Hey All,
Today, just two things:
I'm well on the way to move my courses and services to a new platform that - I hope! - will help me scale up and deliver more value faster.
In the meantime, I shipped this:
1. 🏡 Dream Home Denmark. I launched this two months or so ago and it has been a hit. I’m constantly updating it with buyer feedback and e.g., this week I added sensitivity tables for the Excel models. (More is coming!). You can check it out here.
2. 💰 Online Business Email Course. I’ve been making money online for 15 years now (!) and - finally - I put together an email course that is action-packed and that can guide you too to make money online. It’s free. If you click here you’ll immediately get the first email.
3. ☎️ Community. I also started a community, and it has all these amazing benefits: a) intro 1-1 call with me, b) monthly group coaching, c) access to a back-catalogue of great courses, and more. You can check it out here.
💕 LAST - If you have enjoyed any of my videos, emails, courses or anything, I will appreciate a lot if you can leave me a testimonial or review. You can do so super easy clicking here. It makes a ton of a difference.
There will be some secret goodies for those who leave me one 😀.
(And I've been super bad collecting these, so appreciate you help me catch up!)
Denmark is a rich country but one where it’s especially hard to become rich individually.
To clarify, what I mean as rich is - like, real rich - we can say, for example, a net worth of €1m and up.
(Though, in 2023 many people wouldn’t consider a net worth of €1m “rich” anymore. But alas.)
In Denmark it’s hard to be rich BY DESIGN. I’ll give you two examples:
It’s bru-tal.
Again - This is by design. Call it the Janteloven or whatever you want, but in Denmark it’s hard to accumulate wealth, and - topic for another video - to use that wealth as a “rich” person would do in another country.
(Just look at the car taxes. If you want to get a Porsche or a Mercedes in Denmark you can, but it costs you so much that it’s off the table to all but the most wealthy.)
BUT … There are two exceptions, and they’re what made most “rich” people in Denmark “rich”. These are: real estate (but narrowly defined) and launching a business.
In Denmark, capital gains on the sale of your primary home are not taxed. You can be like this person:
- Bought a House - 2003, for ~4m kr.
- Sold the House - 2020, for ~16m kr.
- Profit: 16 - 5 = 12m kr.
- Taxes: 0.
Yep: 12m kr profit, in Denmark, and not taxed at all.
But it’s a much bigger deal than I thought. It’s not wild to say that this one rule explains a lot of who is rich and who is not in Denmark.
I’ll invite two people to put this into perspective.
First, let me introduce you to Party Peter. He’s a joyful, “life well lived”-type of guy, and his story is:
Peter never invested. (He doesn’t know what an index fund is). He never really “saved”: aside from his (low) house payments he never put money aside. He even occasionally struggles with credit card debt.
But Peter is - by our definition above - literally rich. He has a net worth of 7-8m kr: an euro millionaire.
Peter’s story is multiplied through Denmark. The strategy, again, is very simple:
In the last 10+ years this worked wonders.
But now let’s contrast Peter with someone else who didn’t buy a house, let’s call her Saver Sarah:
Sarah could pay for the 10m kr. house because she and her husband were diligent investors. Starting early, Sarah saved 2.000 a month, then 5.000 month, and last - together with her husband - 20.000 kr per month. (It helped she got cheap rentals throughout.)
Those savings were invested in good funds - 8%+ per year returns, which is the market average - and after paying the 27%-42% taxes on gains (unrealized, remember) each year, by 2022 Sarah and her husband had built a nice portfolio of 2-3m kr.
Just what was needed for the downpayment for the house 😉.
It’s wild, but Sarah could be - in the day to day, and for the past ten years:
Yet, Peter has a net worth 3x Sarah’s and lives in a nicer house. Crazy, isn’t it?
It’s not a given that Peter should’ve been better off than Sarah. It just happened that, through these ten years Peter:
- Borrowed aggressively
- Paid zero taxes on his house gains
While Sarah:
- Didn’t borrow, and
- Paid 27-42% yearly on her investment gains
In other words, Peter played the right game for Denmark. Sarah didn’t.
In other countries like the US, UK, or elsewhere in Europe, Peter wouldn’t get to borrow as much, and then would pay 30%+ on the gains. Sarah, in contrast, would be much better off as her investments would be taxed much less heavily and only at the sale.
So - In conclusion, at least for the last ten years, the right strategy - Peter’s strategy - to become rich in Denmark has been to:
🤷♂️ Maybe? In investing circles, it’s always said that “past performance is not a guarantee of future results”. I can’t fathom that real estate prices would keep rising the way they did, but - hey - who knows…
But it’s unquestionable that it was the right call the last decade. (And there’s a lot of people who’s situation looks like Party Peter’s.)
Personally, I like a third approach - you could call it the “Have It All” Approach. (“Have It All” Hans’ Approach, to follow the naming convention above 😀):
But I’m also a bit conservative. I’m still in my (owned) two-bedroom apartment, and - though I would like some more space - I couldn’t get myself to move out yet… Let’s see.
If you want to discuss this in more depth with me 1-1, check out the Community. (Yep, you can also sign up, have the 1-1, and cancel. ⛵️)
I just launched my new free email course on building an online business. You can sign up just by clicking this link.
It's my best email course yet, and if you join now you can also give feedback and direction as I look to improve it 💕.
I'm sorry I've been out of touch. I’ve been quite busy at work, building these courses, filming videos and (as of a few weeks back!) playing Zelda: Tears of the Kingdom.
I'm off to Alaska with the family in the coming days and look forward to come back recharged to share some amazing work.
AND - That’s all from my end for today. If you’ve any questions/comments, I’m always happy to hear from readers 😀. (And would love your testimonial or review.
Until next time,
Mario
I help people in Europe to buy a house, invest in stocks and build an online side business. I also write on productivity and my travels to 140+ countries.
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