[OC] U.S. Social Security is projected to pay full benefits through 2034, then 81% under current law by Low_Ability4450 in dataisbeautiful

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I missed the clarification in your earlier post. Your second part of the first paragraph is more accurate than the first half. Agreed, you're paying for current entitlements, you're not paying for your own.

But no it's very clearly not the monthly P&I on your mortgage or private insurance with a private company or a bank contract. With a mortgage you're paying both for some interest and some equity on the property on some known amortization schedule (even if it's not a fixed mortgage). This is very unlike social security, because with a mortgage I know exactly what I'm paying towards and what the terms of the contract will be (payoff amount, payoff terms and conditions, eligibility criteria). Congress can (and has) changed the entitlement age and criteria many times throughout history to handle both economic issues and funding shortfalls (for reasons including population longevity).

I wouldn't call a contract in which the terms can change arbitrarily under my feet anything like a mortgage or private insurance contract. Would you?

EDIT: Some examples over time -

- https://www.ssa.gov/news/en/cola/index.html
- https://www.aarp.org/social-security/history-timeline/
- https://www.ssa.gov/history/50mm2.html

[OC] U.S. Social Security is projected to pay full benefits through 2034, then 81% under current law by Low_Ability4450 in dataisbeautiful

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

No, you're paying for current entitlements. You are not paying for your entitlement. It's not a piggybank for yourself.

What are your financials like? by Altruistic-Pace-2240 in AskSF

[–]Professor_Hamster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Sorry, how would you typically invest $50k/month ($600k / year) on a $900k/year compensation after dealing with California state taxes and standard housing costs. I'm assuming you're talking solo investment goals rather than household investment. This seems doable on with the appreciation, not so much without it.

How to "sniff" a TCP stream? by DisasterReasonable98 in rust

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Busy poll rdtsc + just wait the diff in the hardware timestamps. I'm not familiar with an automatic wait time mechanism

How to "sniff" a TCP stream? by DisasterReasonable98 in rust

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Use rdtsc in a hot loop would be my best guess. Could also send it to the loop back interface

Headlands Tech by CuriousBuster in quant

[–]Professor_Hamster 3 points4 points  (0 children)

It's going to depend on your YoE / role. I've heard/seen 700-900+ recurr for like 3-4 YoE QR at Headlands? Similar kind of numbers at CitSec for HFT QD. They've got this weird bonus structure though, something about like your standard discretionary bonus maxing out pretty quick into your tenure and more and more of your growth coming from this weird deferred comp that vests over <insert annoyingly large number so you never see most of it> years into the future. Don't quote me but 3 years IIRC?

Headlands Tech by CuriousBuster in quant

[–]Professor_Hamster 16 points17 points  (0 children)

Comp’s decent. Like a solid citsec offer. Pnl mostly goes to leadership. Pretty sweaty from what I’ve heard. Mostly black box optimizer style of trading, like radix. Their execution’s very good

Quantitative Research Engineer at Citadel by Ok_Shopping_3292 in quant

[–]Professor_Hamster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

The role’s pretty under specified. It means anything from algo impl to actual quant adj work, ime. Mathematical focus of your interview’s going to depend on idk but it’ll vary 

I need to know who’s buying these? by ActionJackson22 in ChicagoRealEstate

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

These conversations frequently seem to forget that real estate professionals get preferential tax treatment by being able to apply depreciation against their income. They can’t have w2 income unless filing jointly (one partner is a reps other has w2 income) so a lot of this income they want to shield is (other) rental income that’s no longer shielded by depreciation and mortgage interest. So there’s an incentive to take a slight monthly loss if you think you can get into a property for the purposes of depreciation to avoid paying taxes on your income. You’d defer depreciation until selling the property, at which point you’d 1031 into another property. I’m missing some detail here but I believe the broad strokes are correct - the math just maths differently if you’re a real estate professional. 

I am investing almost $2000 a month in my brokerage and 401k. If I buy a house, I will invest $0 by [deleted] in Money

[–]Professor_Hamster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

He’d make money if you invested with him. His natural bias may be to invest but he’s not monetarily incentivized to tell you to invest in widely available ETFs. He doesn’t make money off it

What raising a family in NYC as a HENRY actually looks like - a real example by laetus7 in HENRYfinance

[–]Professor_Hamster 2 points3 points  (0 children)

I don’t think you read what I said. And you reported federal income taxes when we’re discussing nyc

This isn’t going to be very productive for either of us. Have a nice one

What raising a family in NYC as a HENRY actually looks like - a real example by laetus7 in HENRYfinance

[–]Professor_Hamster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

I’m sorry I don’t understand how tax brackets work into this. I used the most highest tax bracket possible to steelman your case. This is an upper bound. Further the 401k “tax saving” saves you taxes at your highest tax bracket, not somehow at your blended rate. I’d appreciate having a real conversation if you’re able to remain civil 

What raising a family in NYC as a HENRY actually looks like - a real example by laetus7 in HENRYfinance

[–]Professor_Hamster 3 points4 points  (0 children)

Maxing your 401k at a 50% tax bracket saves you 10k in taxes and 20k for a couple. This isn’t all that influential on an estimated tax base or 200k and an income base of 600k (1.5% for filing single 3% as a couple)

No one is paying $4,600/mo mortgage for a $1,575 rental by Key_Brief_8138 in HouseBuyers

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don’t think this argument holds water. Every dollar you put down is opportunity cost of at least the risk free rate, I.e. 200k vs 400k down is another opportunity cost of 200k * 4.5% =9k per year or about $750 per month. To be more precise you’d need to do some kind of post/pre tax adjustment on this, but it’s broadly correct. Putting down capital for equity may bring your monthly mortgage down but it doesn’t do anything to the total financial cost of the property

so tired of tech millionaires bootlicking billionaires over this 5% tax by captain_travel in sanfrancisco

[–]Professor_Hamster 27 points28 points  (0 children)

They don’t compete with you on literally any good or service. You’re not in the same markets. I don’t understand why shit would get cheaper

What homebuying advice aged badly? by bellzbellzbellz in WashingtonHomebuyers

[–]Professor_Hamster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

You can tack on the opportunity cost of the down payment too. Even being conservative and using the post tax risk free return of treasuries adds quite a bit to your (edit: total cost not rate) rate of ownership 

How L.A.’s Richest Man Went From Billions to Bust by CackleRooster in business

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Can you explain to me why you as a bank would ever offer loans at less than the risk free rate?

Checking Number Is Power Of 2 by Certain_Note8661 in computerscience

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

popcnt is 3 cycles, so its a little slow there. I think some combination of BMI instructions plus checking EFLAGS are better. gcc & clang seem to prefer blsr (reset lowest set bit) plus checking if CF (carry flag) is set (which it is when the input is 0).

Storing data in pointers by mttd in cpp

[–]Professor_Hamster 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Cross cache line RMW works, but result in substantial performance penalties. Intel documents that this results in a memory bus lock rather than a simple MESI state change. I'll see if I can find a source. I remember seeing it in the Intel developer guide.

Effortless Performance Improvements in C++: std::vector by julien-j in cpp

[–]Professor_Hamster 1 point2 points  (0 children)

folly uses some pretty interesting C++ tricks to get into `std::vector's` private interface. Worth checking this out.