How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Moderator: Metal Sludge
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
It’s free in most countries.
- Danzig in the Dark
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Take your Socialist shit elsewhere, you Commie pinky. This is 'Merica!
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- CanadianMetal
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Am doing well but have never been one to live extravagantly and never got into smoking (started and quit in grade 3) , and never bought drugs or dope and only drink socially. My main ‘vices’ , if you want to call it that , are concerts and travel .
I make decent money , but starting the past few years, my investment income is more than my work income lol . Especially this past year as is way more .
I did well in marriage, as after the first decade my wife started making more than me and substantially more as the years have gone on . That is the key , always better if your spouse makes more than you lol
We bought our first house in 2000 for a 1/4 million and then our second nice newer home in 2007 and have paid it off . At the time my current house was over half a million but is now worth many multiples of that , so we lucked out at buying at the right time as the greater Vancouver area is expensive as fuck now . Don’t know how the next generation is going to afford to buy a detached house with a nice private yard . With no mortgage, I put some funds into the theatre room and is my favourite room in the house, never heard anything as good as it sounds now.
So no mortgage or car payments , have two vehicles with one being a newer Tesla.
I love my job, am very good and efficient at it and enjoy that I can work from home most days and go into office to socialize a day or two as well. I an good at keeping a good balance at working /sludgeing / investing / socializing as I meet all my deadlines with indicate , mentor other colleagues and have my own office when I do go into work and no one is ever looking down my neck .
I probably could retire now if I wanted but I get about 6 to 7 weeks of vacation plus all stat holidays and enjoy my work so have not really thought of stopping.
When my twins were born , we started to put money away each year in a tax advantaged educational account , so will have a substantial amount by the time they graduate (in principle plus whatever the added returns end up being) so hopefully that is enough for their university and they can top up with student loans at the time , if more is needed.
One of the best things I did was learn in my 20’s that many of the financial planners talk like they know more than you , but have their own and their company’s interests way ahead of yours . I took control and stripped my retirement investments away from the idiot (who talked a big game) and put them into a self-directed account and did way better investing myself .
I can post more below on some of my saving & investment thoughts and tricks that would be helpful to others , especially if you are a bit younger .
I make decent money , but starting the past few years, my investment income is more than my work income lol . Especially this past year as is way more .
I did well in marriage, as after the first decade my wife started making more than me and substantially more as the years have gone on . That is the key , always better if your spouse makes more than you lol
We bought our first house in 2000 for a 1/4 million and then our second nice newer home in 2007 and have paid it off . At the time my current house was over half a million but is now worth many multiples of that , so we lucked out at buying at the right time as the greater Vancouver area is expensive as fuck now . Don’t know how the next generation is going to afford to buy a detached house with a nice private yard . With no mortgage, I put some funds into the theatre room and is my favourite room in the house, never heard anything as good as it sounds now.
So no mortgage or car payments , have two vehicles with one being a newer Tesla.
I love my job, am very good and efficient at it and enjoy that I can work from home most days and go into office to socialize a day or two as well. I an good at keeping a good balance at working /sludgeing / investing / socializing as I meet all my deadlines with indicate , mentor other colleagues and have my own office when I do go into work and no one is ever looking down my neck .
I probably could retire now if I wanted but I get about 6 to 7 weeks of vacation plus all stat holidays and enjoy my work so have not really thought of stopping.
When my twins were born , we started to put money away each year in a tax advantaged educational account , so will have a substantial amount by the time they graduate (in principle plus whatever the added returns end up being) so hopefully that is enough for their university and they can top up with student loans at the time , if more is needed.
One of the best things I did was learn in my 20’s that many of the financial planners talk like they know more than you , but have their own and their company’s interests way ahead of yours . I took control and stripped my retirement investments away from the idiot (who talked a big game) and put them into a self-directed account and did way better investing myself .
I can post more below on some of my saving & investment thoughts and tricks that would be helpful to others , especially if you are a bit younger .
POUNDING THE WORLD LIKE A BATTERING RAM !!!
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Have you ever had a cock in your ass?CanadianMetal wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 12:49 pm Am doing well but have never been one to live extravagantly and never got into smoking (started and quit in grade 3) , and never bought drugs or dope and only drink socially. My main ‘vices’ , if you want to call it that , are concerts and travel .
I make decent money , but starting the past few years, my investment income is more than my work income lol . Especially this past year as is way more .
I did well in marriage, as after the first decade my wife started making more than me and substantially more as the years have gone on . That is the key , always better if your spouse makes more than you lol
We bought our first house in 2000 for a 1/4 million and then our second nice newer home in 2007 and have paid it off . At the time my current house was over half a million but is now worth many multiples of that , so we lucked out at buying at the right time as the greater Vancouver area is expensive as fuck now . Don’t know how the next generation is going to afford to buy a detached house with a nice private yard . With no mortgage, I put some funds into the theatre room and is my favourite room in the house, never heard anything as good as it sounds now.
So no mortgage or car payments , have two vehicles with one being a newer Tesla.
I love my job, am very good and efficient at it and enjoy that I can work from home most days and go into office to socialize a day or two as well. I an good at keeping a good balance at working /sludgeing / investing / socializing as I meet all my deadlines with indicate , mentor other colleagues and have my own office when I do go into work and no one is ever looking down my neck .
I probably could retire now if I wanted but I get about 6 to 7 weeks of vacation plus all stat holidays and enjoy my work so have not really thought of stopping.
When my twins were born , we started to put money away each year in a tax advantaged educational account , so will have a substantial amount by the time they graduate (in principle plus whatever the added returns end up being) so hopefully that is enough for their university and they can top up with student loans at the time , if more is needed.
One of the best things I did was learn in my 20’s that many of the financial planners talk like they know more than you , but have their own and their company’s interests way ahead of yours . I took control and stripped my retirement investments away from the idiot (who talked a big game) and put them into a self-directed account and did way better investing myself .
I can post more below on some of my saving & investment thoughts and tricks that would be helpful to others , especially if you are a bit younger .
- CanadianMetal
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
No
Strange question to ask in a thread about retirement and investments.
However , some individuals can’t help always thinking about what they really really want , so I won’t hold it against you.
Strange question to ask in a thread about retirement and investments.
However , some individuals can’t help always thinking about what they really really want , so I won’t hold it against you.
POUNDING THE WORLD LIKE A BATTERING RAM !!!
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Very nice. Sounds like you did things the right way! Any advice to us would be greatly appreciated!
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
I think he wants for you to hold it against him, though.CanadianMetal wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 6:00 pm No
Strange question to ask in a thread about retirement and investments.
However , some individuals can’t help always thinking about what they really really want , so I won’t hold it against you.
- CanadianMetal
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Danzig in the Dark wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 6:28 pmI think he wants for you to hold it against him, though.CanadianMetal wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 6:00 pm No
Strange question to ask in a thread about retirement and investments.
However , some individuals can’t help always thinking about what they really really want , so I won’t hold it against you.
Haha damn you made me laugh , I think you are right , now that you mention it . However , he should start a new thread instead of trying to derail this one, perhaps someone else could help him out …
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- CanadianMetal
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Well there are many topic we could discuss but one that really helped us in the beginning was how to pay off the mortgage as soon as possible. As the faster we paid off our house the more we could then pay every month towards our investments and retirement funds etc . In Canada we don’t get any tax breaks for having a mortgage on your principal residence, so is even more important.MattleyCrue wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 6:28 pm Very nice. Sounds like you did things the right way! Any advice to us would be greatly appreciated!
The below will depend on your particular situation and country etc so check with your specialist.
What we did was that we set the nominal payment amount to be something we could easy afford and to have a 20 or 25 year mortgage.
Then we did the following to shorten the time .
1) change from monthly to bi-weekly ( NOT Bi - monthly ) this reduced the time by years . As you are basically making an extra month’s payment every year, without even realizing it .
2) increase your payment amount , EVERY time you get a raise at work and the same when your spouse gets a raise.
The first year of your mortgage, only a minuscule amount is going toward paying the principal , the vast majority (90% or more) is just the interest to the bank . Each year the portion going toward the principal gets slight more .
However any payment you make above your initial amount is going directly to paying down the principal, with zero going towards interest . So a small increase in your payment can decrease your amortization by years or even a decade of all your salary raises are put towards it .
3) most mortgages allow a ( in our case) 20% extra once a year payment towards the principal . So any surprise surplus like $1000 lottery , cash gifts , inheritance etc and can cut your time in half depending on situation.
My wife’s uncle left her a small inheritance. Her sister bought a car and we put it towards our mortgage and paid off our house using the above methods even before my parents paid off their mortgage. You will be shocked how fast time works for you , when most of your money is going towards the principle rather than interest to the bank!
POUNDING THE WORLD LIKE A BATTERING RAM !!!
- DonJuanDeMarco
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Not as comfortable as I was last week!
I made a small fortune last week (election week) but lost most of it this week! I think my 401k is a bi-polar, degenerate gambler!
I made a small fortune last week (election week) but lost most of it this week! I think my 401k is a bi-polar, degenerate gambler!
"You want Don Juan DeMarco, the world's greatest lover, to talk to you? What do you know of great love?"
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Okay I understand.CanadianMetal wrote: ↑Fri Nov 15, 2024 6:00 pm No
Strange question to ask in a thread about retirement and investments.
Have you ever had your cock IN an ass?
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
SP500 is up 24% year to date. Went up 5% last week and then gave back 2.5%. It's a big swing for your average week, but just a blip when you look at the whole year.DonJuanDeMarco wrote: ↑Sat Nov 16, 2024 11:28 am Not as comfortable as I was last week!
I made a small fortune last week (election week) but lost most of it this week! I think my 401k is a bi-polar, degenerate gambler!
But with demented arsonist wolverines on crack running the show next year, I wouldnt be surprised if there is a bunch of pain to come.
LAglamrocker wrote: ↑Tue Oct 22, 2024 8:07 pm You can tell Sleek had nothing to do with this…thats why it’s so entertaining
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Re: How comfortable are you with your retirement accounts?
Quality of care and availability are important also.
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