the Mars Bar. Houses became worth fewer Mars Bars than they were. That's all, no excess Mars Bars anywhere. Same number of Mars Bars buys the next house.The person you bought the house off ends up with it...dont they?
Investors often wonder where their money went when stocks plummet. Stock price shifts are more about changing perceptions of value rather than money physically moving from one place to another. So in truth, it doesn't vanish—instead, the investment's perceived value changes.So if I buy some shares for £100 and they go down in value and I sell them for £80, who ends up with the £20 I’ve lost? Where's it gone?

It’s a good point, but in reality the loss is just the decreased value of the shares, there is no transfer of funds.So if I buy some shares for £100 and they go down in value and I sell them for £80, who ends up with the £20 I’ve lost? Where's it gone?
Buy Mottie has just sold his sharesIt’s a good point, but in reality the loss is just the decreased value of the shares, there is no transfer of funds.
And the calculation is based on shares being bought and sold all the time by investors. If there is no urgency to realise a share investment it becomes little more than a computer game.Share value is purely calculated moment by moment at the stock exchange on the basis of supply and demand.
People will have shorted the stock market...but where has it gone? If somebody had lost, surely someone else has gained? Money just doesn’t vanish into thin air unless it wasn’t really there in the first place.
If you buy a house for £100k and sell it for £80k, who ends up with the 20 you lost?
Not true. Shorting a stock has a theoretically unlimited loss and a maximum gain.People will have shorted the stock market.
You can make as much backing a stock to lose value
you could make more money via traded options, but they are highly riskyNot true. Shorting a stock has a theoretically unlimited loss and a maximum gain.
If the share is worth £100 and goes to zero you gain £100. If it goes to £300 then you've lost £200.
What’s not true ?Not true. Shorting a stock has a theoretically unlimited loss and a maximum gain.
If the share is worth £100 and goes to zero you gain £100. If it goes to £300 then you've lost £200.