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As of February, it’s cheaper to rent a home than buy one in all of the US’s top 50 metros — and by a staggeringly wide margin, according to a recent study.

For a so-called “starter home” in any of these sought-after cities — which some have argued no longer exist thanks to sky-high borrowing rates and inflationary housing prices — it costs 60.1% less to lease the property than own it on a monthly basis, per Realtor.com’s February 2024 Rental Report.

On average, the stiff premium for homeownership amounts to roughly $1,027 in monthly costs — though in the most sought-after cities, that figure more than doubles.

In Austin, Texas, for example, the gap between renting and buying was the largest, according to Realtor.com’s report that was earlier reported on by the Daily Mail.

The monthly cost of buying a starter home — a zero-to-two-bedroom home, per Realtor.com — in the Austin area was $3,695 in February. The sum marked a staggering 141.5%– or $2,165 — more than the typical monthly rent of $1,530 in the Texan capitol.

Seattle’s housing market also boasted a large disparity between buying and renting: The monthly cost of buying a starter home was $4,422 in February, while the median rent was $2,000 — a 121.1% difference, per Realtor.com.

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And in Phoenix, Ariz., the cost of renting monthly, an average of $1,543, was nearly half the $3,071 per month it would require to buy.

Though it’s more expensive to buy a home in all of the 50 major metros in the US, San Francisco, Los Angeles, San Jose and Sacramento in California, as well as Nashville, Portland and Houston rounded out the top 10 cities with the biggest difference between buying and renting.

For reference, in Realtor.com’s February 2023 Rental Report, it found that renting a starter home was more affordable than buying in 45 of the largest US cities.

In the 12 months since, Memphis, Tenn.; Birmingham, Ala.; Pittsburgh, Pen.;, St. Louis, Mo.; and Baltimore, Md., have flipped from favoring homeowners to favoring renters, according to the Daily Mail.

Realtor.com — which assumed an 8% downpayment, a mortgage rate of 6.78% and included the cost of taxes, insurance and fees in its calculations — noted that buying a starter home is becoming increasingly more expensive as the price of monthly rents have dropped at a faster rate than buying costs.

In February, buying costs dropped 1.6% in the previous 12 months, while rent costs dropped 4.44%.

The key driver of this was elevated mortgage rates, Realtor.com said.

In February, the average rate on a 30-year fixed-rate mortgage was 6.78%, according to the real-estate listings website — up from 6.26% 12 months prior.

Surging rates have made it so unaffordable to take on a mortgage that there’s a growing number of buyers these days that Redfin calls “nepo” buyers — a reference to the nepo baby phenomenon where children of celebrities ride their coattails to gain a foothold on a career.

According to a recent survey from Redfin, 36% of Gen Zers, whose ages range between 12 and 27, and millennials, 28 to 43, are expecting a cash gift from family members in order to fund their downpayment twice as many as there were just five years ago.

Another 16% are anticipating to use an inheritance to help fund their downpayment, and 13% plan to live with their parents or other family members.

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Science

Earth’s Oceans Enter Danger Zone Due to Rising Acidification, New Study Warns

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Earth’s Oceans Enter Danger Zone Due to Rising Acidification, New Study Warns

The oceans of Earth are in worse condition than it was, thought, said the scientists. This is because of the increased acidity levels that led the sea to enter the danger zone five years ago. As per the new study, oceans are more acidic by releasing carbon dioxide from industrial activities such as fossil fuel burning. This acidification of the oceans damages marine life and the ecosystem, in turn threatening the coastal human communities that are dependent on healthy waters for their life.

Oceans May Have Crossed the Danger Zone in 2020

In the study published on Monday, June 9, 2025, in the journal Global Change Biology, researchers have found that acidification is highly advanced tha it was considered in the previous years. Our oceans might have entered the danger zone in the year 2020. Previous research suggested that the oceans of Earth were approaching a danger zone for ocean acidification.

How Ocean Acidification Happens

Ocean acidification is driven by the absorption of ocean of excess CO2 into the ocean, which is rapidly contributing to the global crisis. CO2 dissolves in seawater, forming carbonic acid, lowering pH levels and invading the vital carbonate ions. This threatens the species in the water, such as corals and shellfish, which depend on calcium carbonate to build their skeletons and shells.

The Planetary Boundary May Be Breached

Recent research depicts that the ocean acidification levels may now be breached, crossing the previous estimate of a 19% aragonite decline from the previous industrial levels. Scientists are alarmed that this change could destabilise the ecosystems of marine and, in turn, the coastal economies. This is a ticking bomb with socioeconomic and environmental consequences.

Global Consequences of Acidification

The recent findings suggest that scientists have feared in the past. Ocean acidification has reached dangerous levels, exceeding the limit that is needed to maintain a healthy and stable environment. As critical habitats degrade, the rippling effects are expected to cause harm to biodiversity, impact food security for many of the people who depend on the oceans for their livelihood.

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Science

NASA Chandra Spots Distant X-Ray Jet; Telescope Faces Major Budget Cuts

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NASA Chandra Spots Distant X-Ray Jet; Telescope Faces Major Budget Cuts

NASA’s Chandra X-ray Observatory has detected an enormous X-ray jet from quasar J1610+1811, observed at a distance of about 11.6 billion light-years (roughly 3 billion years after the Big Bang). The jet spans over 300,000 light-years and carries particles moving at roughly 92–98% of the speed of light. It is visible in X-rays because high-energy electrons in the jet collide with the much denser cosmic microwave background at that epoch, boosting microwave photons into X-ray energies. These results were presented at the 246th AAS meeting and accepted for publication in The Astrophysical Journal.

Discovery of the Distant X-ray Jet

According to the study, Chandra’s high-resolution X-ray imaging, combined with radio data, allowed the team to isolate the jet at such a great distance. At the quasar’s distance (about 3 billion years after the Big Bang), the cosmic microwave background was much denser. As a result, relativistic electrons in the jet efficiently scatter CMB photons to X-ray energies. From the multiwavelength data the researchers infer that the jet’s particles are moving at roughly 0.92–0.98 c. Such near-light-speed outflows are among the fastest known.

These powerful jets carry enormous energy into intergalactic space and provide a unique probe of how black holes influenced their surroundings during the universe’s early “cosmic noon” era.

Chandra’s Future at Risk

However, the Chandra mission now faces possible defunding: NASA’s proposed budget calls for drastic cuts to its operating funds. For nearly 25 years, Chandra has been a cornerstone of X-ray astronomy, so its loss would constitute a major setback. The SaveChandra campaign warns that losing Chandra would be an “extinction-level event” for U.S. X-ray astronomy. Scientists warn that ending Chandra prematurely would cripple X-ray science.

Andrew Fabian commented Science magazine, “I’m horrified by the prospect of Chandra being shut down prematurely”. Elisa Costantini added in an interview with Science that if cuts proceed, “you will lose a whole generation ” and it will leave “a hole in our knowledge” of high-energy astrophysics. Without Chandra’s capabilities, many studies of the energetic universe would no longer be possible.

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Politics

Vietnam legalizes crypto under new digital technology law

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Vietnam legalizes crypto under new digital technology law

Vietnam legalizes crypto under new digital technology law

Vietnam has passed a sweeping digital technology law that legalizes crypto assets and outlines incentives for AI, semiconductors, and infrastructure.

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