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Q&A: "Why I Can't Sleep, Despite Our Millions" 

Afford Anything Podcast
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Steven is stuck on the question of financial stability. How do you know if you have it? Is there an objective answer based on net worth? Or is it a calculation relative to your income and age?
Jack isn’t sure how to factor his house into his net worth. It’s an asset, but he has a mortgage against it, and there are transaction costs associated with selling it. How should he frame it?
Patricia and her husband are debt-free with a $2.2 million net worth, but she’s constantly stressed about their finances. Are her concerns valid? Or is she a financial hypochondriac?
Former financial planner Joe Saul-Sehy and I tackle these three questions in today’s episode.
Enjoy!
_______
Steven asks (at 02:53 minutes): In Episode 542 when you interviewed “Money With Katie” about money dysmorphia, you said that “the objective truth of somebody’s situation is that they’re financially stable and they just don’t realize it.”
How do you define the objective truth of financial stability?
“The Millionaire Next Door” provides a formula to calculate that number based on your income relative to your age. Is that the standard we should follow? And if you don’t meet that formula, does that mean you’re financially unstable?
What’s the objective truth? And how do you decide?
Jack asks (at 35:04 minutes): I don’t know how to factor our house regarding our net worth. It’s an asset but we have yet to own it outright, plus there are fees, closing costs, and interest to consider. So do we use the Zillow estimate and subtract the debt? Or should we just leave it out of our net worth?
Patricia asks (at 52:09 minutes): Am I a financial hypochondriac? My husband and I are 58 and 56 with a debt-free $2.2 million net worth but I’m stressed about our finances. How do we know if we’ll have enough in retirement?
My husband works from home and I retired when our first child was born. He makes $165,000 a year with additional cash bonuses of up to $100,000 gross, plus restricted stock and performance units, averaging $35,000 annually.
We spend $100,000 a year on living expenses. This will drop to $65,000 a year in retirement after direct costs associated with our kids are gone.
For the past three years, we used the cash bonuses to buy cars for our 19-year-old son and 18-year-old daughter, and replace our much-loved travel van.
Both kids have college costs covered between scholarships and tuition reimbursements. They also have 529 accounts with $60,000 each for additional expenses.
We have $1.2 million invested between our IRAs, a target date 401k that we max out, and an HSA that we max out and don’t touch. We also have $150,000 of emergency funds in a high-yield money market account.
The remaining $950,000 of our net worth is our primary residence valued at $625,000, a second home near Lake Michigan, and our cars.
My husband plans on taking a pre-retirement in 2030, where he’ll work from a travel trailer while we tour the US with an eye out for possible retirement locations. If we don’t find anything, we’ll stay here or head back to Michigan.
Full retirement will be in 2031 when I’m eligible for Medicare. I’ll start taking my Social Security of $1,700 a month and use our savings and investments for living expenses until my husband takes his $4,300 a month of Social Security at age 70.
Even with this plan in place, I feel like we’re not doing enough. Am I right to feel this way?
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20 окт 2024

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Комментарии : 15   
@scottstahley
@scottstahley 3 дня назад
In regards to the home equity on the net worth statement. I've seen some other personal finance professionals use the following for their net worth statement. They use "COST + Improvements" for their home value. This is with the intent to be conservative and not inflate your numbers.
@Madridstrat
@Madridstrat День назад
We all aim for financial stability and a better life. Achieving this is possible through wise investments, frugal living, and careful budgeting. I'm grateful that I learned the importance of working hard for financial freedom at a young age.
@leehaskins307
@leehaskins307 8 часов назад
I’m a small multi millionaire and drive a cool hyundai elantra f-line sport card and live in a normal townhouse in my community… live a comfortable life.. but not what most think of a multi millionaire.. my job has not been boring tho.. love my job for decades and retiring this year with a nice big pension.. stayed with the same company since 1985…. grandfathered into staying in the pension play thru the years.. the company has no pension for about 20 years… just 401k match…
@usflin
@usflin День назад
27:13 Note to Joe, the way you pronounced "affluent" sounded like "effluent" which is probably not what you're going for... I'm with Paula on this one! 😆
@NiranjanBendre
@NiranjanBendre 4 дня назад
It’s not about money. It’s the mindset. If one was a peaceful person or seeking peace person then after millions they will only magnify their behavior and personality.
@cityparkproperties7001
@cityparkproperties7001 4 дня назад
Love you Paula! Long time listener and slow FI guy. 😊
@aarongillette4420
@aarongillette4420 3 дня назад
I am 100% VTSAX currently but my pension now covers all my life expenses. Should I do the 4 fund portfolio with some small and mid caps?
@affordanything
@affordanything 3 дня назад
Go to Portfolio Manager, which is free, and spend some time tinkering with the efficient frontier. I think that will help clarify whether or not you want to do the 4 fund portfolio.
@BrianSchoedel
@BrianSchoedel 3 дня назад
Enjoyed this so much!
@dppettey1
@dppettey1 2 дня назад
My formula - live below your means, maximize tax savings strategies, pay off all debt, buy assets that will grow in value, and create a diversified income stream.
@CataldoMeilleur
@CataldoMeilleur 3 дня назад
Thank you so much for this amazing video! Just a quick off-topic question: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). What's the best way to send them to Binance?
@leehaskins307
@leehaskins307 8 часов назад
there are not many flaws in the millionaire next door book as the women stated.. that book is SOLID with facts.. she tried to say alot of “what ifs”… taking a year off to go to a foriegn country to volunteer… that book had nothing to do with that.. so to say its flawed is WAY WRONG.. sorry… and WAY RIGHT with the large majority of people.. she treid to say its flawed for a very SMALL percentage of people who take a different path.. very pathetic..
@tw2800
@tw2800 4 дня назад
The abundance of the rich does not permit them to dleep
@frederickruderman2997
@frederickruderman2997 3 дня назад
What are these 2 talking about ? It’s all theoretical and has zero practical value in my opinion. They’re talking and talking and yet I find zero value in anything they’re saying. My question to them is: what is your point or goal in what you are talking about ? I don’t get it; you wasted my time frankly
@affordanything
@affordanything 3 дня назад
Yet you wasted your own time leaving a comment. 🤔 If you don’t find value, just move on. Deep-dive discussions are not for everyone.
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