Everyone says real assets win during hyperinflation. They're right — and completely wrong.In 1923, Germany's hyperinflation wiped out savings, demolished the middle class, and destroyed the mark. Landlords who owned bricks instead of paper should have won. Some did. Many were ruined anyway.In this first episode of The Great Inflations series, we go deep on the Weimar landlord — what actually happened to people who owned real estate during the worst monetary collapse in modern history. The answer involves three things almost nobody talks about: rent controls, foreign currency debt, and a government tax specifically designed to claw back the gains.What you'll learn:✅ Why fixed-rate, mark-denominated mortgage debt became the most powerful wealth transfer tool of the era✅ How rent control laws (Reichsmietengesetz) trapped landlords in an asset-rich, cash-poor paradox✅ The three ways landlords got ruined even when their buildings survived✅ The Hauszinssteuer — the government tax that took back the windfall✅ The exact profile of who actually captured generational wealth — and how narrow that window really wasThis is not ancient history. For anyone building a real estate portfolio today — in supply-constrained markets, under rent control frameworks, in a macro environment where dollar reserve status is under pressure — this is a direct map.📖 Sources:- Adam Fergusson, When Money Dies (1975)- Gerald D. Feldman, The Great Disorder (1993)- Harold James, The German Slump (1986)- John Maynard Keynes, The Economic Consequences of the Peace (1919)🔔 Subscribe for weekly deep dives at the intersection of history, macro, and real asset investing.📬 Full written version + modern portfolio framework on Substack (link below).https://thetimelessinvestor.substack.com/Original Article on The Timeless Investor:https://thetimelessinvestor.substack.com/p/the-weimar-landlord