Anonymous wrote:I have a very basic and ugly spreadsheet that I update monthly, each column is one month. I start a new copy of this sheet every January to keep it organized per year.
In this column I have a section for cash assets, investable assets (stocks), and illiquid or physical assets such as house, cars, collectibles, etc. Another section for all liabilities. Then at the bottom it auto computes the net worth and gives liquid and non liquid NW values. Then I pull this value for each month into another spreadsheet with a graph that shows net worth over time.
This is all manual, only costs 10 min per month. Been doing this since starting my career in 2011. I don’t use apps that link your accounts together since they periodically have issues and lost data
Anonymous wrote:Do you have a system for keeping track of various investments?
All your retirement accounts for various jobs, brokerage accounts, bank accounts, etc.
I’d like to get more organized in this area.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:First roll all your previous emoployer 401ks into your current employer 401k.
Not always the best option. I'm not rolling my long-term TSP into my firm's crappy 401(k) that has high fees despite being terrible.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I track everything in YNAB and still meticulously budget despite an 800k HHI.
honestly sounds like overkill, but you do you!
It works for me and takes me less than 15 minutes a week. Most of transactions are auto categorized accurately, and I'm not insane if my Amazon purchases aren't perfect. But allocating all of my money to their various jobs has been a really important mindset change for me. It makes both saving and spending easier.
I definitely agree with you on this point. I'm just not tracking as closely as I did before. Somewhat like, weighing all your food for a period of time to get a baseline of calories but then using that prior knowledge and not worrying about actually weighing each individual item.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I track everything in YNAB and still meticulously budget despite an 800k HHI.
honestly sounds like overkill, but you do you!
It works for me and takes me less than 15 minutes a week. Most of transactions are auto categorized accurately, and I'm not insane if my Amazon purchases aren't perfect. But allocating all of my money to their various jobs has been a really important mindset change for me. It makes both saving and spending easier.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a spreadsheet but only update it once a year. Better to pay less attention is my motto
Set it and forget it.
I set it and forget it in terms of messing with my investments. But I update a spreadsheet the first of each month or sometimes when something crazy is happening and I’m curious to see the impact. I do not stress and don’t feel pressured to sell etc but I really enjoy seeing the growth over time. It’s very cool. I only started doing this a couple years ago. Wish I had started 20 years ago when I started investing.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I track everything in YNAB and still meticulously budget despite an 800k HHI.
honestly sounds like overkill, but you do you!
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:I have a spreadsheet but only update it once a year. Better to pay less attention is my motto
Set it and forget it.