Douglas journal

Where are you and where are you going?
Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

I think this is the graph that best summarizes the gaps remaining for our FI, and they are massive. Still waiting for the exponential increase in asset growth and step down function for monthly spending. Monthly spending will continue to go down but will eventually plateau at ~$3,900 until the house is paid off, which it would plateau at ~$2,800 for a family of four.

$210,000 left on the mortgage (20% paid off). Thinking about paying it off super quick in this overpriced stock market to get the monthly spending to drop. Opportunity costs could be high though so not 100% sure. My wife just told me living in an RV is not an option...at least she does not want the rental property anymore.

Image

(x axis in months)

wolf
Posts: 1102
Joined: Fri Jan 06, 2017 5:09 pm
Location: Germany

Re: Douglas journal

Post by wolf »

Nice graph, simple and easy to understand. Do you calculate your house into the 4%? Or is it just stocks, bonds and cash, as you wrote?

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

wolf wrote:
Sun Mar 04, 2018 12:51 pm
Nice graph, simple and easy to understand. Do you calculate your house into the 4%? Or is it just stocks, bonds and cash, as you wrote?
hi wolf. I do not calculate the house in the 4%. I thought about this for a while and think this is better for this type of graph. I see it as a reminder that we are not ERE until the house is sold and we downgrade in terms of $/month in living expenses.

To make myself feel better I also plot this guy below which is our net worth and takes into account principal paid down on original home value. I think my next graph is going to be net worth including outstanding mortgage principal to put things in another perspective. Gives me something to look forward to...haha

NET WORTH
Image
x axis in months

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Not my best looking graph but it will do. Net Worth including equity on original home value and outstanding mortgage principal. With a comfortable emergency fund and (nearly) maxed out retirement accounts I think our best option at the moment is to get this guy on the positive side, and the best way is to pay down mortgage principal. Will reevaluate the situation once this graph crosses $0 which looks to be about 6 months.

Looking to be FI in 8 years. I hope the big market correction happens well before then.

Image

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Time averaged monthly spending. Will begin 2 year rolling average August 2018
Image

Time averaged our spending is now at $4411 / month. This should shrink down to and stay at $4000 / month in the next year.

Home includes minimum mortgage payment, escrow, PMI, HOA, and things bought for the home

Entertainment includes stuff for kids, travel expenses

Food includes groceries, eating out, toiletries, and some beer

Personal includes all clothes, eating out, beer, cosmetics, gifts, non family entertainment

Health is how much money that is deducted from my paycheck each month, which includes a health spending account contribution. Lately we don't pay much more than the deducted amount in any month.

***

Thankfully all spending has come down over the past several months after a big life transformation in 2016. The low hanging fruit is all gone though, now its the hard stuff, with the mortgage being the elephant in the room.

We spent $100 in beer for March! About $80 of that was from me. This is the first month I have ever quantified this number but I think it fits in line with my estimates. I guess the logical thing is to just reduce the amount of beer consumed...still working on that..

2Birds1Stone
Posts: 1596
Joined: Thu Nov 19, 2015 11:20 am
Location: Earth

Re: Douglas journal

Post by 2Birds1Stone »

Hi Douglas,

You have seen the light and the progress since last year is pretty amazing. As someone who is a couple of years ahead of you in terms of discovering/applying these principles I want to encourage you and let you know that it works!

Does your wife work? You income is very healthy, if its growth outpaces inflation and you continue to derive more utility from your money you will reach FI much sooner than you think.

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Thanks for the reply 2Birds. I saw the light maybe 4 years ago but I had a pretty big hole to climb out. For the longest time it was get out of debt, get out of debt! But now it is WTF do I do with all this money? Luckily I have been studying for a while but there is so much to learn. I am conservative with most of my predictions so the FI dates have a decent chance of getting pulled in especially if we sell our house later and move to a location with a relatively low cost of living.

My wife has not worked for about 2 years now, probably won't full time for another 5 or so due to the little ones. She does all sorts of things though to keep our home in order that allow me to focus on work / managing assets like side hustles, community networking, finding free stuff, social coordinating, documentation, parenting, ect. Although in my dream world she would be able to do that and have a job but it just wouldn't be possible without outsourcing most of the work. In an ideal scenario just as I am burning out from my career she is ready to go back to work so that we have health insurance and income.

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

this will be an interesting graph over time. The ultimate goal is to have the two lines intersect (time averaged) and then I will definitely have leveled up. I rarely go to bars / tap-houses anymore and I won't switch it up to moonshine to save costs. I now see the lines intersecting as a prerequisite for early financial independence which of course means more than having a bunch of money in the bank. Basically consuming alcohol will need to become more or less a social activity rather than a daily unwind. Let's see how this goes.

Image

Gilberto de Piento
Posts: 1942
Joined: Tue Nov 12, 2013 10:23 pm

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Gilberto de Piento »

At first I was shocked by the amount you are spending on beer. I assumed you were drinking a crazy amount (Is this guy an alcoholic?). Then I did some math, assuming you are drinking at home:

$80 for beer / $9 per six pack (the price where I'm at) = about 9 six packs.
9 six packs x 6 beers per pack = 54 beers.
54 beers / 31 days in a month = less than two beers per day.

Is that about right? If you want to save money in this area maybe cut back to one beer a night or replace a couple of the nice six packs with something more generic.

2Birds1Stone
Posts: 1596
Joined: Thu Nov 19, 2015 11:20 am
Location: Earth

Re: Douglas journal

Post by 2Birds1Stone »

I'm in the same boat with drinking. I have 3-4 beers a night, which if you add it up is insane. Even if it's 4-5 nights a week it adds up to ~60-80 beers a month. I probably spend ~$100/month on beer.

Kriegsspiel
Posts: 952
Joined: Fri Aug 03, 2012 9:05 pm

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Kriegsspiel »

I drink a good deal too, because it feels fantastic. Drinking + lots of exercise = yes.

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Musings on owning a mortgage and SWR

My biggest non ERE burden that I carry is home ownership before FI. I agree with the concept of renting as cheap a place as possible and then if you want buy a home with cash once you are FI. But since my wife 100% thinks owning a home is what you should do (and we have already bought one) I am stuck with a mortgage until we pay it off, likely within 7 years. By that time we should be really damn close to FI.

Ever since I started calculating monthly expenditures I have been counting our total mortgage towards our monthly total. Recently I have done some creative financial accounting and decided mortgage principal paid should not go to monthly expenses, thus decreasing our SWR. Folks say owning a home is not an investment but it sure ain't like being in student loan debt if done right.

I think this is the best way to factor in home ownership in you FI score card. Or at least the one that makes me feel best about having a mortgage. SWR just went from 44% to 37%. Small gain by creative accounting but I'll take it!

stand@desk
Posts: 398
Joined: Sun Dec 08, 2013 9:40 pm

Re: Douglas journal

Post by stand@desk »

Hi Doug,

I just read this thread and I may have missed your age and if you have children.

This thread is a perfect example of how strong inertia is..knowing you want to get out of your home ownership to increase advancement to FI, yet spouse wants to maintain home ownership. We have inertia in he renting side (luckily), have rented for many years and have no plans to move to home ownership...

I feel this is also similar to one holding losing stocks and sunken cost theory or whatever that is called. Hard to make changes against inertia.

Good luck with the progress..as long as you are moving positively on the S curve life is good, no matter how long it takes to reach the goal..

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Musing on Career

Decided to stop working as many hours at work, from around 60-65 hours / week to 50-55 hours / week. They have somehow instilled fear of losing ones job to all the employees but at this point I could care less if they let me go. Thinking about working extended hours on the weekends now makes me want to throw up. We have 7 more years to go until FI so this makes me slightly nervous about how I will be acting with only a few more years to go. I should be able to get another job easily it just won't pay as much. I guess worse case scenario I work a few more years to make up for lowered salary.

Life is good and getting better!

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

I received a bit of good news a couple days ago. My wife decided that being a stay at home mom is not something she wants to do for much longer. This has been a touchy subject between us for about a year now but I haven't brought it up for at least 3 months so this was good to hear. Her biggest complaint was how much other stay at home mom's complained about everything and gossiped. Another motivation was to get our family closer to FI in a shorter amount of time so we can live in an city / country that more aligns with our values. The final motivation was that she felt like she needed more from life. Hearing this truly put a smile on my face, mostly because I am selfish and want to be early FI.

Is it selfish to want to be FI? I guess you're either being selfish or being prudent.

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Macro asset allocation is my more interesting graph lately. We made a big push recently to make a dent in our mortgage but for the next 6 months or so we will just make minimum payments to bring it more to the 25-30% range. The extra money will go towards after tax accounts which definitely need a boost (the reduction 8 months ago was from selling company stock). Will build up gold to maybe 5-10% from its current 2% while also trying my hand at conservative individual stock picks. Cash and 401k allocation will roughly stay the same.

Image

Kriegsspiel
Posts: 952
Joined: Fri Aug 03, 2012 9:05 pm

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Kriegsspiel »

Your graph looks like a witches claw. I recommend drinking more alcohol.

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Musings on exercise routines

Finally found an exercise routine that seems to be sticking and wanted to share because it may help others for ideas. Here is my morning routine M-F:

-Wake up between 5-6 AM. 90% of the time I don't use an alarm clock
-Leave home for work 30 minutes after waking up
-Run 1.5 miles to work
-30 minutes barbell exercise in on-site gym
-Shower then go to work
-Run home 1.5 miles
-Ad hoc stretching at home before bed

I think the biggest factors to continued success are my proximity to work which allows me to run without significant efforts and the fact that our building has an on-site gym (and shower). Since I have to start work at a very specific time I try to be as efficient as possible in the gym which goes perfectly with barbell exercises. If I wake up later I just spend less time in the gym or skip it altogether. If I am up early I spend more time in the gym. Biking to work is less optimal than running because at my distance I hardly broke a sweat on the ride, but if I ran I was sweating a lot. They took about the same time anyway because of the short distance. Because of this routine from the past 6 months I can say I am in the best shape of at least the past 10 years of my life if not 15 years. If you have a family and job morning exercising is the best way to establish and commit to a routine.

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Happy new year! Looking back on last year's "short term financial goals" posted here about the same time I think I got all checked off my list except one...

-Reduced family spending below goal. Last year we spent $36,000 (I don't count principal paid on mortgage as spending). We have a little room to reduce this further but I don't think it will be by much unless we move to a low cost of living area
-opened a Roth IRA
-Diversified 401k portfolio
-opened a health savings account for 2019
- >20% paid down on mortgage
- However, mortgage principal paid is 35% of our total assets. I originally wanted this down to 25% but this won't happen until the end of 2019

****Goals for 2019****
Get sober. Although I am no longer the same person from college, and I definitely made improvements in 2018, I want more in 2019. There are too many skills I want to improve outside of a demanding job and family and I need to be hyper-focused to make gains. I am also not super happy with my job so I am hoping this helps with my day-to-day mood. Not to mention this could save me around $600 / year that I could apply to more productive endeavors.

The above is my only "New Years" goal for 2019. I think if this works out everything else will fall into place.


Slowly making progress on this guy. This equates to something like a 28% SWR. I remember reading somewhere on this forum that people tend to hang out in forums that help them aspire to what they want to be, even if it is idealized. So even though we are MMM level spending I look to ERE to help try and get us to the next level. FWIW my wife thinks ERE is ridiculous and has no plans to get us lower than MMM levels. I'm still working on her (:
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x-axis in months; y-axis is 24 month rolling average of monthly spending

I started using personal capital a couple months ago and mostly I think it is great, especially for tracking overall portfolio performance.
Currently I am sitting on a couple $10k more in cash / short term cash equivalents than is showing up on this asset allocation. I have been setting us up defensively for the past 8 months or so and will continue to add more to cash equivalents. Definitely more nervous about losing principal than missing out on stock returns at this moment. If stocks keep climbing from their recent lows I will pull more out of the stock market to try and lock in gains. Either way I need to get my picks ready for when the market eventually takes its needed dive.

Image

Douglas
Posts: 80
Joined: Fri Feb 10, 2017 11:36 am

Re: Douglas journal

Post by Douglas »

Some guy opened up a bike repair shop 5 minutes walk from my home about 3 months ago. He has been in business for 3 years then moved to a warehouse location nearby. Local bike stores are closing but his model might work out because it is low overhead...just a guy and his girlfriend fixing bikes and selling parts in a garage warehouse. I have a bunch of needed bike work to do.. I'll get all my parts from him and try and pick his brain. Biking 10 miles a day as part of a new commute. This could be the summer I level up my bicycle repair skills.

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