The Most Important Number -- And Everyone Gets It Wrong

Поделиться
HTML-код
  • Опубликовано: 10 сен 2024

Комментарии • 100

  • @kathyprager4976
    @kathyprager4976 Месяц назад +44

    The most important number BEFORE retiring is 0! ZERO DEBT!

    • @tts20smoke20
      @tts20smoke20 Месяц назад +3

      Exactly, mortgage paid, cash for vehicles, no credit card balance, pay off every month.

    • @joeordinary209
      @joeordinary209 18 дней назад

      Totally agree, will have my house 100% paid 2027( no other loans), the same year will retired at 62.

  • @gregwessels7205
    @gregwessels7205 Месяц назад +49

    I appreciate budget software but there is no way I'm connecting my accounts to a third-party. I don't need another point of failure (hacking) especially with the rate of companies being exposed now days.

    • @johnurban7333
      @johnurban7333 Месяц назад +5

      Exactly, I use a notebook and write everything down. It’s not that difficult.

    • @momhouser
      @momhouser Месяц назад +1

      Don't have to link accounts to use models..just input numbers.

    • @ivanvarykino8202
      @ivanvarykino8202 Месяц назад +5

      Simply choose manual updates. No need to link anything.
      Budgeting software is not really necessary. But I've had quicken for many years so very easy tonrun a report to see everything. Retirement planning software on the other hand is priceless.

    • @caesarrome6136
      @caesarrome6136 Месяц назад

      ​@@ivanvarykino8202What retirement planning software do you use?

  • @solomon611
    @solomon611 Месяц назад +14

    For me, using spend tracking software was way too time consuming. I find it easy to track bucket spending by payment method. Most essential expenses like utilities and insurance, are auto paid from our checking account; for others like food and store purchases, we use our primary credit card. For the discretionary bucket, largely subscription and auto-withdrawal fees, we use a second credit card. And for the big lifestyle expenses, mostly travel for us, we use our airline credit card. Easy enough to track actual monthly spending from each source vs historical average and note one-off variations vs rising or falling trends. It may not be as precise an analysis as some would want but it seems to work for us.

  • @eddy6892
    @eddy6892 Месяц назад +4

    A pocket calendar, $10, is a pretty low tech way to track spending. Get one with a small space for each day. At the end of each month break it down on legal pad into categories. Did this for years, it works

  • @katsadventures7027
    @katsadventures7027 Месяц назад +7

    My property tax is 83 a month. My insurance is 86 a month. I’m grateful I live somewhere where it’s still fairly cheap.

  • @robgerety
    @robgerety Месяц назад +3

    My experience is that my living expenses went down big time when I retired. No more mortgage and no more contributions to pension made a huge impact. But yes, I agree you have to sort out how much your actual outgoing cash will be and make sure you have enough net income to cover the cash outflow. My situation is different than many because my income is 95% is in a pension and social security both of which have cost of living increases.

    • @AlumniQuad
      @AlumniQuad 18 дней назад +1

      Many retirement calculators that I've come across let you estimate expenses in retirement as a percentage of your current income, typically 80%. It turned out that my expenses so far (in the second year of retirement) are about 55% of my final salary.

  • @RAKelBerquist
    @RAKelBerquist Месяц назад +52

    I plan to retire at 62 in another country outside the US that is free, safe and very cheap with a high quality of life. I could fully just rely on only my SS if I wanted to when that times arrives but I'll also have at least one pension, a 403 (b) and a very prolific lnvestment account with my Abby Joseph Cohen my FA. Retiring comfortably in the US these days is almost impossible.

    • @AliciaSalvadore
      @AliciaSalvadore Месяц назад

      How can i reach this abby Joseph Cohen, if you don't mind me asking?

    • @PoshanMind
      @PoshanMind Месяц назад

      Abby Joseph Cohen hooked me up with a late-stage fund that got me in on private shares of some hot companies before they hit the market or blew up. Those investments totally paid off when the companies went public and their stocks shot up. Now, I’m stoked because I’m heading into retirement with almost a million bucks in my portfolio.

    • @PoshanMind
      @PoshanMind Месяц назад

      The thing is people often doubt the prospects of financial advisors like Abby Joseph Cohen in business/markets today. Well it gives me more time to get ahead while they stew in their own pity and doubts as they childishly complain about those spreading the word

    • @RAKelBerquist
      @RAKelBerquist Месяц назад

      ​@@AliciaSalvadore
      Well her name is 'ABBY JOSEPH COHEN SERVICES'. Just research the name. You'd find necessary details to work with a correspondence to set up an appointment.

    • @RAKelBerquist
      @RAKelBerquist Месяц назад

      ​@@AliciaSalvadore
      Abby Joseph Cohen Services is a portfolio manager and investment advisor. She gained recognition as a former employee at Goldman Sachs; a renowned investor she is. Abby Joseph Cohen has demonstrated expertise in investment strategies and has been involved in managing portfolios and providing guidance to clients.

  • @PersonalMoneyTeam
    @PersonalMoneyTeam Месяц назад +15

    Most people make retirement planning way too complex. It's not that difficult. Focus on eliminating ALL debt before retiring (including mortgage). Start early and pay yourself first. $500/mo. ($16/day) for 30 years at a 10% return (S&P average over the last 30 years) grows to over $1.1 Million! If you have NO DEBT and don't live in CA, you'll have more than enough to live in most places (if not, MOVE). My folks retired 7 years ago with no debt and about $500K in savings. They left CA and moved to SC. They live a stress free life with their SS and dividend income. They have never taken a penny from their savings and it's growing every year without any additional contributions. So. their savings is really a $500k emergency fund! Think for a moment how much cash you would have every month with no mortgage payment, no car payment, no credit card payment, etc. Bottom line, you don't need a $1 million to retire if you willing to live in a low cost state like SC!

    • @DavidsonFootball1
      @DavidsonFootball1 Месяц назад +1

      if your mortgage rate is less than the money market rate on savings, which is true for many people right now, you'd be a fool to pay it off early

    • @gauravipal5691
      @gauravipal5691 Месяц назад +4

      @@DavidsonFootball1There is a mental peace about knowing no one can take your home away, even if you lose your job.

    • @DavidsonFootball1
      @DavidsonFootball1 Месяц назад

      @@gauravipal5691 you may well have such a feeling, but it’s a delusion. If you pay off a 3% mortgage with money you can earn a risk free 5% on, you’re losing money. If that gives you the warm fuzzies, more power to you.

  • @kitchensink1803
    @kitchensink1803 14 дней назад

    Every bank/ credit card has a Download button. I've been doing this now for about 2 years. It's an accurate way to see expenses. Knowing this number and what my investments are making are helping me with planning and staying in track. Thank you for your videos!

  • @katsadventures7027
    @katsadventures7027 Месяц назад +7

    My biggest expense is giving to other people. In fact, I might have a little problem with that.😂

  • @stevekrewson4931
    @stevekrewson4931 Месяц назад +1

    Thanks for the budgeting advice and how to break it down in different categories. I managed to save a lot, but I really don’t know what I spent and I’m sure I’m not the only one. Thanks for a great video.

  • @edadan
    @edadan Месяц назад +1

    We’re on track to retire with same income that we have now…and with no debts. God willing, we will do well in our old age.

  • @katsadventures7027
    @katsadventures7027 Месяц назад +7

    As far as food, I personally think people are eating far too much food and when they do eat, it’s the wrong food. I eat one good meal a day and that is plenty less than four dollars a day

  • @amtangsoo
    @amtangsoo 16 дней назад

    Thank you for sharing this information. Hopefully, I will learn how to keep more of what I worked so hard to save, by watching your videos.

  • @turtle522
    @turtle522 Месяц назад +4

    Oppps. Missed that number. Can't go back 17 years now.

  • @tomj528
    @tomj528 Месяц назад +2

    Budgets suck, I went the other way and just spend as little as possible while finding lower cost or free alternatives that are also better. I can roll through retirement with social security alone providing for everything plus $10,000 of fun money. Meanwhile we're continuing to shove money into retirement accounts for the tax savings alone as we have no need of additional spending.

  • @clsanchez77
    @clsanchez77 Месяц назад +1

    Great video. If anyone on here is a Fidelity customer, they have a great retirement planing tool that includes a retirement monthly expenses worksheet. I find this incredibly helpful. Has all the suggested categories discussed here and can help you estimate monthly costs for some of them as well.

  • @coevers1962
    @coevers1962 Месяц назад

    Monarch has been very valuable in understanding our spending.

  • @jonathanfoster2263
    @jonathanfoster2263 Месяц назад +1

    I've been tracking my spending for a while with a pre-retirement budget and also created a projected post retirement budget. In general my spending will go down except for occasional travel. One thing that I only recently got some more concrete numbers on was for healthcare, I had budgeted a pretty high number for insurance so I think I will fall well below that number

  • @andyjacob7
    @andyjacob7 18 дней назад

    Plaid uses screenscrape technology, which some institutions try to thwart. The more successful connections use api. I’m not as debt averse as tax averse in strategizing my retirement plan and I would rather put my money to work, increasing capital gain, than being debt free. The money I withdraw will be from the principal and not the capital gains (homegrown dividends - coined by one of our investment advisors). When I croak, the nextgen will enjoy the cost basis step up.

  • @AG-so4gl
    @AG-so4gl Месяц назад +2

    Its not rocket science. Let your hard earned savings work harder for you. Retired 10 years early, Geo Arbitrage. Work and saved in developed countries, retire early in safe and comfortable developing ones. Live very comfortably on 2.5k a month.. 😊😊😊

    • @freedomlife3623
      @freedomlife3623 Месяц назад

      Which developing country is safe & comfortable?

  • @tomatodo8334
    @tomatodo8334 Месяц назад +1

    I see a big problem tracking expenses from Costco, one usually buys many things from various categories... food, toys, furniture, clothing... no software will be able track those expenditures

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  Месяц назад

      Same. I split it out manually. Costco lets you pull a digital version of your receipt on their website

  • @rockymntnliberty
    @rockymntnliberty Месяц назад +2

    This is a factor that I hear ignored over and over when I listen to people talking about how much you should have for retirement. They seem to always do the calculations as though you're still paying for your kids braces, three cars, a home, and typical credit card debt. If on the other hand, you've become debt free, including your house, and your biggest expense is your utility bill, you're living expenses might be dramatically lower at retirement. Now all of a sudden instead of 10,000 a month in expenses, you're at 1500 a month, and even a modest retirement income might be pretty comfortable.

  • @user-zo8mf4gn5g
    @user-zo8mf4gn5g Месяц назад

    Traveling gives me anxiety so I'm not going to spend more in that category thankfully. I track EVERYTHING. I can tell you how much I spent on milk last year LOL, I'm a nerd.

  • @inked_icons
    @inked_icons Месяц назад

    Great video! I’ll be checking out monarch money for sure. I used personal capital but it had similar issues that you mentioned with mint.

  • @katsadventures7027
    @katsadventures7027 Месяц назад +1

    I have a tiny house 444 ft.² even that’s too big but it’s great 😊 it’s paid for. I could’ve stayed in a city where my expenses were four times as much but I said nope there’s no way I’m going to do that so I moved back home to where I grew up 😊

  • @katsadventures7027
    @katsadventures7027 Месяц назад

    Yep, the last few months I have been doing my budget right down to the last dollar seeing where I spend where I can eliminate. I am a pretty frugal person instead of drying my clothes in the dryer. I’m hanging them out. I’m unplugging things that I don’t use this is the main thing you need to make a budget to know yourself mark down everything, where you’re at!

    • @kersting13
      @kersting13 Месяц назад +1

      If you have gas heat and appliances, clothes drying is the biggest electricity hog (excluding AC). If you've got a back yard (or if your'e otherwise inventive) you can dry your clothes without using the dryer. My dryer vents out very close to my AC, so I NEVER dry clothes in the dryer when it's hot out. Always on the line, and maybe I stick clothes in the dryer for a fluff.

  • @anthonys5568
    @anthonys5568 Месяц назад +1

    I've tried several aggregators and they are maddening how unreliable they are.

  • @jeanah685
    @jeanah685 2 дня назад

    Who the heck is spending 9000 to 11000 a month to live!? Thats completely ridiculous!

  • @YIWOTY
    @YIWOTY Месяц назад

    Love your content.

  • @HungNguyen-se8dn
    @HungNguyen-se8dn Месяц назад +2

    O debt. Live below your mean.

  • @tinahenry6209
    @tinahenry6209 22 дня назад

    Love your channel. Have you looked at New Day software for financial planning?

  • @tscoff
    @tscoff 28 дней назад

    I would argue that we need to track our expenses for a full year. Many of us travel in the summer and don’t travel the rest of the year so our expenses increase in the summer.
    We need an annual cost of living, not a monthly cost of living.

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  28 дней назад

      I calculate trip costs as a separate goal and most people simply can’t keep it up for a year - if you can, I agree it’s best.

  • @michaelt2974
    @michaelt2974 6 часов назад

    People actually spend 12,000 per month? Holy crap I am way far behind.

  • @phyr-4g
    @phyr-4g 20 дней назад

    $8k income per month but only $687k net worth. Wow that is low, with that income you should be way higher.

  • @PorscheSpeedster-kz6nc
    @PorscheSpeedster-kz6nc Месяц назад +2

    Can you explain how secure these bank and brokerage connections are? This is my number one concern using these apps. Is there a read only function and security from having for account hacked and drained?

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  Месяц назад +3

      These aggregators make your data more secure, but I don’t understand all the in and outs of how it works. Even if someone hacked your account, they couldn’t access your actual bank account. A little Googling will explain how it all works. But in short, yes, it’s only read only.

  • @sixstringsdaddy2477
    @sixstringsdaddy2477 Месяц назад +1

    Nope, got is as right as I can likely get it to be. Thought about all those things you mention, car fund, medical, home maintenance... So while it's probably still wrong because we don't have a crystal ball. Way more accurate than your generic stats though.

  • @JohnSmith-ps7hf
    @JohnSmith-ps7hf Месяц назад

    The magical FU number is US $2.5M per person. 25M gernerates 100k yearly.

  • @CynthiaNoelNYC
    @CynthiaNoelNYC Месяц назад +1

    Guarantee you'll need a new roof!

  • @VivaciousOM
    @VivaciousOM 22 дня назад

    What happens when an aggregator is hacked? Have you exposed all of your account numbers? Too scary.

  • @seangarvey3875
    @seangarvey3875 24 дня назад

    What percentage do you overestimate for planning a retirement budget?

  • @ChevySS1968
    @ChevySS1968 Месяц назад

    I want a good income in retirement too!!!!!

  • @mandosandradios
    @mandosandradios 17 дней назад

    How is monarch better than quicken?

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  17 дней назад

      I find it more user friendly. Use whatever works for you!

  • @Lolatyou332
    @Lolatyou332 Месяц назад

    19k a year on the house?
    That's literally less than i spend on my mortgage, insurance, AND taxes...

    • @kersting13
      @kersting13 Месяц назад +2

      It's an average, so many of the people included in this (it's ALL retirees) do not have a mortgage. It's taxes, insurance, maintenance.

    • @momhouser
      @momhouser Месяц назад

      Yes, upkeep is the biggest housing expense.

    • @tscoff
      @tscoff 28 дней назад

      My house coasts me $22,000/year for my mortgage, property taxes, insurance, and utilities. That doesn’t include maintenance like replacing my hot water heater or other things. That’s just my base monthly costs.

  • @2dodger2
    @2dodger2 Месяц назад

    How does monarch compare to the EveryDollar budget app?

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  Месяц назад +1

      Haven’t compared that specifically, but it’s better than everything else I’ve looked at.

  • @stevezoleski8844
    @stevezoleski8844 Месяц назад +2

    Have to disagree BIGTIME on the average food bill. Nobody today is surviving on $6500 annually for food! As sad as it is, that number is at least $10K.

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  Месяц назад +1

      It’s an average from the BLS. But it’s sure higher for us.

    • @greenlantern1986
      @greenlantern1986 Месяц назад

      ...what? Wife and I are on track for less than 5k for all food spending. Don't say nobody!

    • @Ethernet480
      @Ethernet480 Месяц назад

      Keep in mind the average actual spend for one person is likely for multiple people. The stated figure is a person

  • @Ethernet480
    @Ethernet480 Месяц назад

    Before watching let me guess
    1a. expenses
    1b. RMDs

  • @dsmith9572
    @dsmith9572 25 дней назад

    Who spends $10,000/month?

  • @mutantryeff
    @mutantryeff Месяц назад +5

    Mathematically, the most important number is 1.

    • @tomj528
      @tomj528 Месяц назад +3

      Unless you eat Taco Bell...then the most important number is #2.

    • @masterblaster2593
      @masterblaster2593 Месяц назад +1

      @@tomj528😂

  • @ronmexico5908
    @ronmexico5908 Месяц назад

    I’d say that number is 25 or better yet 50😁

  • @williamread8186
    @williamread8186 Месяц назад

    I think the most important number is how long you are going to live. Based on Dr Peter Attia discussion and my analysis of this mine is 86 years. Sadly my spending per month last year was $8686.28 per month. Housing was about $4100 of that which includes the big four, mortgage taxes insurance and repairs/maintenance. Retirement is a bit daunting for me.

  • @Icebrg313
    @Icebrg313 Месяц назад

    10K/month? I guess I'm the wrong demographic for your channel! :o Yikes!

    • @foundryfinancial
      @foundryfinancial  Месяц назад +1

      Or I just like round numbers that make math easy for illustrations.

  • @scottferris7234
    @scottferris7234 Месяц назад

    $10k a month?

  • @wmp3346
    @wmp3346 Месяц назад

    VO 2 max?

  • @jasonedwards6870
    @jasonedwards6870 Месяц назад

    Intro too long i quit after 1 minute.

  • @Sarmoon1.1
    @Sarmoon1.1 Месяц назад +1

    This is not applicable because of the rise of the National Debt. Inflation will continue to go up and it is going out of control…

    • @greenlantern1986
      @greenlantern1986 Месяц назад +1

      Someone hasn't paid attention to financial news lately.