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Why Most Millionaires Don't Feel Wealthy — and What It Really Takes to Feel Financially SecureGo ![]() | New ![]() | Find ![]() | Notify ![]() | Tools ![]() | Reply ![]() | |
| Green grass and high tides |
If you have lets say, $250k in the bank. 50k in a rainy day (emergency) account. Own your own home ($400k). Have a retirement acct. $250-400k and zero debt. Or some variation scenario. Generate enough basic income to meet your everyday normal expenditures. You are a millionaire and are doing quite well. It takes a lifetime of work to get to this point for most that can get there. It is not an easy feat. Even today. The key to success is living with in your means. If you just blow $ and feel like going hog wild that won't hold up. But otherwise you should be just fine and secure. Just monitor goings on's around you and adjust accordingly. It is still a significant accomplishment and kudos to those who achieve. Fwiw. "Practice like you want to play in the game" | |||
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Alienator![]() |
I would say this is pretty accurate. I'm not far off and I'm still stuck in the "starter" house I bought in 2013. Can't upgrade in house because it requires double what my current house is worth. We are debt free except the mortgage. Living comfortably but no where close wealthy. I thought being a millionaire would be it but now I'm trying to plan for 3-4 million by 65. SIG556 Classic P220 Carry SAS Gen 2 SAO SP2022 9mm German Triple Serial P938 SAS P365 FDE P322 FDE Psalm 118:24 "This is the day which the Lord hath made; we will rejoice and be glad in it" | |||
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His Royal Hiney![]() |
I adopt this bucket system and am pretty close to your allocations First 3 months: Cash in banks and high yield savings Rest of the Year: 6-month treasury etf Next Year and Year after that: Ladder Bond ETF that mature in December the year before. Year 3 - 10: Capital preservation mix of broad equity ETFs and higher fixed income, low volatility ETFs designed to mitigate a 20-30% downturn in the next 3 to 6 month horizon. Currently 40% equity / 60% fixed income Year 11 - 20: Growth-Oriented Sector equity ETFs with Fixed Income. Currently 70% equity / 30% Fixed income. While the 70/30 mix is aggressive for a retiree, I base my acceptance of that risk in that I have a surplus in both long term buckets and the stock market can more than recover over 10 years. And I also rebalance between the two buckets every year. "It did not really matter what we expected from life, but rather what life expected from us. We needed to stop asking about the meaning of life, and instead to think of ourselves as those who were being questioned by life – daily and hourly. Our answer must consist not in talk and meditation, but in right action and in right conduct. Life ultimately means taking the responsibility to find the right answer to its problems and to fulfill the tasks which it constantly sets for each individual." Viktor Frankl, Man's Search for Meaning, 1946. | |||
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| No More Mr. Nice Guy |
It's all about how your numbers work for you. If you can ride through 3 to 5 years of bear market living off your cash-like balance, the more equities the better the probability of long term gains. I started out with a 30/70 equity/bond mix with the plan to spend down the bond (and money market) while the equities grew. Statistically this greatly reduces sequence of return risk, and my presumption has been since Biden took office that we were going to see a serious bear market. (I still believe it is coming eventually, and will be terrible due to the national debt and budget.) But then I stepped into gold and silver, 10% each, which brought me to 50/50 cash/equities. Now our silver is 40% of the portfolio and gold still at 10% after selling quite a bit. I let the winners ride and it has made us very comfortable. My diversification is all messed up but when we hit a few numbers I'll rebalance to 10% each silver and gold, 30% equities, 50% bonds/money market. The equities are across large and small cap, growth and value, plus some dividend funds and a smattering of tech. | |||
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| My other Sig is a Steyr. ![]() |
Yes, but back then most everybody hoped to be a thousandaire. | |||
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Fighting the good fight![]() |
Of course. Let's say for ease of math that $500k of that is their home equity, cars, and other illiquid net worth. That still potentially leaves them $1.5M available to invest and live off. Even with an ultra safe investment strategy and the traditional conservative 4% annual withdrawal rate, that is still $60k income per year. $60k a year is around the median annual earnings for an American worker ($62k), and higher than the median annual earnings for workers in many Low Cost of Living states (high 40s to low 50s). They're not going to be living the high life, but in a LCOL area with a paid-off home, that $60k can go a long way... And depending on their investment strategy and risk appetite, they could even be pulling 5-6% each year, which would put them at $75k-$90k, comfortably above the median worker. Plus, if they have access to a pension, which often isn't included as part of net worth calculations, then they'd be in an even better spot and well ahead of the curve. | |||
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| Down With The Sickness |
Logically I know we're financially secure, but I don't feel wealthy. I guess when I was young, dumb, and broke I thought being wealthy meant being able to indulge without thought or concern. While I'm not worried about keeping the lights on or surprise repair bills, I still weigh wants vs needs and expect value for my money, just as I did several zeros ago. Even inside the top 10% we can relate a lot more to the bottom 90% than the top 1%. | |||
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| Partial dichotomy |
I could not have said it any better! This is exactly how I feel. As I get older and more mortal, I am aware of my "wealth" and am trying to actually spend more improving my places to add to their value and my own pleasure of them. As I mentioned in another recent thread, I'm likely to die with no heirs, so I'm betwixt and between where my assets will go. | |||
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| Down With The Sickness |
We're in the same boat with no heirs. We've been volunteering to help rescue dogs for several years now and it's become passion of ours. The rescue is part of our estate plan now but in the future I'm thinking of exploring setting it up as a revenue stream instead of a lump sum check. | |||
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| Partial dichotomy |
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| Member |
The problem is inflation. Inflation averages 3.5% a year +/-. When I was starting out my career, a million dollars was a LOT of money. That million in today's dollars is $6,500,000. Now today that is still a lot of money. Having a million in savings, using the 4% rule, that gives you 40,000 per year to drain down and not run out of money. Not exactly the life style of the rich and famous. | |||
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| More persistent than capable |
While still working and near retirement, I was very happy with my financials and did feel very secure. Reading the Journal and seeing my next door neighbor sold his business for 17 billion readjusted how wealthy I felt. Lick the lollipop of mediocrity once and you suck forever. | |||
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| Lawyers, Guns and Money |
Yes. Exactly! Which is why you have to earn more than 4% in retirement. "Some things are apparent. Where government moves in, community retreats, civil society disintegrates and our ability to control our own destiny atrophies. The result is: families under siege; war in the streets; unapologetic expropriation of property; the precipitous decline of the rule of law; the rapid rise of corruption; the loss of civility and the triumph of deceit. The result is a debased, debauched culture which finds moral depravity entertaining and virtue contemptible." -- Justice Janice Rogers Brown "The United States government is the largest criminal enterprise on earth." -rduckwor | |||
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| Member |
You have to earn more than 4% in retirement if you plan on being buried with all your principal savings. (or plan on passing most of it on to your children) If you have $2M+ at 62, and earn nothing on that money, you could withdraw 60K+ a year until you were 95. (assuming no social security) | |||
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Why Most Millionaires Don't Feel Wealthy — and What It Really Takes to Feel Financially Secure
