Anonymous wrote:Average for 20s is 85k. Average in your 60s is 570K.
You are an entitled little thing and need to get out of your bubble before all that money that came to you so easily is just as easily taken away.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Didn’t read the whole thread, so maybe this was addressed? Someone in their 20s can surely be a millionaire, but how can one be a 401k millionaire at that age? You can’t invest enough to reach millionaire status at that age unless you really hit on a couple of stocks.
Why is every naysayer on here just following the established norms within a 401k and picking low cost index or target date funds and then just blindly contributing over time? Of course you won’t have $1M accumulated in < 10 years with that strategy. That set and forget philosophy is now the losing strategy. AI and accessible retail trading platforms have changed everything. Most millennial and Gen Z investors are actively buying and selling within their 401k, IRA, and other investments accounts. This is the new key to making big money. Capitalizing on extreme volatility.
401ks also aren't where you should be doing this type of investing so thanks for giving horrible advice.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Didn’t read the whole thread, so maybe this was addressed? Someone in their 20s can surely be a millionaire, but how can one be a 401k millionaire at that age? You can’t invest enough to reach millionaire status at that age unless you really hit on a couple of stocks.
Why is every naysayer on here just following the established norms within a 401k and picking low cost index or target date funds and then just blindly contributing over time? Of course you won’t have $1M accumulated in < 10 years with that strategy. That set and forget philosophy is now the losing strategy. AI and accessible retail trading platforms have changed everything. Most millennial and Gen Z investors are actively buying and selling within their 401k, IRA, and other investments accounts. This is the new key to making big money. Capitalizing on extreme volatility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Didn’t read the whole thread, so maybe this was addressed? Someone in their 20s can surely be a millionaire, but how can one be a 401k millionaire at that age? You can’t invest enough to reach millionaire status at that age unless you really hit on a couple of stocks.
Why is every naysayer on here just following the established norms within a 401k and picking low cost index or target date funds and then just blindly contributing over time? Of course you won’t have $1M accumulated in < 10 years with that strategy. That set and forget philosophy is now the losing strategy. AI and accessible retail trading platforms have changed everything. Most millennial and Gen Z investors are actively buying and selling within their 401k, IRA, and other investments accounts. This is the new key to making big money. Capitalizing on extreme volatility.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Didn’t read the whole thread, so maybe this was addressed? Someone in their 20s can surely be a millionaire, but how can one be a 401k millionaire at that age? You can’t invest enough to reach millionaire status at that age unless you really hit on a couple of stocks.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Didn’t read the whole thread, so maybe this was addressed? Someone in their 20s can surely be a millionaire, but how can one be a 401k millionaire at that age? You can’t invest enough to reach millionaire status at that age unless you really hit on a couple of stocks.
Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
+1 isn’t this so common in educated, dual income couples?
Anonymous wrote:https://www.morningstar.com/news/marketwatch/20241205305/millennials-are-finally-joining-the-401k-millionaires-club-heres-how-they-got-here
Srsly. DH and I are still in our late 20s and each of us has $1M+ in our 401ks. Is being a millionaire the new lower class?
Anonymous wrote:my daughter (no husband) has a million (without parental help.) she is 32.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:my daughter (no husband) has a million (without parental help.) she is 32.
She may have a million, but she doesn’t have a million in her 401k
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Troll. $22.5k current match. 10 years ago it was a lot less. Can't active trade with 401k.
I'm 46 and have something like $500k in my 401k. Never had a match, went to law school so started very late. Took a few years off where I wasn't contributing. DH has a match and I think has something like $800k in his. Both of us make over $1m a year, and we've got $8m of savings. But 401k is not the place where the value is.
You have an HHI of $2M+ and you only have $500K+$800K in your 401k and $8M in savings total?!? You’re either spending way too much or you’re terrible at investing.
DH and I are about your age and we only have an HHI of $150K, but we have $5M in savings total, most in a 401k (Roth). Our savings is 33X HHI and yours is only 4X. Wow. In another five years our NW will probably be more than yours. You’re a lawyer, though, so not particularly clever or good with numbers.