Originally posted by srblanco7
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
That's a nice bonus of $750k. Try and run simulations. I'm curious.
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Originally posted by srblanco7 View Post
Thanks LAL. A combination of good fortune, a healthy savings rate, and solid stock market performance since the time that I joined this site accounts for the majority of the growth. I also was a shareholder in a privately held company that sold and netted me an additional $750k in early 2019. I had been slowly DCA-ing these funds into the market when the pandemic hit, and, though I've never been a market-timer, I used it as an opportunity to invest what remained, which has bolstered our returns this year.
At the risk of over-explaining, I accumulated my shares in the privately held company based on foregoing a bonus over a roughly 15 year period and instead opting to receive my bonus in Company shares. Ultimately, I believe this approach resulted in a higher rate of return than if I'd taken the bonus in cash and invested in the market, but I've never run the calculation to verify.
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Originally posted by Singuy View Post
Just me speculating but look at the year when he had 600k, it was 2008. That's pretty much the bottom of the bull market so any modest contribution including such a high base number should get him to where he is.
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
How did you manage to increase the Investments so much? Savings or investing? Amazing job!
At the risk of over-explaining, I accumulated my shares in the privately held company based on foregoing a bonus over a roughly 15 year period and instead opting to receive my bonus in Company shares. Ultimately, I believe this approach resulted in a higher rate of return than if I'd taken the bonus in cash and invested in the market, but I've never run the calculation to verify.
Last edited by srblanco7; 11-14-2020, 04:17 AM.
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View Post
How did you manage to increase the Investments so much? Savings or investing? Amazing job!
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Originally posted by srblanco7 View PostJoined in Feb 2008.
Rough estimates for 2008
Debt: Mortgage $100k
Retirement and Investment Accounts including 529s: $600k
Current
Debt: None
Retirement and Investment Accounts $4.3M
529s: $166k
EF: $80k
Savings & Contribution Rate: 27% of gross (plus annual bonus)
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Joined in Feb 2008.
Rough estimates for 2008
Debt: Mortgage $100k
Retirement and Investment Accounts including 529s: $600k
Current
Debt: None
Retirement and Investment Accounts $4.3M
529s: $166k
EF: $80k
Savings & Contribution Rate: 27% of gross (plus annual bonus)
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Joined 4/2010 at 29, the following are rough estimates off top of head.
Debt: Mortgage 208K (1 yr in)
EF: 24K
401K: 6K (contribution rate 5%)
2020 at 39:
Debt: Mortgage 150K
HE: 170K
EF: 38K
401K: 162K (up to 18%)
Portfolio: 156K
Saving/contribution rate: 30-32% of gross.
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It says I joined: 6/27/2008.
Age: 21 (1 year into my 1st career on the Railroad)
Mortgage: $None
Debt: -$10,000
Portfolio value: ~$2500
2020: according to one of my trackers.
Age: 33 + 32 Y/o Wife (wife works fulltime, i'm working several part time jobs).
Debt: ZERO
R.E. Debt: Zero
Portfolio value: $370k
R.E. Value :$320k
Very good organic progress, helps when you have a married team working at it. . Paid off all of my debt levers earlier this year. And getting my R.E. License now. All my growth will try to be focused on either *Very freeing simple ways to make decent money -or- following jobs/projects/ideas that i'm interested in already, or curious to learn. Trying to make money motivation one of my later requests.... Only thing that keeps this plan risky, is you're not safe unless you have at least 1 foot in a big corporation before your medicare age. Thankfully, my wife is holding our insurance hostage card, by her corporation. I'm hoping this (corporate insurance affordability) will be bucked soon though. My last ditch effort, is taking a loading job at UPS. Super part time, but you get the big corporate insurance. Otherwise I'll have to go back to corporate sales..... (not the end of the world, but I only want to do that as a last resort. )Last edited by amarowsky; 11-03-2020, 08:38 AM. Reason: added in my better half. She's been a big change that was pleasantly added in 2011 (married a several years later)
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2013
Debt
Student loan: ~90k of student loans,
140k of mortgage
Assets
10k of emergency fund
401k: 110k
2020
Debt
Zero
Assets
40k emergency fund/savings
50k Prepaid tuition
35k peerstreet
401k: 500k
Stocks: 3 million
Home equity: 900kLast edited by Singuy; 11-02-2020, 06:47 PM.
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Originally posted by disneysteve View Post
There’s an easier way.
Do an Advanced Search for your user name and plug in the dates of the month you joined. I searched June 1 to June 30, 2006. Of course, that only works if you posted around the time you joined. If you lurked for a while and didn’t post right away, just expand your search parameters.
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Originally posted by kork13 View Post
Wasn't terribly easy, but I went into each of the main forums (General Discussion, Investing & Banking, Personal Finance, etc.), went to the very last page, noted when I joined the forums, and started clicking through the page counter 100 at a time until I found posts from that rough timeframe. Then clicked through each page until I found my opening post.
What can I say, it was a Saturday afternoon & I got curious. Lol
Do an Advanced Search for your user name and plug in the dates of the month you joined. I searched June 1 to June 30, 2006. Of course, that only works if you posted around the time you joined. If you lurked for a while and didn’t post right away, just expand your search parameters.
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Originally posted by LivingAlmostLarge View PostHow do you find your first post?
What can I say, it was a Saturday afternoon & I got curious. Lol
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