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Reply to "$7M vs $10M"
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[quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous][quote=Anonymous]I don't think I'd have any lifestyle change between those two numbers. At $25M I think I'd start incorporating a few stupid-rich things, like chartering planes for travel. But at those numbers I'd be retired, relaxed, and still focusing on preservation.[/quote] Really? I'm going to reach that net worth in a few years, the way my portfolio is going, and there's no way I'd charter a plane, unless to get somewhere a commercial route can't go. I just want a normal middle class life, and preserve wealth for my descendants. [/quote] If you are close to $25 million, the words normal middle class do not describe you[/quote] They do, and this what a lot of people don't understand. I have a middle class income. Income and assets can be VERY different things. I happen to have lucked out in my stock portfolio, but that doesn't make my job high-earning. And since I'm still quite young, there is no way I'm quitting my life to gobble up my capital. I have kids to put through college, parents to look out for and spending on luxury just isn't my thing. Maybe I will re-evaluate when my kids are finished with college. But certainly not now. I think you some of you, who probably all out-earn me, just don't quite understand what it's like to actually have 10M+ in a stock portfolio in your early 40s. It's not "Woohoo! Free money! Let's spend it". It's "Hmm, OK. My oldest's college is 85K a year. My father has dementia. Let's wait and see." [/quote] You seem to have gotten lucky in the market, but don’t understand what you have. $10M should generate $500k to $1 million annually in return. Can you not live on that? Sounds like $250k or less would be fine for your lifestyle. Run some numbers bro; you’re overthinking it. [/quote] Best practice for UHNW individuals is 2-3% annual withdrawal to not touch your principal and to continue allowing your money to grow to account for future inflation and higher spending down the road. Then you have to account dividend taxes and/or capital gains taxes. I agree with PP, when you have this much money and are still young, it's definitely not "free money! let's spend it!" unless you want to end up with nothing. People get into trouble thinking the market is going to return 5-10% every year and relying on that type of withdrawal, not to mention uncertainty with the future tax code. [/quote]
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