Event JSON
{
"id": "67c844662333bcc1cf4102e00c68b034f2e34ffab0f69f475770b01ab62210d0",
"pubkey": "b190175cef407c593f17c155480eda1a2ee7f6c84378eef0e97353f87ee59300",
"created_at": 1740123844,
"kind": 1,
"tags": [
[
"e",
"34aba1e060ef51c7668f229cebbfb07e48f5a11d1d9198cdd5ff5bec6d46849d",
"wss://nos.lol",
"root"
],
[
"p",
"41b9c1fbcd754352cd109aab6710217797132eb7a66a75c94a35402df1991d5e"
],
[
"r",
"wss://bitcoiner.social/"
],
[
"r",
"wss://nos.lol/"
],
[
"r",
"wss://nostr.land/",
"write"
],
[
"r",
"wss://relay.primal.net/"
],
[
"r",
"wss://relay.snort.social/",
"write"
],
[
"r",
"wss://relay.damus.io/"
],
[
"r",
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]
],
"content": "Accepting that there is a store-of-value-premium on real-estate, I'm wondering what about the cost side, the cost of building new houses, the cost of renovating, construction material and labor. Isn't that limiting the store-of-value premium? (if there is high demand for buying existing real estate as investment, and prices go up, but newly-builds prices are lower, it's more efficient to build).\nOr, it's the other way around, and the store-of-value-premium also pulls up the construction prices, and inflates construction material and labor prices, infiltrating the whole supply chain? I think this is the case.",
"sig": "fd0204bab1551710a9755e840e46e869e752d32a466ad93e59524afa1a9b9d80dce028334aecbd743cf5b34e24d34fc785535ecd175036bfe714063d60bccf9b"
}