not really, picking the right assets to use will be part of the thinking.Limited to trading,investing?
Perhaps a definition of financial freedom/independence.
Following
A planner suggested a way of quantifying those terms that I quite liked:
• Financial independence: passive income > your projected expenses
• Financial freedom: passive income > a multiple of expenses (a buffer for lifestyle, unforeseen events - essentially greater peace of mind)
Agree with the base criteria craft. I think thats what planners start with. The also consider risk profile/appetite too but in trying to keep it simple we could allow that to be influenced by the timeframe/desired financial freedom age assuming we're looking for the "safest"/most reliable path/strategy to get there (maybe another definition needed here?).
Don't want to complicate it, but it could be interesting to look at 2 scenarios: achieiving it in a short timeframe (e.g. 10 years) & at a more leisurely pace long term (30 years?).
Also is it an exercise to grow a one off asset base (e.g. $100k) ? As peoples circumstances and ability to inject cash are all different at different times in their life. Could see it becoming complicated but like the idea of trying to keep its as simple as possible... some sort of lay persons wealth plan
Start 25
This sort of thing interests me a lot. Especially the 'go slow' part. Realistic, achievable, low skill floor and not time consuming.Thinking
Start 25
Target $100k passive income p.a without capital drawdown by 60.
This sort of thing interests me a lot. Especially the 'go slow' part. Realistic, achievable, low skill floor and not time consuming.
However the 60 thing doesn't sit well with me.
What about start age 25, target income say $40-50k by age 45? (without need for capital drawdown, if possible). What's the maths break down on that? How important is sequence of returns? That sort of thing enables you to be very flexible with what you want to do with the 15-20-25 years before you retire. Call it 'barista financial independence.' (You only need a small wage to support yourself, if that).
This is a good idea for a thread and something I tried to do 30 years ago.
Tech/a is correct in his question of $100k in today's dollars or in 'future' dollars, as there is a huge difference.
30 years ago, many assumptions I made including $ needed per annum, interest rates, inflation etc were all proven to be incorrect over time. Likewise for stock valuations. The sort of numbers I used were $30k for income, which was well above median incomes for the time, plus with inflation and interest rates high, and had been high for well over a decade, I used totally inadequate assumptions, but somehow have adapted over the years.
Personally, adaptation to changing conditions over time I feel is as important as any initial plan, as change in underlying conditions is the one certainty we have in the future.
So good to have you turn up VES - if you keep posting I know this will become a useful thread for many others.This sort of thing interests me a lot. Especially the 'go slow' part. Realistic, achievable, low skill floor and not time consuming.
However the 60 thing doesn't sit well with me.
What about start age 25, target income say $40-50k by age 45? (without need for capital drawdown, if possible). What's the maths break down on that? How important is sequence of returns? That sort of thing enables you to be very flexible with what you want to do with the 15-20-25 years before you retire. Call it 'barista financial independence.' (You only need a small wage to support yourself, if that).
I'm in a pretty similar situation. Same age, except no kids, but the wife hasn't been working the last few years. I also try to invest an amount every six months or so. Wife might work again one day, but it isn't included in my plan, more of a *bonus*. I'm pretty passive these days, ETFs split between VGS and VAS (About 65/35 at the moment, but VAS might end up slightly higher in my end scenario because of franking credits) plus still have about 8 stock positions, but haven't added any new ones in quite a while. Generally at this wealth level can rebalance the using thenew capital without having to sell anything. Will add some bond / interest exposure one day, but still have a small mortgage floating around on our PPOR.Hi,
I echo the above I'd rather think 'part way there' at 45 rather than total way there at 65. As a 30 year old right now, 40k passive @ 40 seems to have a nice ring to it.
I'm going to jump in here - not sure if this is the goal of the thread but happy to be used as an example.
Situation:
Gone from DINKS to 1.5 incomes and a child recently. Savings rate has subsequently slowed but still confident I'll be well in front of the ledger for the foreseeable future. Live within our means, inherently happy (I hope!).
Equities Position:
150k split roughly 50/50 between buy and hold ETF's (VGS/VTS/AUI/VHY) and 2 Radge funds. Buy and Hold have been solid, Radge has been slow but am committed to the cause for the next several years as I can appreciate the benefit of avoiding huge drawdowns, not to mention I am looking for out performance.
Wife and I also have super balances exposed to equities, just letting them do their thing.
Hi,
I echo the above I'd rather think 'part way there' at 45 rather than total way there at 65. As a 30 year old right now, 40k passive @ 40 seems to have a nice ring to it.
I'm going to jump in here - not sure if this is the goal of the thread but happy to be used as an example.
Situation:
Gone from DINKS to 1.5 incomes and a child recently. Savings rate has subsequently slowed but still confident I'll be well in front of the ledger for the foreseeable future. Live within our means, inherently happy (I hope!).
Equities Position:
150k split roughly 50/50 between buy and hold ETF's (VGS/VTS/AUI/VHY) and 2 Radge funds. Buy and Hold have been solid, Radge has been slow but am committed to the cause for the next several years as I can appreciate the benefit of avoiding huge drawdowns, not to mention I am looking for out performance.
Wife and I also have super balances exposed to equities, just letting them do their thing.
Plan:
1. Continue to push savings into the above at a 50/50 split. Save hard and also remove as much 'timing' as possible. I have a number in my head that every 6 months I must deposit into the market, regardless of the markets performance in that time. This keeps my savings honest and my plan steady.
2. At some stage combine super funds and start an smsf to invest in ETF's. Unsure what Super balance is required to justify this move
Other Factors/Considerations:
- Will need to upgrade residence at some stage, may push horizon out.
- Also trading short term futures which I consider outside this scope, at the point where I cover costs barely, if I can get this really going as a second income this brings my time horizon in substantially.
- Random events, both in life or work space which can't be controlled
- Future stock market returns - will the next 40 be as strong as the last 40, I'm not sure.
Thanks Craft. I agree with the younger ones here at looking at a shorter timeframe, like 45-50 years old from mid 20's. When you are young 50 seems to be old, yet a few of us would love to be 50 again.
We went from DINKS, to one income with kids, to breadline because of a purchased business, to an income with investments, to having more returned in investments than any income and super distributions.
I personally think that any investment in a broad range fund is exactly the wrong move, as it will never get the long term performance necessary to get to a $100k passive income in today's dollars, that might be $200k in a decade.
Going for a few WELL CONSIDERED long shots, definitely not just one or 2, when young is an appropriate strategy. Of course this is totally the opposite most thinking.
To get any outsized gains, which is what we are talking about, over a relatively short timeframe (2 decades), there is risk involved. Low/no risk will not achieve the gains necessary.
It is going to take me a while, but I will go through some real world numbers to work out where an average performance over the last 2 decades could have led someone. I'll post later, but my suspicion is nowhere near a $100k pa passive income today. I'll include some 'good' timing.
However things to be mindful of – that 800K would need to be outside of super to draw at 45 and that sees us giving up a lot of tax tailwind during accumulation and the 40K itself would be taxable.
Preservation age is definitely a big risk but the tax advantages for taking that risk are substantial. I think a mix of some in, some out is desirable to balance accumulation efficiency and freedom to draw earlier. Though if you want full access at 45 that means nearly everything needs to be outside.Hi Craft, just on your super assumptions, I don't have any confidence in using current rules for the next 20 years.
They have changed so much in the last 20 years, that I don't think we should use any assumption for gaining access to super at 60 in a couple of decades time. It might be 70 by the time people can access super, the way governments are tending to think and act.
Outside super has always been my choice, as I have access to my funds. I actually made some correct assumptions about govts changing rules for access to super over 20 years ago. This has helped a lot in freedom of investment choice, while giving up tax advantages.
Rule changes are outside an investors control, something we need to be adaptable towards. Being stuck in a system, where choice can be limited, is a nono IMHO.
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