Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wife went back to work after SAHM for 15 years, and a lot of sacrifices. tuition is just part of the equation, remember to add the social aspect of it, field trips, ski club, dance..(if u have a DD, this gets expensive, etc)..
How did she get a job?? I am trying to do this to be able to afford to send our second to private.
+1 Please share!
I'd rather go back to work that ask for FA for DC2, but after 15 years out of work, no doors opening here!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:wife went back to work after SAHM for 15 years, and a lot of sacrifices. tuition is just part of the equation, remember to add the social aspect of it, field trips, ski club, dance..(if u have a DD, this gets expensive, etc)..
How did she get a job?? I am trying to do this to be able to afford to send our second to private.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These financials don't seem to be written by anyone who actually knows anything about their own personal finances.
No one earning $250K with $2.5M in savings should be bothered much my paying for private school or college. First of all, the savings should be producing investment returns equal to to their work income. Live on (and save from) the salary and only tap the investment return for your children's education. So last year, the S&P 500 was up 30%. On a $2M portfolio, that was a $600K return. This year, it is up $15%. If you siphon off the earnings from just the past two years, you have enough to fill the DCs' trust funds with nearly $1M, more than enough to throw off all of DC's education needs in perpetuity and buy them very nice houses when they turns 25. No sacrifice in lifestyle and an insignificant difference in your overall financial picture.
I guess. But those who have been burned by the stock market, and have $2.4M that they have carefully saved are not always included to gamble in the stock market like that.
Also, not a good idea to put all your savings into the stock market anyway. You should keep some in cash for emergencies and some in fixed income for safety.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:These financials don't seem to be written by anyone who actually knows anything about their own personal finances.
No one earning $250K with $2.5M in savings should be bothered much my paying for private school or college. First of all, the savings should be producing investment returns equal to to their work income. Live on (and save from) the salary and only tap the investment return for your children's education. So last year, the S&P 500 was up 30%. On a $2M portfolio, that was a $600K return. This year, it is up $15%. If you siphon off the earnings from just the past two years, you have enough to fill the DCs' trust funds with nearly $1M, more than enough to throw off all of DC's education needs in perpetuity and buy them very nice houses when they turns 25. No sacrifice in lifestyle and an insignificant difference in your overall financial picture.
I guess. But those who have been burned by the stock market, and have $2.4M that they have carefully saved are not always included to gamble in the stock market like that.
Anonymous wrote:I don't understand how you can't do it on that HHI. You must be committing the money elsewhere to something you consider more important. Which is fine as long as you recognize that it's a reflection of your priorities and not the actual lack of money.