FI-ders snapping up housing supplies driving housing prices higher than it is, should we ask if its ethical to own multiple dwellings? Have been hearing many achieve FIRE via realty. Feels like a dog eat dog world 😢 my background: i intend to reach FI by investing in the stock market.
@KaskuserFiorel11 сағат бұрын
Thanks for the forecast! I need some advice: My OKX wallet holds some USDT, and I have the seed phrase. (alarm fetch churn bridge exercise tape speak race clerk couch crater letter). Could you explain how to move them to Binance?
@AverageJoeDividends12 сағат бұрын
I cannot even have 6 consecutive days off of work and I also have "unlimited PTO" For every day I take off, I have 4 hours additional work to do. It is no wonder that I am working to get out of corporate work.
@hellinggayle14 сағат бұрын
Don't simply retire from something; have something to retire to. Start saving, keep saving, and stick to investments. Everyone should have BTC in their portfolio
@Kimberlybaker33114 сағат бұрын
It’s really heartbreaking to see how inflation and recession impact low-income families. The cost of living keeps rising, and many struggle just to meet basic needs, let alone save or invest. It’s a reminder of the importance of finding ways to create financial opportunities. You've helped me a lot sir Robert! Imagine i invested $50,000 and received $190,500 after 14 days
@Michaely18314 сағат бұрын
Absolutely! Profits are possible, especially now, but complex transactions should be handled by experienced market professionals.
@JohnHogan19714 сағат бұрын
Some persons think inves'tin is all about buying stocks; I think going into the stock market without a good experience is a big risk, that's why I'm lucky to have seen someone like mr Robert Williams Owen.
@ChristineMeier96314 сағат бұрын
Finding yourself a good broker is as same as finding a good wife, which you go less stress, you get just enough with so much little effort at things
@ddxl45913 сағат бұрын
I'm surprised that you just mentioned and recommend Mr Robert Williams. I met him at a conference in 2018 and we have been working together ever since.
@TacticalStrudel17 сағат бұрын
I don’t mean to be an ass, but this guy misses work because he misses “problems that need to be solved”. I can take one look and see a massive problem that needs to be solved - you’re 100lbs overweight. I promise you the spreadsheets you miss are not more important than your health. Make that your top priority in retirement. I’ve been effectively retired over 3 years (44M), it’s just not this hard.
@Carnegiered525 сағат бұрын
What is 44m?
@TacticalStrudel5 сағат бұрын
@@Carnegiered52 44 y/o male.
@veez746717 сағат бұрын
Sigh, if you want to work then don't retire.
@70qq19 сағат бұрын
i learned quickly during 2020 that my wife and i both being off 24/7 for weeks at home didnt work ... i want to do and watch things my wife doesnt , but she saw us needing to be apart or doing things alone as our relationship isnt working ... i convinced her to try a schedule (she likes routine so i knew thatd be easy) ... i just said when we spend all our free time together but both of us work its not a huge amount of time , that doesnt mean we can spend all our free time together when were not working or we will go nuts ... so when we were both off for weeks we decided to try having coffee together in the morning and watching a bit of tv and/or music while we talk , then a walk and workout with more talk , then lunch with more talk , then we split up and have alone time until 5pm ... it works out pretty good ... people need to be apart to appreciate each other and be a human ... we are not meant to be a spouse or parent all day every day , and even though we dont want to work forever , work did let us be a individual human thats not just a spouse or parent 24/7 ... so when you retire , you cant just put the 8-10 hours a day you put towards work into the other part of your life that was just a small fraction of each day before ... you need to just be an individual human part of the day with your own interests to stay sane and make it work and avoid resentment i think ... at least for me
@KerryGarner-rp4lx19 сағат бұрын
Lose some weight. Your retirement won’t last long because your health will fail.
@SeekAlivenessКүн бұрын
I always enjoy these. Thanks for recording and posting.
@CampFIКүн бұрын
Thanks for watching and commenting.
@mightT111 күн бұрын
yeah retire then go to some seminar take advice from random people. probably best not to retire if you can't work it out for yourself... still need people telling what to do. Retired people don't have enough free time to work it... Great job!
@susanam687016 күн бұрын
You are such a smart cookie, Stephanie. Great advice!
@hengleekai778817 күн бұрын
100 % us stock investor never see real downturn
@BuildaWealthySpirit21 күн бұрын
I love this so much!! 💙💙 it shows there are so many different ways to approach financial freedom and how to have fun doing it 👏
@SeekAlivenessАй бұрын
Agree with the others, this is great stuff. I love Sean’s straightforward, comprehensive explanations- gives me knowledge + confidence to employ these tactics.
@SeekAlivenessАй бұрын
Awesome talk!
@SeekAlivenessАй бұрын
Really appreciate this video. Especially the reminder that we are evolving. Love the ‘better’ questions on the last slide.
@christinab9133Ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@JPK-o9dАй бұрын
A 10 minute talk over 20 minutes…
@CornerGАй бұрын
Nothing was ripped away, you threw it away. You’re correct, that’s called a mid-life crisis.
@alk672Ай бұрын
So this woman had a mental breakdown and ruined her marriage (2.0 kids), and then the first thing she did on her way to recovery was realizing she wanted to be a mindset coach. I can't even.
@MrMoneyMustacheChannelАй бұрын
Holy moly, what kind of comment is this for someone you've never even met?! Looks like there's no escaping the Internet Marriage Police. For everyone else reading this, including the majority people who do go through divorce: don't let the shame and blame tactics of random commenters on KZbin bring you down. Those of us who have been through it and come out the other side know that although it's not always the easiest choice it's quite obviously the right one. Don't let social or religious pressure keep you in a relationship that is abusive or not salvageable for any other reason - there's no shame at all in living life the way that is right for you. And your kids - remember they don't care about your relationship status, they care about their lives. So focus on that by minimizing fighting and making sure your separate households are close enough together to continue their happy and peaceful upbringing.
@alk672Ай бұрын
@@MrMoneyMustacheChannel it was her choice to share the story in a public forum, so the audience has every right to comment, especially seeing how she wants to be a coach now. A student has every right to be aware of their coach's qualifications.
@carriedoancoaching2108Ай бұрын
@@alk672 I believe unprocessed grief is the fuel of all judgment. Behind every bigot is a broken heart. Because we have no spaces to grieve and be witnessed in our pain, we take it out on ourselves and one another. So many walk around mistaking wounds as mouths, speaking from their pain, not even knowing they are hurting. It is easier to demonize than it is to feel the pain. It is easier to say that I am wrong than it is to confront the intimate judgment right there in your heart from the pain you refuse to see. But I have hope because I and so many of us did not choose the easy road. And what we found on the other side is The kind of love that we were seeking all along. Divorce is many things. Among them, it's a grief ritual. One in which we mourne who the world wanted us to be, and become and welcome who we were meant to be.
@Bleys0072Ай бұрын
Why I haven't? But... I have. :)
@DUBLL100Ай бұрын
Carrie doesn’t seem happy , I’m not being mean but the fake laugh to mmm showed mat.. I hope she finds happiness in the future I really do. Lost soul
@DMurph-y7tАй бұрын
Seems fine to me
@hydspiritАй бұрын
Was that voice MMM ?
@CampFIАй бұрын
Possibly. At what time stamp?
@tylercampbell6058Ай бұрын
@@CampFI7:37
@akbeal20 күн бұрын
Yes seemed like a planted answer and you can see them both defending her in the comments above
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtleАй бұрын
That is the best argument I have heard for a traditional 401k
@erickarnellАй бұрын
This is a great presentation, but I still have a hard time separating marginal tax rate and effective tax rate. I've watched so many people mix the two in past, it makes me nervous.
@countdigiАй бұрын
I have watched a number of Sean's videos. Technically, you should compare marginal dollars deferred with effective-marginal dollars coming out. I add the term effective because things like social security can create a higher tax rate than your "on-the-book" marginal rate. With that said, I think Sean has a great message which is: 1. Once you contribute or convert a Roth dollar, you have ended your planning 2. Any model you use is almost certainly not correct years later Therefore, you need to measure in broad strokes and effective tax rate gives you a "flavor" of how your taxes will likely look. I think he also presents this way to combat the fear of other financial personalities who encourage very high-tax bracket earners to contribute Roth or nothing. --- Now for the math on a static example, take a married couple that takes 48k ss and 20k from a trad-ira. For 2025, they will pay no taxes (even under 65). However if you add 30k of income they will pay 5700 of taxes. 5700 / 30000 = 19% effective-marginal rate even though they stay in the 12% bracket because it pushed their ss into taxable territory. Here is a little script I wrote to demonstrate this for educational value only: > fin/cash-ret.py --year=2025 --income=20000 --ss=48000 --add-inc=30000 > year:2025 status:mfj income : 20000.000 + ss_taxable : 6000.000 = income_taxable : 26000.000 fed_tax : 0.000 fed_tax_breakdown vs-effective-marginal (adding 30k of extra withdrawl from ira) income : 50000.000 + ss_taxable : 31500.000 = income_taxable : 81500.000 fed_tax : 5703.000 fed_tax_breakdown 3318.00 ( 27650.00 @ 0.1200) [ 45450.00 space-left] 2385.00 ( 23850.00 @ 0.1000) [ 0.00 space-left] fed_tax_eff : 0.058 (5703.0 / 98000) fed_tax_diff_mgn : 0.190
@countdigiАй бұрын
So with the above example although their effective-marginal is 19% w/ 30k extra withdrawal, their effective tax rate still is 5.8% so even if they deferred _all_ their dollars at 12%, while not optimum (using "false precision") - they are by no means "crushed by taxes."
@christinab9133Ай бұрын
❤❤❤
@moonchild66Ай бұрын
I need to try this ❤
@tylercampbell6058Ай бұрын
Great last line- “life is an improbable gift; we get to write our own story; FI is the fuel that powers that intention.”
@andrewkingdon2000Ай бұрын
Listening to him made me realise how going through life is like ticking off the levels on your own personal "Maslow hierarchy of needs". We all start with subsistence, then move into safety and security then comfort and family then ultimately personal enlightenment and inner calmness. Retiring should really be about the final step on that Maslow scale.
@4fb182Ай бұрын
Awesome and inspiring presentation! And honestly this is goals right here.
@TheahLilАй бұрын
LOVE this presentation! I totally agree with what you said about how the mindset is a huge challenge. I recently hit coast FI too, and when I consider what my options can be there's a reality that societally there will be push back/stigma about doing something agains the norm. Doing a big long trip or going part time, or switching jobs to one that pays less that is more enjoyable are all options to me and all of them are things I think people will not understand and have skepticism about. I'm in brainstorming/saving phase and we'll see what happens!! Question: how did you do the arranging year off? apology if I missed that part.
@shannonraysinАй бұрын
Wow! So wonderful to hear your story, Keith! Thank you for sharing. Definitely gained some great insights. :)
@TravelingNPАй бұрын
Would love to know how she got her house ready to be rented (what she did with her stuff) and if she made a profit renting out her place.
@spillion4223Ай бұрын
Hi there! At first I packed up my personal belongings and moved them into a small storage unit. When I realized I would be committing to a longer, unfurnished rental, I downsized my furniture, completely moved out (into a larger storage unit), painted, etc. As far as profit, I am making a moderate profit on the monthly rate, but will take awhile to break even as the first month’s rent went to realtor fees. While I don’t love paying for long-term storage, this was the right move for me at this point in my life. Best of luck if you’re considering taking the leap!
@TravelingNPАй бұрын
Thanks for the reply! I am more interested in your experience with furnishedfinder, leaving your stuff for those 3 months and being able to rent it out yourself for a profit ?
@timdelp3861Ай бұрын
Great presentation. Thanks fir sharing
@vawardАй бұрын
Thank you for the awesome video and information! I learn a bit more every time I watch it.
@tythepunter2 ай бұрын
This was really good. I am in my 3rd “One more year” and need to think a little bit more about what if things go right.
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks @tythepunter! OMY syndrome is very much a real challenge for many even though it wasn't for me. I think it might be most helpful to try and drill down to why OMY is a particular challenge for you. I would suggest starting with a Seven Whys. Why do you feel the need to work OMY? Etc. I find that most OMY people arrive at an emotional answer (feelings) vs a spreadsheet driven answer (dollars). Good Luck and let me know how I can help! 👍
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtle2 ай бұрын
I love these presentations
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks @FIRE_DrNinjaTurtle! BTW, love your screen name. There is a really an amazing amount of information on the CampFI channel. I would highly recommend attending one of the CampFI events. The value they offer is fantastic. The one-on-one conversions with attendees are a particular highlight. Let me know if you choose one of the Florida ones. I would love to say hi! 👍
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtleАй бұрын
@@TheCrusher_StanKwak I will be there one day. I am traveling so much in early retirement that I have not settled down yet. I am in Alabama so I will be at one the Florida CampFi events.
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtle2 ай бұрын
I found Daniel Gilbert
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
I really like his work. His TED talk is amazing! 👍
@rpjordan2 ай бұрын
My favorite point was the "What if everything goes right?" shirt. So many people are quick to bring up areas I may have overlooked or potential pitfalls. All I want to say is, "Trust me, I've obsessed over this for years, but I appreciate your concern."
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks @rpjordan! I actually wish I had bought that shirt when I first saw it. 😁 I agree with you regarding people being so quick to focus on potential pitfalls. Unfortunately this type of negativity is increasingly popular throughout the world. Like you, I ran the numbers a zillion different ways to make sure we would be likely fine. Of course there is no 100% guarantee. I think part of the challenge is people want a 100% certainty button and those do not exist in the world. Good luck on your journey! Let me know how I can help! 👍
@brian71102 ай бұрын
I found the $1400 dollars of Dunkin Donuts to be so relatable HAHAH. 10% of the way on my FIRE journey. Thank you for the great talk and your insight!
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks @brian7110! We were late to look at our spending but I am happy to report that doing so allowed us to catch up and spend much more mindfully. And we absolutely spend. 💰 Great to hear that you are in the early stages of your journey! This is a very exciting time. If I can help in any way, let me know. 👍
@bryansmith28242 ай бұрын
If you don’t show your actual numbers how do you expect people to relate? Very dissappointing
@CampFI2 ай бұрын
Curious what numbers he didn’t show that you would have liked him to. He did show numbers.
@brian71102 ай бұрын
There are endless talks about FI with numbers and we all have heard the "Shockingly Simple Math" talk a million times. He likely just used percentages to be modest. Valuable talk and funny take on certain aspects of FIRE!
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks for the feedback @bryansmith2824. Sorry to disappoint. I am guessing here a bit since you did not specify which numbers you wished I had included. I suspect it might be the net worth data near the end of the talk. I was actually not trying to be coy as I thought the percent growth was more helpful. To add context our net worth in 2012 was $914K. This is inclusive of our primary residence but did not include any savings we set aside for our son's college education. When we retired in April of 2022 our net worth was just under $3.1M. Hope this helps. If you are looking for more, just reach out to me. 👍
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks@@brian7110! I appreciate the feedback! 👍
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks for the feedback @bryansmith2824! I am happy to share any numbers that I did not already share. I am not exactly sure which additional numbers you wanted since you did not specify in your comment. I suspect you may be looking for dollar figures for our net worth growth. If so, no problem. Our 2012 Year End Net Worth was about $915K inclusive of our primary residence but excluding any money that we had put aside for our son's college expenses. When we retired on April 1st, 2022 our Net Worth was just under $3.1M. Hope this helps add clarity. If I can help in any other way, please let me know. 👍
@timdelp38612 ай бұрын
Great talk, thanks for sharing
@BSGSV2 ай бұрын
Excellent talk. And the first words in the video are spot on: focus on the savings rate. Slow and steady progress wins the game.
@TheCrusher_StanKwakАй бұрын
Thanks @BSGSV! I appreciate the feedback. I do truly believe that Savings Rate is by far the most important item to focus on that is within your control. Focus is the key word. Focus and ignore the noise. And yes, it is much more a marathon than a sprint. 👍
@TheEssenceRevealed2 ай бұрын
Grateful for events like this for helping to meet like minded people because it is hard to find in the wild. Thanks for the encouragement to find human charging stations.
@TheEssenceRevealed2 ай бұрын
Thank you for this breakdown. Starting FI is easy, figuring out how to go about what to do after retirement is a bit more complex. This helps!
@BSGSV2 ай бұрын
Same here: When I worked, I paid myself first by fully funding my 401k before I received my paycheck. Then I fully funded my Roth IRA at the beginning of the year. Every paycheck, I scheduled payment of all my recurring "big boy" bills first: mortgage, PT, utilities etc. After that, I didn't budget. All remaining expenses I did not restrict. I trusted my own frugality to handle food, gas, and shopping. The proof it worked was that I always ended up with large amounts of extra cash at the end of the month. Every few months, I dumped cash into my brokerage account. I retired early at age 53.
@stephonee2 ай бұрын
Frees up so much brain space to not fuss over every category!
@BSGSV2 ай бұрын
@@stephonee Yes. While this method ensures responsible living, the caveat is that this method has the potential to waste large amounts of cash if one doesn't value wealth building over spending. One must think of money NOT as a tool to "get what you REALLY want" and rather as a precious resource that can make you money and provide security in future.
@ChrisJamesPodcast2 ай бұрын
This was really great, thank you guys
@FIRE_DrNinjaTurtle2 ай бұрын
I have never heard of this tool. I did not catch the cost. I love learning new information from Camp Fi
@Andocus12132 ай бұрын
$80 per year is not expenssive but when there are alternatives like Empower for free, it is hard for me to justify the cost. Is there any thing useful you could do with a free version of Tiller?
@ChrisHaas-c2x2 ай бұрын
Amazing job, looking forward to continuing to follow you / your blog