Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this forum makes me feel so freaking poor
Richness in life is derived from family, friends and health. Sure, it’s helpful to have money but it only helps to an extent.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:this forum makes me feel so freaking poor
Richness in life is derived from family, friends and health. Sure, it’s helpful to have money but it only helps to an extent.
Anonymous wrote:this forum makes me feel so freaking poor
Anonymous wrote:Ridiculous. We are just in the top 1 percent, by a whisker, but we are very far from rich.
After paying mortgages on our two homes, bills, private school, meals out, soirees, European vacations etc. there is very little left at the end of the month.
Anonymous wrote:I think people are not thinking through this. You will always have a higher percentile for income then net worth unless you have an inheritance or are older.
Let’s say you are 40 and just started making a 98th percentile income, there is no way to have a 98% net worth without an inheritance or lottery type win when you were younger. Moving up in net worth takes years of sustained high income and market returns.
If the 40 year old keeps making a 98% income for the next 20+ years then they have a chance of also having a 98% net worth or possibly even more.
Anonymous wrote:This is so demoralizing. I was just inside the top 2% a decade ago. My earnings have gone up so much (at least it seems like it), so I was thinking, man, I must be in the 1% by now. But nope, I'm actually farther away from the 1% now than I was 10 years ago! no way to keep up with the joneses
Anonymous wrote:Half of Americans over 55 may retire poor
https://www.marketwatch.com/story/half-of-americans-over-55-may-retire-poor-2020-10-01?mod=home-page
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:The differences between average and median net work are crazy.
So many people with so little saved or even so little equity.
But the top 10% are doing so well!