Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Late 50's, $8.5m total, including about $2m in home equity (2 houses). Aim is to get to $10m before retirement, which if the market keeps up will be within 4-5 years between additional savings, paying off the last bit of mortgage, and market growth. DH will also get a moderate pension from the Fed Govt.
I'm the earlier poster in my late 50s who retired a half dozen years ago and now has a net worth of $7.3 million -- not quite what you have but in the ballpark. Interesting enough, we also have two houses with close to $2 million in equity between them and have elected to keep the mortgage on one. Out of curiosity, why are you waiting? Why do you feel the need to "get to $10m before retirement," especially if you're thinking it'll take another 4-5 years? By then you'll be in your 60s and will have wasted another 4-5 years when you have to have plenty of money already. Time is more precious than anything else at this point. What expenses do you have not including your mortgage makes you conclude that you need $10 million? We are leaving like kings and queens on less than what you already have . . .
Anonymous wrote:A lot of old farts here
Anonymous wrote:I totally love this thread OP. But I am surprised the folks have as much as the 35-45 do. So 8 am guessing they are into tech or medial sales and law. Compared to this crowd where I see a lot of pension listed so fed type jobs.
Anonymous wrote:You supposed to have a multiplier by age in this case 5.5 million total is goal for a 55 year old.
Anonymous wrote:What is the appropriate tax discount for IRA / 401k equity? I realize the tax liability will vary depending on other income, but is there a rule of thumb to think about those amounts?
Anonymous wrote:A lot of old farts here
Anonymous wrote:Late 50's, $8.5m total, including about $2m in home equity (2 houses). Aim is to get to $10m before retirement, which if the market keeps up will be within 4-5 years between additional savings, paying off the last bit of mortgage, and market growth. DH will also get a moderate pension from the Fed Govt.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:It is really funny. Compare this thread to the 35-40 year old thread. It seems like the younger people have MORE money than this crowd, which is most likely BS.
I noticed that too, and I don’t think it is B.S. for a few reasons:
1. Younger arrivals to DC tend to work in highly paid careers; often they have relocated from NY;
2. Still on first marriages or had early starter marriage with no kids;
3. Not old enough to have experienced disability that impacts earnings power;
4. Not old enough to have had to take time away from work to care for sick or dying family members;
5. May not have special needs diagnoses for kids or selves (this leads to out of pocket medical costs).
Yes, when I was 35, I thought I’d be rich forever because I had $750k in wealth and a lucrative career. Ha!
At 57 and 59, we still have two kids to get through college. Biggest area where we screwed up on savings. Lost a lot of money due to family health, disability and caretaking responsibilities as well as disability.
Thank God we saved as much as we did in our 20s and 30s. The 40s and 50s have dragged us down financially, but looks like we will still be fine, God willing.
I’ve actually never before calculated the value of the pension / annuity other than to know it will pay us roughly what we make now @ $175k yearly. So I’m shocked we are worth this much. Gotta love DC, you always feel poor! Actually it is our cash flow as a family of four here that is so hard. Had to move kids to private school due to crazy public schools, so there is that too!
Net Worth:$7.2M
Income: $175k
Home equity: $900k
401ks, IRAs: $3M
Value of pension/annuity per calc shared upstream in the thread: $3M
College and emergency savings: $350k
Anonymous wrote:It is really funny. Compare this thread to the 35-40 year old thread. It seems like the younger people have MORE money than this crowd, which is most likely BS.
Anonymous wrote:Anonymous wrote:Properties - $67 million
Stocks - $119 million
Art/jewels/collectibles - $185 million
Yachts/cars/helicopter/jet- $72 million
Various cash/treasuries/liquid funds - $63 million
Forgot to mention $3.7 billion in Bitcoin.