đ
Can You Really Retire in Your 30s? - YouTube
Channel: unknown
[0]
When the Social Security Act was passed in
1935, retirement officially began at 65.
[7]
And the life expectancy at the time was 58.
[10]
So from the very outset, âretirementâ
wasnât exactly considered a universal experience.
[15]
But over the last century as life expectancies
have climbed, the concept of retirement has
[21]
become synonymous with the final chapter in
a personâs life.
[24]
Then, the book âYour Money or Your Lifeâ
came out in the 90âs and introduced a radical concept
[30]
The author, Vicki Robin, proposed that by
living with extreme frugality for a few years,
[35]
younger people could essentially become âretiredâ
long before old age.
[39]
She claimed to have achieved financial independenceâŠ
in her 20âs!
[43]
Today, the phenomenon of financial independence
at a young age goes by the acronym âFIREâ.
[48]
It stands for âFinancial Independence; Retire
Earlyâ.
[51]
And itâs no fringe movement - FIRE has been
covered by the New York Times, Market Watch,
[55]
and Forbes.
[56]
And itâs got more and more millenials wondering
âcould I quit my day-job too?â
[70]
This isnât about dropping out of society
or living in a cave⊠necessarily.
[74]
FIRE practitioners work extremely hard while
living far below their means for years to
[80]
amass enough savings to leave the workforce.
[83]
And it doesnât mean youâll spend your
newfound freedom just hanging out in bowling
[86]
alleys like Jeff Lebowski.
[88]
Many people who manage to retire early continue
to work--but only on projects theyâre passionate about.
[94]
But the question remains⊠is it possible
to achieve through savings alone?
[99]
Peter Adeney, aka âMr. Money Mustacheâ,
might be considered the modern FIRE movementâs
[106]
founding father.
[107]
Adeney was working as a software engineer
while living dramatically below his means
[111]
during his 20âs.
[113]
He took his savings and paid off debt and
invested it it in stock-index funds.
[117]
By 2005 and in his early-30âs, Adeney and
his wife had amassed around $600,000 and a
[123]
paid-for home.
[125]
He calculated he had enough to leave the work-force-permanently.
[129]
Adeney suggests that Early-Retirement is possible
through three fundamental concepts: Frugality,
[134]
Investing, and the â4% Ruleâ of withdrawals.
[139]
Letâs face it - unless you luck into a large
windfall of cash, youâll have to save up
[143]
a serious nest egg to retire.
[145]
And the simplest way to do that is to slash
your lifestyle.
[148]
Normally, financial advisors suggest a 10-15%
savings rate to retire at a normal age of
[154]
65 or so.
[155]
Want to retire ahead of schedule?
[157]
Then youâll have to level that up.
[159]
Most early-retirees adopt a 50% to 75% savings
rate⊠or more!
[164]
Itâs not uncommon for them to cut restaurants
& bars, buy cheap cars, bike to work, make
[169]
do with a smaller house, and avoid luxuries
like gyms, fancy vacations, and expensive hobbies.
[175]
Simply stashing cash into a bank account is
a good start.
[179]
But the FIRE proponents rely on the power
of the markets to boost their savings rates.
[184]
Assuming you saved your money into a general
stock-market index fund, you might expect
[188]
7-10% rate of return, based on historical
averages.
[192]
Any experienced investor will tell you that
year-to-year returns will swing wildly, maybe
[196]
even crash!
[198]
So thatâs where the third rule comes inâŠ
[200]
A 1998 study by Trinity University concluded
that a 4% annual withdrawal rate of your money
[206]
in retirement should allow you to never out-live
your money - even in a bad economy.
[212]
This means that even with the dramatic ups
and downs of the stock and bond market, as
[216]
long as your yearly expenses stay below 4%
of your total savings, you should be able
[222]
to live off them for⊠well, theoretically,
forever.
[225]
Put another way: you take your annual spending
needs, then multiply it by 25.
[230]
Thatâs the amount you need to become financially
independent.
[234]
By now I imagine youâre wondering what it
would take if YOU wanted to to retire early.
[238]
I think itâs time toâŠ
[240]
RUN THE NUMBERS!
[245]
Letâs imagine you have a household income
of $85,000, but you live way below your means
[250]
and only need $35,000/yr to be happy.
[253]
According to our rule of 4%, youâll need
$875,000 in the bank in order to be financially
[259]
independent.
[260]
Through extreme thrift and aggressive cost-cutting,
youâre able to save $50,000/yr, which comes
[266]
to 59% of your annual income.
[268]
At that rate of savings, and assuming your
stock-index funds got an average return of
[273]
7%, youâll have hit your goal in...
[275]
12 years.
[277]
A good income, frugal living, and compound
interest are a powerful wealth-building combination.
[283]
You might be wondering âWhat if I donât
make a ton of money?
[286]
Is this realistic?â
[287]
A common critique of the Early Retirement
movement is that Adeney and other leaders
[291]
of the movement had high-paying jobs in medicine
or engineering.
[295]
Making big bucks can certainly speed up the
process.
[298]
But itâs not a requirement.
[299]
Take Jillian Johnsrud.
[301]
She began working towards financial independence
at age 19.
[305]
Her husband served in the armed forces and
she worked in customer service and sales.
[310]
Over the next 13 years they made an average
household income of $60,000, with no year
[316]
over six-figures.
[317]
And by 32 Jillian had saved enough to be completely
financially independent.
[323]
All while raising adopted & biological children
and climbing out of $52,000 of debt.
[330]
She uses her freed-up time to travel the country,
write, and raise her children.
[334]
Today she does some work as a writer and coach,
but itâs on her terms.
[338]
If you think that âearly retirementâ is
all about lounging around and avoiding work,
[342]
youâve missed the point.
[343]
Instead, itâs about taking an active step
to replace a job you hate with work you loveâŠ
[349]
and often finances are the biggest hurdle.
[351]
As Adeney says about the FIRE phenomenon:
âEarly retirement means quitting any job
[355]
you wouldnât do for free â but then
continuing right ahead with work in something
[359]
that works for you, even when you donât
need the money.â
[362]
And if youâve already got a fulfilling job
you love-- congratulations, you already have
[367]
the benefits of early retirement without having
to save up for it!
[371]
So whether or not you want to sprint toward
early retirement, the mindset of reducing
[376]
your lifestyle, living simpler, and building
a more rewarding work-life is something we
[381]
should all be aiming for.
[382]
And thatâs our Two Cents!
[385]
If you were to retire today, what would you do with your newfound freedom?
[389]
Tell us about it in the comments.
You can go back to the homepage right here: Homepage





