Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 150k in our checking accounts for the first time. Its a nice sense of relief but we still do not think of ourselves as "having money".
What would "having money" mean like for you?
You’d have a lot more money if you weren’t just letting 150k rot in a checking account. What a terrible financial decision.
What do you recommend?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Is it smart to have $150k in your checking account? Shouldn't it at least be in a money market account or something?
NP. The highest rate you can get on money market is 0.2% at my credit union and 0.3% at my bank. My basic deposit earns 0.15% so you're talking about a whopping $150 annual difference on 100k deposit for a money market fund. Not exactly rising to the level of a decision that matters at all.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:We have 150k in our checking accounts for the first time. Its a nice sense of relief but we still do not think of ourselves as "having money".
What would "having money" mean like for you?
You’d have a lot more money if you weren’t just letting 150k rot in a checking account. What a terrible financial decision.
Anonymous wrote:We have 150k in our checking accounts for the first time. Its a nice sense of relief but we still do not think of ourselves as "having money".
What would "having money" mean like for you?
Anonymous wrote:Is it smart to have $150k in your checking account? Shouldn't it at least be in a money market account or something?
Anonymous wrote:A clear before/after event for me was when I realized I’d stopped checking the prices of groceries on the shelf at Whole Foods while shopping. If I happened to notice a BOGO sign, I might stock up, but I wasn’t thinking about cost or tallying things up in my head as I shopped anymore.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I think for me it happened when we crossed above 5 mil in net worth. I remember eating a meal for 200 dollars for the four of us and not caring. That was a clear "before/after" event. I understand that there are many experience-focused people for whom a $50/person meal is perfectly normal even with far less net worth. This was just an example, I am sure everyone has their own examples.
Everyone is different OP. We are over 5mil and still don't feel like this PP.
Anonymous wrote:I think for me it happened when we crossed above 5 mil in net worth. I remember eating a meal for 200 dollars for the four of us and not caring. That was a clear "before/after" event. I understand that there are many experience-focused people for whom a $50/person meal is perfectly normal even with far less net worth. This was just an example, I am sure everyone has their own examples.