Anonymous wrote:The entire premise of this post is that OP is cranky he can't retire *in his early 50s* with no guaranteed health insurance, no pension, and making $210k each year. Actually, scratch that - he'll have $5m in actual dollars, and using the 3% rule be able to withdraw $150k per year - which in inflation adjusted dollars will be *more* than he spends now.
And this is somehow cause for despair. GMAFB.
Work until you are 60, OP, which is still retiring early.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, you’re saving $100k per year, how many years of that did you put into your calculator?
He said 20 years.
Why do you think OP is a he?
Anonymous wrote:The expectation you can work for 20 years and then not work for 30 or 40 off savings from those 20 is a little ridiculous.
It’s also why saving *anything* in your 20s is highly recommended. And why I plan to give my kids a brokerage account with a couple hundred thousand dollars when they graduate college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was just running some numbers in an investment calculator and, frankly, they’re a little depressing. I’m in my early 30s, single, and have finally gotten my income to the point that I make $210K, am debt-free, and I’m able to save $100K per year.
Even saving at that level, which seems like a huge amount, I have to work for decades and would still have to live a modest lifestyle if I retire semi-early.
In the calculator, I assumed 8% returns, 3% inflation, and a 15% tax rate on my investments. With those assumptions, $100K per year invested for 20 years becomes $2.36M in today’s dollars (it’s almost $5M in nominal terms, but of course, that means nothing).
Using the 3% rule at that time, that means I can pull out about $70K per year to live on, which is not that much more than I currently spend trying to live a frugal lifestyle and stack my investments heavily. And of course, that assumes that I stay in relatively good health so I can afford my own insurance and medical bills before Medicare. Throw kids into the picture, and thoughts of early retirement would be over.
I don’t know – that seems kind of…underwhelming. I guess I always thought that saving $100K would be a fast track to riches. But now, more and more, it seems like you really need exorbitant incomes or significant risk-taking/entrepreneurship to be able to live a really good life at a relatively young age. Am I out of touch here? Missing something? Thoughts?
Did you think riches fall from the sky? Basic investments protects against inflation and a little more.
You spend more on yourself than my family of 4 spends.
Are you counting home equity as spending? 401k?
Anonymous wrote:I was just running some numbers in an investment calculator and, frankly, they’re a little depressing. I’m in my early 30s, single, and have finally gotten my income to the point that I make $210K, am debt-free, and I’m able to save $100K per year.
Even saving at that level, which seems like a huge amount, I have to work for decades and would still have to live a modest lifestyle if I retire semi-early.
In the calculator, I assumed 8% returns, 3% inflation, and a 15% tax rate on my investments. With those assumptions, $100K per year invested for 20 years becomes $2.36M in today’s dollars (it’s almost $5M in nominal terms, but of course, that means nothing).
Using the 3% rule at that time, that means I can pull out about $70K per year to live on, which is not that much more than I currently spend trying to live a frugal lifestyle and stack my investments heavily. And of course, that assumes that I stay in relatively good health so I can afford my own insurance and medical bills before Medicare. Throw kids into the picture, and thoughts of early retirement would be over.
I don’t know – that seems kind of…underwhelming. I guess I always thought that saving $100K would be a fast track to riches. But now, more and more, it seems like you really need exorbitant incomes or significant risk-taking/entrepreneurship to be able to live a really good life at a relatively young age. Am I out of touch here? Missing something? Thoughts?
Anonymous wrote:The expectation you can work for 20 years and then not work for 30 or 40 off savings from those 20 is a little ridiculous.
It’s also why saving *anything* in your 20s is highly recommended. And why I plan to give my kids a brokerage account with a couple hundred thousand dollars when they graduate college.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I was just running some numbers in an investment calculator and, frankly, they’re a little depressing. I’m in my early 30s, single, and have finally gotten my income to the point that I make $210K, am debt-free, and I’m able to save $100K per year.
Even saving at that level, which seems like a huge amount, I have to work for decades and would still have to live a modest lifestyle if I retire semi-early.
In the calculator, I assumed 8% returns, 3% inflation, and a 15% tax rate on my investments. With those assumptions, $100K per year invested for 20 years becomes $2.36M in today’s dollars (it’s almost $5M in nominal terms, but of course, that means nothing).
Using the 3% rule at that time, that means I can pull out about $70K per year to live on, which is not that much more than I currently spend trying to live a frugal lifestyle and stack my investments heavily. And of course, that assumes that I stay in relatively good health so I can afford my own insurance and medical bills before Medicare. Throw kids into the picture, and thoughts of early retirement would be over.
I don’t know – that seems kind of…underwhelming. I guess I always thought that saving $100K would be a fast track to riches. But now, more and more, it seems like you really need exorbitant incomes or significant risk-taking/entrepreneurship to be able to live a really good life at a relatively young age. Am I out of touch here? Missing something? Thoughts?
I think what you're doing feels underwhelming because you're heavily restricting yourself to just save 100K so essentially you're suffering for 20 years for barely any outcome.
But also, your math is wrong. You end up with 3.4M after accounting for inflation. Further, accounting for 15% capital gains means that, you take out 4% of 3.4M (136K), but you'll only see 85% of it (115K).
Not sure what you did for your math. Did you assume that you'd be paying capital gains every year or something? You only pay capital gains when you sell, which I assumed would only happen at the time of you actually withdrawing the funds.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Wait, you’re saving $100k per year, how many years of that did you put into your calculator?
He said 20 years.
Why do you think OP is a he?
Anonymous wrote:I was just running some numbers in an investment calculator and, frankly, they’re a little depressing. I’m in my early 30s, single, and have finally gotten my income to the point that I make $210K, am debt-free, and I’m able to save $100K per year.
Even saving at that level, which seems like a huge amount, I have to work for decades and would still have to live a modest lifestyle if I retire semi-early.
In the calculator, I assumed 8% returns, 3% inflation, and a 15% tax rate on my investments. With those assumptions, $100K per year invested for 20 years becomes $2.36M in today’s dollars (it’s almost $5M in nominal terms, but of course, that means nothing).
Using the 3% rule at that time, that means I can pull out about $70K per year to live on, which is not that much more than I currently spend trying to live a frugal lifestyle and stack my investments heavily. And of course, that assumes that I stay in relatively good health so I can afford my own insurance and medical bills before Medicare. Throw kids into the picture, and thoughts of early retirement would be over.
I don’t know – that seems kind of…underwhelming. I guess I always thought that saving $100K would be a fast track to riches. But now, more and more, it seems like you really need exorbitant incomes or significant risk-taking/entrepreneurship to be able to live a really good life at a relatively young age. Am I out of touch here? Missing something? Thoughts?