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Apache is functioning normally

September 7, 2023 by Brett Tams

Warren Buffett turned 93 years old last week, so friend-of-the-blog Kyle wrote in:

Could be an interesting article to reference and break down his most memorable pieces of advice

Kyle

Call Me Stan…for Buffett

Did you know that stan is a slang term for “an overzealous or obsessive fan of a particular celebrity.” Apparently, the etymology is “half stalker, half fan,” and a reference to this (very R-rated) Eminem song, “Stan.”

I’m certainly a zealous Buffett fan. The word “Buffett” appears in 45 unique articles on The Best Interest. This is article #46. Call me Stan.

Yes – Buffett and Eminem in the same article. Welcome to The Best Interest.

Buffett’s Best

Happy birthday, Warren! You’ve provided countless hours of education to me and inspired much of my work here. In honor of your longevity, here are my favorite Buffett-isms, and a quick blurb explaining why they’re so, so good…

Someone is sitting in the shade today because someone planted a tree a long time ago.

Count your blessings and thank your forefathers. And if you’re especially gracious, plant trees for tomorrow’s generations. I’m here in part because of Warren’s trees, and I’m planting a few saplings myself.

The chains of habit are too light to be felt until they are too heavy to be broken.

Habits are scarily powerful. Barely noticeable at first…and unbreakable in the long run. Choose your habits carefully.

It takes 20 years to build a reputation and five minutes to ruin it. If you think about that, you’ll do things differently.

A classic. Especially in today’s social media world. Reputation-building is a slow practice of consistent good actions while avoiding one-time-and-you’re-dead landmines.

In the business world, the rearview mirror is always clearer than the windshield.

Monday morning quarterbacking is annoying because of course the rearview mirror is clear. It’s so easy to see.

But if you want to make a real difference in the world, grow your skill of peering out through the foggy future windshield. It’s really hard.

Quick plug for one of my all-time favorite articles: The Madness of Forecasting.

Look at market fluctuations as your friend rather than your enemy; profit from folly rather than participate in it.

A fundamental truth that changed my investing perspective as a ~25-year old. Market volatility is your friend. And like any good friendship, it can/should be additive to your life.

Basically, when you get to my age, you’ll really measure your success in life by how many of the people you want to have love you actually do love you.

What does this have to do with money? Nothing. Nada. Zero.

I don’t look to jump over 7-foot bars: I look around for 1-foot bars that I can step over.

Good for investing. Good for life. Don’t make it harder than it has to be.

We enjoy the process far more than the proceeds.

Yes, it’s easy to say this when you’re worth $100 billion. Much harder if you’re only making minimum wage. But I know there’s truth there.

I feel it every day. I enjoy my daily process immensely.

Only when the tide goes out do you discover who’s been swimming naked.

Another classic. People misbehave in this world constantly. They might not pay the price today or tomorrow. But eventually, the tide always goes out.

You only have to do a very few things right in your life so long as you don’t do too many things wrong.

Much of life is a “negative art,” or an “art of subtraction.”

It’s better to hang out with people better than you. Pick out associates whose behavior is better than yours and you’ll drift in that direction.

Similar to Jim Rohn’s “average of the 5 people you spend the most time with” quote.

My friend groups, from both high school and college, have talked about this before. The quotes are true for us. We’re glad to have each other because we’ve made each other better people.

[Source below: “You Just Go”]

Time is the friend of the wonderful company, the enemy of the mediocre.

“Company” as in business? Or “company” as in people in your presence?

Both.

Wonderful businesses and people produce fantastic results over time.

In the 20th century, the United States endured two world wars and other traumatic and expensive military conflicts; the Depression; a dozen or so recessions and financial panics; oil shocks; a flu epidemic; and the resignation of a disgraced president. Yet the Dow rose from 66 to 11,497.

I use this quote once a week with clients with fears of the stock market. I totally get those fears. But this quote always helps provide perspective.

Price is what you pay. Value is what you get.

Another classic. Good for investors, but also good for simple daily spending. Don’t conflate price with value.

Should you find yourself in a chronically leaking boat, energy devoted to changing vessels is likely to be more productive than energy devoted to patching leaks.

Know when to quit.

It’s hard. Nobody wants to be labeled “a quitter.” But it’s better than drowning in a boat that could never be saved.

Predicting rain doesn’t count. Building arks does.

Don’t tell me. Show me.

The best thing I did was to choose the right heroes.

Similar to the quote above about surrounding yourself with good people. Be careful who you idolize. I think “stanning” for Warren is a solid pick.

If you get to my age in life and nobody thinks well of you, I don’t care how big your bank account is, your life is a disaster.

Money is just a tool, a means to an end. For most humans, that “end” is somehow related to interpersonal relationships in their lives.

Thanks for the good time and good quotes, Warren. Here’s to 93 more years.

Thank you for reading! If you enjoyed this article, join 7000+ subscribers who read my 2-minute weekly email, where I send you links to the smartest financial content I find online every week.

-Jesse

Want to learn more about The Best Interest’s back story? Read here.

If you prefer to listen, check out The Best Interest Podcast.

Source: bestinterest.blog

Posted in: Money Basics Tagged: 2, About, advice, age, All, art, average, Bank, bank account, before, Behavior, best, big, birthday, Blog, buffett, build, building, business, clear, College, company, depression, disaster, discover, education, energy, expensive, financial, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, first, flu, forecasting, future, good, Grow, habit, habits, hours, in, interest, Investing, Investing & Retirement, investors, jump, leaks, Learn, Life, Links, longevity, Make, making, market, me, measure, Media, military, minimum wage, money, More, negative, negative art, Oil, or, Other, podcast, president, price, productive, Quotes, read, reading, recessions, Relationships, right, rose, School, simple, skill, social, Social Media, Spending, states, stock, stock market, story, swimming, The Stock Market, time, unique, united, united states, US, value, volatility, wants, warren, warren buffett, work, wrong

Apache is functioning normally

June 1, 2023 by Brett Tams
Table of Contents
show

Highlights and Takeaways

  • The average millennial is 35 years old, earns $54,000 per year, and has a net worth (including any home equity) of around $130,000
  • 45% of millennials have student loan debt, with an average balance of $40,600
  • 52% of millennials are homeowners, with a majority of those home purchases occurring over the past 5 years
  • 55% of millennials have children, with a total U.S. birthrate in 2021 of 1.66 children per woman (it takes 2.00 children per woman for the population to replace itself, so we might be in trouble there…)
  • There are simple steps you can take to become better-than-average financially, including focusing on increased income, measuring your monthly cashflows, using tax-advantages investing vehicles, and more.

The Stats

I’m a Millennial. Many of you reading this are too. Millennials – also called Gen Y – are people born between 1981 and 1996. The average millennial is currently 35 years old.

Let’s walk through some vital financial statistics for American millennials. Then we’ll talk about how we can improve our own financial life to become above average.

Using income data and net worth data from the website DQYDJ, we can see that the average 35-year-old earns $55,000 per year and has a net worth (including home equity) of $130,000.

If we add in data from this Business Insider article, we also learn:

  • Just under half of American millennials have student loan debt. Roughly 45% of millennials have loans, with an average remaining balance of $40,600.
    • I’m sure this data skews younger. The oldest millennials are 42 years old, while the youngest are 27. Not only have college costs continued to rise in the past 20 years (affecting younger Millennials more than older), but there’s also the plain fact that older millennials have had more time to pay their loans off.
  • According to a RentCafe study, 52% of millennials own a home.
    • 18.2 million Millennials now own, or share ownership in, a home, vs. 17.2 million millennial renters (note: this data looks at the 110 largest American metro areas, thus does not include all millennials)
    • Again, this data likely has an age skew. The chart below shows how millennial homeownership first increased in the early 2000s – when the youngest millennials were still in elementary school. The oldest millennials have had a long time to buy.
    • That said, 7.1 million millennials became homeowners in the past 5 years (including yours truly). More and more younger millennials are looking to purchase homes.
    • An important caveat…home ownership might be the so-called “American Dream,” but it’s not mathematically optimal for all people, nor a great investment in general. I’m a huge proponent that your primary home is “a home first, an investment second.” You need a place to raise a family. You don’t need a 7% real return on investment.
  • According to an older (2019) Pew Research study, fewer millennials are starting families than previous generations. Pew found that 55% of millennial women had had a live birth, compared to 62% of Gen X women and 64% of Baby Boomer women in the same age range.
    • What does this have to do with personal finance?
    • First, kids are expensive. Having kids is financially challenging. And not having kids can be a symptom of an already-challenging financial life e.g. “I’m not having kids because I couldn’t afford to give them a good life,” or, “My goddamn student loans were so high we delayed having kids by 5 years.”
    • Second, birthrates drive economies. Children grow into adults – who work, consume, and oil the economic machine. Personal finance is tied to that economy.

How to Be a Better-Than-Average Millennial…At Least Financially

What can you do to rise above the average?

First, adopt a stoic mindset. If you’re “worse” than average, you’re not a bad person. And whatever happened in the past – those events that brought you to this moment – is immutable. You can’t change it. All you can do is forge on and blaze a better trail ahead.

So let’s blaze that trail.

Salary and net worth are easy-to-measure metrics, so let’s start there.

Improving Your Salary

One of the worst pieces of financial advice I see all too often is, “Did you consider increasing your income?” …as if there are raises hiding in your office cabinets if only you’d look for them!

The better advice, instead, is encouragement that you can increase your income. You just need the right approaches and tactics. What are some examples?

  • Talk to your manager. Is there a path for increased pay in your role or at your company? Ask them: what does that path look like? Get them to agree that if you follow the path, a pay raise will follow.
  • More education. Maybe there isn’t a positive path at your current job. It’s a dead end. You need to find ways to get on a better path, and further education is highly effective. BUT! You need start with the end in mind. Get a degree or certification that will truly further your career and your income. Computer science? Yes. Underwater basketweaving? Not so much.
  • Look outside your current role, too. One of the fastest ways to higher pay is by switching jobs. Or using a potential job switch to negotiate a raise.
  • Side hustles can work. But choose carefully. I know too many Uber drivers who, if they ran the numbers, would realize their side hustle barely pays them minimum wage.
Getting some inflation-adjusted raises would help, too…

Increasing Your Net Worth

Salary is a one-trick pony. All it measures is incoming cashflow in. Net worth is far more comprehensive, as it’s a function of:

  • inbound cashflow
  • outbound cashflow
  • changes in asset values (e.g. investment growth)

There are many ways to increase your net worth, most of which are within your control today (unlike increasing your salary, which might take years to successfully execute).

  • Learn from the #1 lesson I’ve found from the various financial experts I’ve interviewed on my podcast:
  • Measure your cashflow – a.k.a. budgeting. You can’t manage what you don’t measure. The only way you’ll ever decrease your spending is if you measure your spending. You need a budget – it can be detailed, or simple. But you can’t not have a budget.
  • Follow the financial order of operations. Learn how to prioritize your financial to-do list.
  • Put in more “work” to combat financial disorder. You’ll need to read this article for context.
  • Remove the negatives. Personal finance is a “negative art.” Increasing your net worth is more about avoiding mistakes than taking huge steps forward.
  • Bucket your money, then put it to work. Determine the timeline for the various expenditures in your life, then invest the money you don’t need in the short term.
  • Take advantage of tax advantages and “free money,” like 401(k) or Roth IRA accounts.

Housing and Kids

How can you be “better-than-average” in terms of housing and children?

If you’re thinking, “Homeowner plus 3 kids is better than renter with zero kids,” I think you’re doing it wrong. Instead, consider the financial (and more importantly, non-financial) acumen that goes into making those decisions.

For example, I think rent vs. buy calculators – like this one from Nerdwallet – are fantastic tools. If the math points you toward renting, then rent. There’s no race to be a homeowner, nor do I think homeownership is intrinsically good. “Better than average” doesn’t apply here.

But I think it’s more important to look yourself in the mirror and be honest with answers like:

  • How many years do I plan on living here?
  • Do I love this house? This neighborhood? This school district?
  • If this home never appreciates in value, am I ok with that?
  • Or the alternative: Since rent doesn’t build equity, am I ok “throwing my money away” in exchange for flexibility and less responsibility?

Children are even more personal and less financial. The only major financial question, in my opinion, is: do we have the financial means to provide for this child? Every other important question is personal.

Again, there’s no such thing as “better than average.” Instead, I see child-rearing in a binary way: are you giving your children a good home? Or not?

If you are, then you’re doing it right. Whether you have 10 kids or 1, you need to give them a good home. What’s a “good home” vs. a “bad home?” Everyone’s opinion will differ. But you know it when you see it.

Millennials are getting their financial life in order. It’s a wonderful thing. And through smart, patient personal finance decisions, you can carry on to become a “better-than-average” financial millennial. Investing in knowledge is a great place to start.

Thank you for reading! If you enjoyed this article, join 6000+ subscribers who read my 2-minute weekly email, where I send you links to the smartest financial content I find online every week.

-Jesse

Want to learn more about The Best Interest’s back story? Read here.

If you prefer to listen, check out The Best Interest Podcast.

Source: bestinterest.blog

Posted in: Money Basics, Personal Finance Tagged: 2, 2021, About, advice, age, All, American Dream, art, ask, asset, average, average salary, baby, Baby Boomer, balance, best, better than average, Blog, bucket, Budget, Budgeting, build, business, Buy, cabinets, Calculators, Career, Children, College, College Costs, company, data, Debt, decisions, dream, Drivers, Economy, education, equity, events, expensive, experts, Family, Finance, Financial advice, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Free, General, Giving, good, great, Grow, growth, home, home equity, Home Ownership, home purchases, Homeowner, homeowners, homeownership, homes, house, Housing, How To, in, Income, increasing your salary, Inflation, interest, Invest, Investing, investment, IRA, job, jobs, kids, Learn, Life, Links, list, Live, Living, loan, Loans, making, manage, math, measure, millennial, millennial homeownership, millennials, mindset, minimum wage, Mistakes, money, Money Basics, More, negative art, negotiate, nerdwallet, net worth, office, Oil, ok, oldest, Operations, Opinion, or, Other, ownership, patient, Personal, personal finance, place, plan, podcast, points, Purchase, race, Raise, real return, Rent, renter, renters, renting, Research, return, return on investment, right, rise, roth, Roth IRA, Salary, School, school district, science, second, short, short term, Side, Side Hustle, Side Hustles, simple, smart, Spending, statistics, story, student, student loan, student loan debt, Student Loans, switching jobs, tax, Tax Advantages, time, timeline, tools, Uber, under, value, vehicles, will, woman, women, work, wrong

Apache is functioning normally

June 1, 2023 by Brett Tams
Table of Contents
show

Highlights and Takeaways

  • The average millennial is 35 years old, earns $54,000 per year, and has a net worth (including any home equity) of around $130,000
  • 45% of millennials have student loan debt, with an average balance of $40,600
  • 52% of millennials are homeowners, with a majority of those home purchases occurring over the past 5 years
  • 55% of millennials have children, with a total U.S. birthrate in 2021 of 1.66 children per woman (it takes 2.00 children per woman for the population to replace itself, so we might be in trouble there…)
  • There are simple steps you can take to become better-than-average financially, including focusing on increased income, measuring your monthly cashflows, using tax-advantages investing vehicles, and more.

The Stats

I’m a Millennial. Many of you reading this are too. Millennials – also called Gen Y – are people born between 1981 and 1996. The average millennial is currently 35 years old.

Let’s walk through some vital financial statistics for American millennials. Then we’ll talk about how we can improve our own financial life to become above average.

Using income data and net worth data from the website DQYDJ, we can see that the average 35-year-old earns $55,000 per year and has a net worth (including home equity) of $130,000.

If we add in data from this Business Insider article, we also learn:

  • Just under half of American millennials have student loan debt. Roughly 45% of millennials have loans, with an average remaining balance of $40,600.
    • I’m sure this data skews younger. The oldest millennials are 42 years old, while the youngest are 27. Not only have college costs continued to rise in the past 20 years (affecting younger Millennials more than older), but there’s also the plain fact that older millennials have had more time to pay their loans off.
  • According to a RentCafe study, 52% of millennials own a home.
    • 18.2 million Millennials now own, or share ownership in, a home, vs. 17.2 million millennial renters (note: this data looks at the 110 largest American metro areas, thus does not include all millennials)
    • Again, this data likely has an age skew. The chart below shows how millennial homeownership first increased in the early 2000s – when the youngest millennials were still in elementary school. The oldest millennials have had a long time to buy.
    • That said, 7.1 million millennials became homeowners in the past 5 years (including yours truly). More and more younger millennials are looking to purchase homes.
    • An important caveat…home ownership might be the so-called “American Dream,” but it’s not mathematically optimal for all people, nor a great investment in general. I’m a huge proponent that your primary home is “a home first, an investment second.” You need a place to raise a family. You don’t need a 7% real return on investment.
  • According to an older (2019) Pew Research study, fewer millennials are starting families than previous generations. Pew found that 55% of millennial women had had a live birth, compared to 62% of Gen X women and 64% of Baby Boomer women in the same age range.
    • What does this have to do with personal finance?
    • First, kids are expensive. Having kids is financially challenging. And not having kids can be a symptom of an already-challenging financial life e.g. “I’m not having kids because I couldn’t afford to give them a good life,” or, “My goddamn student loans were so high we delayed having kids by 5 years.”
    • Second, birthrates drive economies. Children grow into adults – who work, consume, and oil the economic machine. Personal finance is tied to that economy.

How to Be a Better-Than-Average Millennial…At Least Financially

What can you do to rise above the average?

First, adopt a stoic mindset. If you’re “worse” than average, you’re not a bad person. And whatever happened in the past – those events that brought you to this moment – is immutable. You can’t change it. All you can do is forge on and blaze a better trail ahead.

So let’s blaze that trail.

Salary and net worth are easy-to-measure metrics, so let’s start there.

Improving Your Salary

One of the worst pieces of financial advice I see all too often is, “Did you consider increasing your income?” …as if there are raises hiding in your office cabinets if only you’d look for them!

The better advice, instead, is encouragement that you can increase your income. You just need the right approaches and tactics. What are some examples?

  • Talk to your manager. Is there a path for increased pay in your role or at your company? Ask them: what does that path look like? Get them to agree that if you follow the path, a pay raise will follow.
  • More education. Maybe there isn’t a positive path at your current job. It’s a dead end. You need to find ways to get on a better path, and further education is highly effective. BUT! You need start with the end in mind. Get a degree or certification that will truly further your career and your income. Computer science? Yes. Underwater basketweaving? Not so much.
  • Look outside your current role, too. One of the fastest ways to higher pay is by switching jobs. Or using a potential job switch to negotiate a raise.
  • Side hustles can work. But choose carefully. I know too many Uber drivers who, if they ran the numbers, would realize their side hustle barely pays them minimum wage.
Getting some inflation-adjusted raises would help, too…

Increasing Your Net Worth

Salary is a one-trick pony. All it measures is incoming cashflow in. Net worth is far more comprehensive, as it’s a function of:

  • inbound cashflow
  • outbound cashflow
  • changes in asset values (e.g. investment growth)

There are many ways to increase your net worth, most of which are within your control today (unlike increasing your salary, which might take years to successfully execute).

  • Learn from the #1 lesson I’ve found from the various financial experts I’ve interviewed on my podcast:
  • Measure your cashflow – a.k.a. budgeting. You can’t manage what you don’t measure. The only way you’ll ever decrease your spending is if you measure your spending. You need a budget – it can be detailed, or simple. But you can’t not have a budget.
  • Follow the financial order of operations. Learn how to prioritize your financial to-do list.
  • Put in more “work” to combat financial disorder. You’ll need to read this article for context.
  • Remove the negatives. Personal finance is a “negative art.” Increasing your net worth is more about avoiding mistakes than taking huge steps forward.
  • Bucket your money, then put it to work. Determine the timeline for the various expenditures in your life, then invest the money you don’t need in the short term.
  • Take advantage of tax advantages and “free money,” like 401(k) or Roth IRA accounts.

Housing and Kids

How can you be “better-than-average” in terms of housing and children?

If you’re thinking, “Homeowner plus 3 kids is better than renter with zero kids,” I think you’re doing it wrong. Instead, consider the financial (and more importantly, non-financial) acumen that goes into making those decisions.

For example, I think rent vs. buy calculators – like this one from Nerdwallet – are fantastic tools. If the math points you toward renting, then rent. There’s no race to be a homeowner, nor do I think homeownership is intrinsically good. “Better than average” doesn’t apply here.

But I think it’s more important to look yourself in the mirror and be honest with answers like:

  • How many years do I plan on living here?
  • Do I love this house? This neighborhood? This school district?
  • If this home never appreciates in value, am I ok with that?
  • Or the alternative: Since rent doesn’t build equity, am I ok “throwing my money away” in exchange for flexibility and less responsibility?

Children are even more personal and less financial. The only major financial question, in my opinion, is: do we have the financial means to provide for this child? Every other important question is personal.

Again, there’s no such thing as “better than average.” Instead, I see child-rearing in a binary way: are you giving your children a good home? Or not?

If you are, then you’re doing it right. Whether you have 10 kids or 1, you need to give them a good home. What’s a “good home” vs. a “bad home?” Everyone’s opinion will differ. But you know it when you see it.

Millennials are getting their financial life in order. It’s a wonderful thing. And through smart, patient personal finance decisions, you can carry on to become a “better-than-average” financial millennial. Investing in knowledge is a great place to start.

Thank you for reading! If you enjoyed this article, join 6000+ subscribers who read my 2-minute weekly email, where I send you links to the smartest financial content I find online every week.

-Jesse

Want to learn more about The Best Interest’s back story? Read here.

If you prefer to listen, check out The Best Interest Podcast.

Source: bestinterest.blog

Posted in: Money Basics, Personal Finance Tagged: 2, 2021, About, advice, age, All, American Dream, art, ask, asset, average, average salary, baby, Baby Boomer, balance, best, better than average, Blog, bucket, Budget, Budgeting, build, business, Buy, cabinets, Calculators, Career, Children, College, College Costs, company, data, Debt, decisions, dream, Drivers, Economy, education, equity, events, expensive, experts, Family, Finance, Financial advice, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, Free, General, Giving, good, great, Grow, growth, home, home equity, Home Ownership, home purchases, Homeowner, homeowners, homeownership, homes, house, Housing, How To, in, Income, increasing your salary, Inflation, interest, Invest, Investing, investment, IRA, job, jobs, kids, Learn, Life, Links, list, Live, Living, loan, Loans, making, manage, math, measure, millennial, millennial homeownership, millennials, mindset, minimum wage, Mistakes, money, Money Basics, More, negative art, negotiate, nerdwallet, net worth, office, Oil, ok, oldest, Operations, Opinion, or, Other, ownership, patient, Personal, personal finance, place, plan, podcast, points, Purchase, race, Raise, real return, Rent, renter, renters, renting, Research, return, return on investment, right, rise, roth, Roth IRA, Salary, School, school district, science, second, short, short term, Side, Side Hustle, Side Hustles, simple, smart, Spending, statistics, story, student, student loan, student loan debt, Student Loans, switching jobs, tax, Tax Advantages, time, timeline, tools, Uber, under, value, vehicles, will, woman, women, work, wrong

The Negative Arts of Money and Paddle

February 15, 2023 by Brett Tams

“You have a better chance of improving by getting rid of bad traits rather than acquiring new ones.”

Posted in: Money Basics Tagged: 2, 2023, action, All, art, ask, basics, Basketball, birthday, Blog, boring, Budgeting, budgeting software, buffett, chance, chicken, country, court, diversification, efficient, Finance, finances, financial habits, Financial Wize, FinancialWize, football, fun, good, great, habits, helpful, home, interest, Investing, Investing & Retirement, Learn, Make, math, Media, men, mississippi, mistake, Mistakes, model, money, More, negative art, new, outdoor, paddle, passive, Personal, personal finance, personal finances, podcast, right, simple, Software, space, Spending, Sports, story, title, Video, warren, weather, work, youtube

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