05-02-2022, 04:09 PM | #45 | |
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1) Read the short, but redundant book the "Little Book of Common Sense Investing: The Only Way to Guarantee Your Fair Share of Stock Market Returns." 2) Adopt Buffett's 15 minute retirement plan. 3) Fire my financial advisor in 2015 and take matters into my own hands using Vanguard. The amount of growth we've had is astounding, especially when you get out of those high fee investments and stop paying all those financial advisor related fees (many of which are intentionally hidden/buried). Investing is freaking simple if your goal is to retire with $1M-5M. You really don't need much help investing and managing a portfolio of that size. Just follow Buffett's 15 minute retirement plan and learn the basics. Once the portfolio gets to around $1M, then go some other directions to diversify a bit more. Occasionally hire a fiduciary financial advisor every so often to review your portfolio and work with an attorney to make sure your estate is in good order. For those that don't know, a fiduciary financial advisor is a licensed person legally obligated to put your interests first when making investment decisions. They're not going to sell you anything. Last August I went from fulltime to 32 hours a week. Our investments allowed me to do that at 47 y/o. I plan to retire by 52 or earlier.
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05-02-2022, 05:38 PM | #46 | |
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Nailed it! All started for me reading that little red book too.
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05-03-2022, 08:46 PM | #48 |
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The best advise I've ever given is you can get rich by diversifying but wealthy but consolidating. So if there is a company or stock you believe in strongly put the majority of your assets in there if you want a shot at getting wealthy.
*Not financial advice just something I was told |
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05-04-2022, 12:06 PM | #51 | |
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05-04-2022, 02:59 PM | #53 |
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So which index funds/ETF would you guys recommend? I have Vanguard and S&P500 for 401K and some traditional IRA. Would like to put more money in for the long haul/retirement.
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05-04-2022, 03:49 PM | #54 | |
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I can't say that any S&P 500 index fund is better than the other as they all operate generally the same and have the same funds in their portfolio. The key is you want investments with low fees/expense ratios. Something like 0.04-0.07%. Most S&P 500 index funds are around 0.04%. If you're just starting out though, just do a well known S&P 500 index fund at 80-90% of your portfolio and the remainder is some sort of bond index fund. Financial advisors want to make this stuff seem really difficult. It is not. They want you to believe it is difficult so that they can charge you high fees and sell you investment products with high expense ratios (i.e., 1%+). It doesn't seem like a lot, but when you consider that a financial advisor will be taking 1.3-1.7% of your portfolio's value each year to "manage it", it most definitely adds up. Most advisors say their annual management fee is ~1% for a typical sub-$2M portfolio, but when you do the math, it's closer to 1.3-1.7% with everything considered and tallied at the end of the year. It's a racket and many of those fees are somewhat hidden and it takes some digging to see where you're getting hit. On a $500K portfolio, they're taking $5,000 to $8,500 each year to do VERY little. Over the course of a few decades, that's hundreds of thousands of dollars spent in fees and money that could have been invested and grown your portfolio. Over the course of 20 years, you would have likely spent and lost out on well over $500k+ in portfolio growth.
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The forest was shrinking, but the Trees kept voting for the Axe, for the Axe was clever and convinced the Trees that because his handle was made of wood, he was one of them.
Last edited by XutvJet; 05-04-2022 at 03:58 PM.. |
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05-04-2022, 04:03 PM | #55 | |
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05-05-2022, 04:53 AM | #56 | |
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Best financial advice I can give is the importance of learning how to fix things yourself. When my husband decided it was time to reno our house this year, we saved $15,000 at least, thanks to my parents drafting me to help them with their home projects throughout the years. What a pain in the butt, but Im SO not paying $10,000 for some moron to paint walls, and fix the dents. And, invest! Also, leave some sentimental stuff & a bit of money, but perhaps not a large sum. From experience, this can change how people think, break up families, and cause fights that will never get settled (or may have to be settled in court). If your kids can count on themselves, they wont count on something you have coming into their possession. |
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05-05-2022, 09:44 AM | #57 |
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OP, since you have kids I'd recommend reading "Die With Zero" by Bill Perkins. He talks about his path to wealth and how the practice of saving up your whole life to leave a larger inheritance to your kids is the wrong approach because if you die at say age 90, your kids are probably in their 60s or 70s and don't really need that sort of financial windfall anymore. He instead recommends giving the kids their "inheritance" during major stages of their life (marriage, first house purchase, etc) when they can really benefit from it. Then spend the rest and enjoy your own life with the goal of "dying with zero".
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05-05-2022, 10:31 AM | #58 |
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More so reading for awareness as I too am quite interested here but going to throw in a point for discussion because I am still unsure how to handle it when I get to that stage of life.
Background: Grandparents did well, parents are still doing well from a financial standpoint. I was raised without being handed anything. Job at 13, no financial help on the first vehicle, no financial help with college, wasn't welcomed back home after college (not in a rude manner, my parents are quite nice) and had to find a place and ensure a job was in place prior to fund said place. Through college I worked to pay for my fun during my time there. Wedding, small chunk from both sides - so bulk of our wedding was paid out of pocket. Keep in mind, wife was the same - 4H growing up, sold animals to pay for her first vehicle and horse, paid for her own college, worked through college. We are now doing well for our age, and unless something catastrophic happens, we will continue to do so as our jobs are as stable as can be. My wife and I have gotten into arguments about this as she is pretty soft, I'm a little more rough around the edges. The goal is to be pretty well off by time we have kids and they become of age where they need assistance (vehicle, college, wedding, etc). Given our upbringing, and how I believe that upbringing shaped us into who we are today, even if I had the opportunity to pay for everything for them (kids), why would I (well aware of the obvious answer here)? I feel we live in an age where everything is handed on a silver plater, and I hate it with a passion. I am not a greedy person, I wouldn't mind by any means sharing the wealth, but it is more so the message it construes. I'm sure i will find the right answer as I get older, but again wanted to hear some opinions. |
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05-05-2022, 01:26 PM | #59 |
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I can't believe that any financial advice thread here has gone three pages without someone suggesting hookers and blow!
Has BP-OT finally jumped the shark?????
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05-05-2022, 02:00 PM | #60 | |
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05-05-2022, 02:23 PM | #61 | |
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My son is 17, has a 4.7 GPA, will graduate next year with 24 hours of college credit, works a 16-18 hr/wk job during school, has a side gig doing video editing, and is involved in extra circular audio/visual work for the school. We gifted him my wife's 2015 Outback and he pays all the expenses on it. We've saved up for college and he will likely not have to pay a dime. We would like him to have a job while in school though and he's fine with that. When he gets his first home, we plan to give him a nice chunk for a down payment. My daughter is 13, has a 4.0 GPA, and is a stellar volleyball player and is being recruited by some of best clubs in the city. Her goal is to play college volleyball. Maintaining grades while playing a near round sport at the highest club level and having some free time for friends and family leaves no time for work. For better or worse, club sports are way different when they were even 10 years ago. We're fine with that because we see her work ethic. We also have a nice college fund set aside for her as well. If she gets a sports scholarship, then that's gravy. Otherwise, she too will be set. We plan to do the same for her when comes to buying a house. We'll likely give her the Outback when she's 15 and help my son buy a used car. We'll take out the loan and he can pay us back at a lower payment until he graduates college. We plan to gift our kids money each year once they are out of school. I will also help my kids setup Vanguard accounts once they are 18 and will teach them how to invest. We don't want our kids to struggle, but we also want them to be independent and successful.
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The forest was shrinking, but the Trees kept voting for the Axe, for the Axe was clever and convinced the Trees that because his handle was made of wood, he was one of them.
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05-05-2022, 03:25 PM | #62 | |
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05-05-2022, 03:33 PM | #63 | |
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Seems like you wife and yourself have done a great job guiding your kids in the right direction. |
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05-05-2022, 03:42 PM | #64 | |
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To me, if they know they have to pay, it "should" lead to further effort in reference to extra curriculars and high school studies. Obviously Jet proved this wrong above, but there a exceptions to everything. Idk, I go back and forth - glad I don't have to make these decisions yet haha. |
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05-05-2022, 04:13 PM | #65 | |
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There has to be some balance between teaching your kid to be self sufficient/the value of hard work, and standing by while they tie a financial millstone around their necks. Every parent has to figure that out themselves. I just remembered - i really like what my friend’s parents did with her. They saved up to pay 100% of her college, and then told her that whatever scholarships or financial aid she got for herself, was the value of the car they’d buy to send her off to college in. She drove a new E36 325i convertible in college |
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05-05-2022, 04:32 PM | #66 |
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-Live within your means. The person who makes $50k per year and spends 49 is better off than the person who makes $1 million and spends 1.1.
-save money. Cash money. Cash is king. -invest. But don't jump on investments you don't understand. In todays world that probably means crypto and NFT's. They're poker. If you're at the table and you don't know who the mark is: you're the mark. -spend less on your house than the bank allows you too. Sorry Californians. -you may live to 95 and need your money to last. You also might die tomorrow. Find the balance between enjoying your money now and having some for later. Since we're on a BMW car forum, I'm gonna assume everyone here is ok enjoying some money now. |
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