Straight Arrow
Well-known member
Priceless!Keep your health while you have it.
Follow along with the video below to see how to install our site as a web app on your home screen.
Note: This feature may not be available in some browsers.
Priceless!Keep your health while you have it.
74 years old and building a 4000 square foot home is stupid. He won’t live long enough to enjoy it. My Grandpa just turned 81 and dementia has just started. Can’t imagine restarting at that age.This is an interesting trend that I've noticed.
When my grandparents retired they downsized, sold their 4 bed 3 bath, and moved to a small apartment closer to their kids, and or health services.
I know at least 6 different boomers/boomer couples that are retiring and building... and building bigger no less (not sure if that last part is your plan)
Just seems interesting, I can't imagine any other generation in history has had "start construction on a new large home" as part of their retirement plan.
Seems like something that 35-55 year olds do... 3 of the 6 from above are in their mid 70s.
Literally was talking to one of my dad's friends yesterday about lumber prices... he's 74 and building a 4000 sqft house.
I did not work those couple extra years...the plan always to retire at 62,Sounds like you took a pretty wise approach to covering those three years.
Cheers to you man. $24k a year just in premiums really eats away at your retirement. Makes working a couple extra years more acceptable
Yes the key to this scenario is to not earn very much money on the subsidized health plan. A non-issue for 2020 because of stimulus bills not requiring payback if you made too much money, but anyone thinking about this scenario better talk to a tax advisor to make sure they don't have to pay the subsidy back as it is dependent upon your income. It will bite you in the ass if you are not sure of your revenue streams and the taxability of those.I did not work those couple extra years...the plan always to retire at 62,
with Obamacare, health insurance cost is minimal and we are saving more in retirement
than when we were working and maxing out our 401Ks every year.
For us, as Alaska residents the threshold was an adjusted gross income of $89k...so each year as long as our gross income wasYes the key to this scenario is to not earn very much money on the subsidized health plan. A non-issue for 2020 because of stimulus bills not requiring payback if you made too much money, but anyone thinking about this scenario better talk to a tax advisor to make sure they don't have to pay the subsidy back as it is dependent upon your income. It will bite you in the ass if you are not sure of your revenue streams and the taxability of those.
Yes it is a great tool to use if you understand your income. I have a lot of clientele surprised at year end when they have a huge tax bill because of this that and the other. Mostly self-employed clients.For us, as Alaska residents the threshold was an adjusted gross income of $89k...so each year as long as our gross income was
less than that, a subsidized Blue Cross Gold policy was very affordable.
What is HELOC, FOMO?Last few years my investments have gone bananas. County just reassessed my house and the value is WAY up. Looks good on paper, but when you consider inflation the overall gain is more modest. So what does all this mean in the grand scheme of my life goals? Not much
My wife wants a new house someday and I want undeveloped land. If/when we buy anything it will be in cash. We see everyone around us leveraging their assets and credit to get the things they want now. HELOC is selling as fast as the banks can underwrite it. We’re going to wait out the buying frenzy and buy in a downturn. If one doesn’t come for a long time we might be out of luck, but oh well we haven’t lost anything except opportunity. There’s a little FOMO simmering, but we refuse to give in to that and do something foolish.
Re: investment strategy - ours is aggressive, and will stay that way until we’re knocking on death’s door. The conventional wisdom is that you “need” bonds, and the older you get the more bonds you need as a percentage of your assets. I disagree. We do stocks, real estate, plus 6 months of income in cash. This can work if you’re willing to clamp down on spending during a downturn to avoid a death spiral of assets.
Edit: The reason for the aggressive investment strategy is to compensate for inflation, which is fairly predictable and inevitable; it’s even a goal of the FED to have inflation.
HELOC is Home Equity Line of Credit. When property values spike, it starts a feeding frenzy of homeowners converting their overnight asset into spending money. Can also be via mortgage refinance or 2nd mortgage, although HELOC is quick and easy. I have been receiving written offers weekly from my bank since this time last year.What is HELOC, FOMO?
Thank you! I read a Harvard report that a year ago was a record $10 trillion in home equity - debt in the US.HELOC is Home Equity Line of Credit. When property values spike, it starts a feeding frenzy of homeowners converting their overnight asset into spending money. Can also be via mortgage refinance or 2nd mortgage, although HELOC is quick and easy. I have been receiving written offers weekly from my bank since this time last year.
FOMO is Fear of Missing Out. Lots of folks see recreational properties getting snapped up, and home values skyrocketimg in hot locations like Bozeman. The feeling is you have to act fast and buy because if you wait another year or so the price is going to be far higher (sometimes it is, sometimes it’s not).
Just closed on the Wyoming acreage. Look out Bill Gates! I'm a farmer now.My first job when I retire in about 3 years will be to build a new house. It will be small but nice. Hopefully the building material shortages will sort itself out by then. Sold my Missoula county property recently and reinvesting in some Wyoming acreage. Left over cash may get "invested" in a pack string. Spend the next 10 years looking over every nook and cranny in the Absarokas, Beartooths, and Wind Rivers. The Washington goofballs can KMA!
Beautiful land!Just closed on the Wyoming acreage. Look out Bill Gates! I'm a farmer now.
View attachment 186402
View attachment 186403
Inflation is transitory- sometimes it goes in reverse as well. The long term average is 2-3% and that will most likely not change. Look at the longer term. If you are invested in good companies, your returns will ultimately outpace inflation.I remember reading somewhere that the Dems would take away your 401K if they were to win the presidency. Given the current cries of inflation and the devaluing of the dollar due to "printing money", how does that impact retirement goals? The cash that sits in the 401K now keeps losing value as the dollar value declines so basically the Dems aren't taking it away, they are basically making it worthless.
Really getting sick of the shiznizzle that is going on here at work (family owned business and I am not family) and would like to walk away from the drama. Would walk away today making pretty good money a year just going to the mailbox (other sources of income). Don't live high on the hog and am debt free.
Suck it up and take a wait and see approach to see if the inflation is just a blip on the radar or walk? What would HT do?
The millionaire I know pays over $300k/year in federal income taxes and has paid over a million to the IRS in the last 3 years.Elitists..........if you did not figure inflation into your methods/formulas/plans,you did not plan.
If your concerned about inflation in this market,your way off what inflation is. Try the 70's....
Just ask Hank,he knows nothing & has nothing to prove it. Except I own my place & am debt free & poor.
PS,don't expect your insurance to be the same when you retire as promised. Or believe the promises.
Keep your health while you have it. If not become a millionaire and just pay for nothing.....
Are they looking for sympathy?The millionaire I know pays over $300k/year in federal income taxes and has paid over a million to the IRS in the last 3 years.
No, just empathy.Are they looking for sympathy?