Agree. I'm 48 and my spouse 58. We have zero debt at his point. |
I have about $17M in debt. Sounds horrible, right?
But I also have a NW of $510M. I borrow money as often as I can, invest smartly, and pocket the profits. |
230k. We have more than that in savings (stock market, not including our retirement). I’m never getting rid of my sub 3% mortgage. |
$2M mortgage, no other debt |
Love that family money! Only those with a financial safety net think the way you do. It’s easy to take so-called risks by capitalizing on investment leverage when the risk you’re taking is being borne by someone else. |
You sure it's not a billion? This is the internet - no one is going to check. |
You’re comparing your gifted privilege to PP’s hard work and honestly earned accomplishment? You’re a veritable skid mark and drag on society!! Who brags about such a dishonorable existence?!? |
Probably will be $1B when I hit 30. But, at my current age of 27, it is definitely still just $510M. |
You're falling behind other kids who made their first Trillion before the age of 19. Slacker. |
Hey baby millionaire- why are you posting on this website? |
lol sure. Keep crying. |
+1 Also, did PP buy Bitcoin when they cost $1 each? They'd have way more money than they got from the stock market. Oh right, they didn't because only hindsight is 20/20 and the stock market could just as easily have been cut in half over that time period. In that case, they'd be sitting on those losses on top of the debt they didn't pay off. This the whole point for you numbskulls: many people don't want to use the roof over their head as a poker chip at the casino, even when the odds are in their favor. Once my mortgage is paid-off and I've got a decent amount in some other, safe diversified investments? Sure, then I'm open to the leverage game. |
Around $858k mortgage in house now worth around $1.6M.
We collectively paid off or had forgiven all but $10k of about $200k of student loans. |
Gotta love when someone living in $1.6M home has their debt forgiven by hardworking taxpayers. And people wonder why blue collar Americans vote Republican. |
Right, what you did was colossally dumb. Thinking that the stock market would be cut in half over any time horizon beyond 1-2 years is utter insanity. The fact that generations before me had money didn’t equip me with a ton of money, it equipped me with the lessons of how to preserve and grow my money by investing as much as early as possible and leveraging smartly. People who didn’t come from this background undoubtedly are susceptible to all sorts of foolish ideas, like paying off your mortgage in between the ages of 22-40 instead of building invested wealth with that money. “Peace of mind” is an emotional basis. The goal should be to make as much money with the money you have and taking the emotion out of it. It doesn’t take hindsight to know that it’s myopic and poor money management to pay off your mortgage quickly. |