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General FI Investing

Our 2021 FI Progress: Joining The Double Comma Club

BLUF: Fueled by a massive bull market and a high savings rate in 2021 our invested assets grew by over $275k. We officially joined the double comma club having over $1M in invested assets.

In a previous article, I covered how we saved $140,000 last year in 2021. Today I’m going to dive into where we stand with our investable assets and how that tracks to our overall FI number.

I’ll cover where the investments are located from an account type perspective (brokerage, 401k, crypto). However, what we’re invested in from an asset allocation perspective will be a topic for another post. In general we’re 75/20/5. 75% stocks, 20% bonds, 5% cash and crypto. Mostly invested in low cost mutual funds.

It feels a little odd to be writing about our financial progress last year right after a few weeks negative volatility (week ending Jan 21st, 2022) in the stock and crypto markets.

It’s pretty minor from my perspective, but some people that have recently enjoyed 25% returns last year are freaking out! Some newer investors are getting their first real taste of dealing with their emotions when things aren’t going up. Welcome to investing.

The Tax Triangle

The US tax system is complicated with lots of rules, exceptions and nuance that can bite you. It’s important to understand the taxation of your investments on the way out because that directly impacts how much you need to have to be FI. I wouldn’t recommend trying to use the Wesley Snipes accounting method.

Gossip Rocks Forum

The tax triangle refers to three different groups of investment accounts that each receive their own tax treatment: tax free, taxable and tax deferred.

  • Tax Free – No taxes due on the withdrawal of this money as long as the correct rules are followed. Examples: Roth Accounts, HSA’s used for qualified medical expenses.
  • Taxable – Gets preferential long term capital gains (LTCG) tax treatment for qualified dividends and assets held longer than a year and a day. 0%, 15% and 20% LTCG taxation rates in 2022. Examples: Brokerage accounts, crypto brokerage account.
  • Tax Deferred – Was saved pre-tax on the way in. Taxed as ordinary income when withdrawn from the account at your marginal tax bracket. Examples: t401k, tIRA, 403b, 457b, TSP, etc.

I introduce this idea briefly right now because that’s how you’re going to see my investible assets bucketed.

How I Track Progress

There are two main tools that I use to track our financial progress right now: personal capital and a spreadsheet.

Personal Capital (PC) does a good job of connecting to each of my accounts, aggregating that data and keeping it current. As account security has gotten tighter it does get a little more annoying as every month or two I need to resubmit credentials. You’ll see a few areas where I didn’t do that for a while and the charts look flat.

However, I also like to be able to see where that money is stored according to the tax triangle to help me see the amount in each area and what that breakdown in percentage wise. That information helps me understand if I need to make a change as to where to direct future investment dollars.

2021 Investment Account Values

Without further ado, here are the details! I’m going to use January 1st 2021 to January 15th 2022 as the period of review here because I took a snapshot of the accounts on January 15th. There are also a couple of bugs in the personal capital data so the chart dollar amounts don’t quite line up with my spreadsheet data but the spreadsheet data is right.

Summary Data

I think it’s easier to start with the high level summary and then dive into the details from there.

Current Investments (no house) is all of our investment accounts and cash but excludes our home equity. Net worth I’ll explain later in the article.

Breaking this down to the tax triangle, here is the distribution of those investment by tax treatment.

We have a situation that’s not uncommon – we’re heavy in tax deferred accounts. I’m still comfortable with contributing to a t401k because we’ve got a plan to draw down or Roth convert a good portion of that money when our income is much lower.

Some CFPs refer to this as the tax planning window between retirement starting and social security (SS) payments starting. Our tax planning window will likely be between ages 55 and 67. Income from jobs will have stopped and social security won’t have started so we’ll be in the lowest tax brackets.

Total Investments and Cash Accounts (+$275,500)

A strong saving year plus a strong market year where the S&P500 gained 26.9% contributed to great gains overall. The +$275,500 is the total change in account balance. In other words, it includes both contributions and investment gains.

There’s a $15k mistake here because one of Mrs. MFI’s accounts wasn’t synching right and the value that personal capital charts see is “frozen” in time. So, the PC amount below should be +$261k for the year in investments, but then add in the cash accounts and we’re in the $281k range. I’ve rounded numbers all over the place for simplicity so the numbers don’t perfectly add up.

Tax Free Accounts (+$83,300)

Cash, our Roth accounts and our HSA accounts make up our “tax free” accounts. Savings account interest is taxed as ordinary income but the amount being made here is trivial so I put it here.

Including HSAs in this bucket might seem a little unsual. HSAs could actually be put into a couple of different places. As I covered in this post, the money coming out of an HSA is tax free when used for qualified medical expenses. Right now I’m planning to use it for that purpose including long term care.

After 59.5 years old you can withdraw from an HSA for non-medical expenses and it will be taxed as ordinary income. If I wanted to plan on that outcome we could stick it in the tax deferred bucket to plan for ordinary taxation on that money.

Cash (+$20,000)

Cash listed here is cash held in non-investment accounts so it’s not part of the $1.19M listed above.

Why so much cash? Well, there are three high level sub-buckets:

  • $10k – Old vacation funds – My employer changed vacation systems from an accrued system to “unlimited.” I have $10k stuck there until I separate from service.
  • $10k – Checking/Sinking funds – I have a number of sinking funds in my YNAB managed budget. They’ll get spent eventually.
  • $25k – Mrs. MFI savings – She feels good about having a decent amount in her savings account. We’ll get some of that invested soon but her feeling good is more important here than the financially optimum approach.
Roth Accounts (+$54,500)

We only started contributing to Roth accounts 6 or so years ago so we’re playing catch up here. I’m very fortunate to have a mega backdoor Roth (MBR) capability using my work 401k and have used that to maximize what the IRS will let me put into a Roth account. I’ll keep doing that as long as I have the income and the politicians don’t kill that option.

My work 401k makes the MBR a little tricky so I only plan to do one transfer a year. MBR #1 below is the transfer of funds accumulated in both late 2020 and early 2021. MBR #2 was because I was worried about the Build Back Better Act killing the backdoor so I proactively did a second transfer just to be safe.

Due to some poor planning by me, we were potentially going to run into an issue of making too much money to contribute to a Roth the traditional way. As such, I backed out Roth contributions by re-charactizing them to an IRA and then backdoored them back into Roth a month later.

Health Savings Accounts (HSA) (+$8,800)

As I covered in this post, HSAs are awesome if you’re on a HDHP. Our accounts are quite new and small so they aren’t compounding much…yet. We continue to max them out and pay for medical expenses out of pocket so they should be north of $100k combined in about 7 years.

Mr. MFI HSA Investment Account
Mrs. MFI HSA Investment Account

Taxable Accounts (+$58,000)

Our two taxable accounts are a traditional brokerage account mostly invested in stock index funds and a new crypto brokerage account.

Brokerage (+$44,500)

The traditional brokerage contributions were lowered in priority as I was shoveling money into the crypto account when the prices started to fall near the end of year.

Crypto (+$13,500)

In late 2021 I decided that I had stayed out of the crypto space for long enough and started buying Bitcoin and Ether to diversify a bit into that space. I also moved some cash funds into stable coins to learn how they work and see how safe those 8% returns really are. I’m much more motivated to learn once I have some skin in the game.

Bitcoin peaked in price on November 8th so I timed that perfectly to “buy high”! The price has steadily dropped since then so I’ve been dollar cost averaging all the way down. Still waiting for the bottom! I have a small amount of crypto in another account besides what’s shown in this chart.

Tax Deferred Accounts (+$134,200)

Since these accounts are our oldest and largest it should come as no surprise that they saw the biggest jump in value. We put $50k into them courtesy of maxing them out plus employer matches and they saw another $84k in growth. That is some sweet compounding gains.

Mr. MFI 401k Accounts (+$89,200)

Mr. MFI 401k part 1
Mr. MFI 401k part 2

Mrs. MFI 401k Account (+$45,000)

Mrs. MFI 401k

Net Worth – Post House Sale

Net worth is a financial measure that takes into account all assets that you own minus liabilities. However, it doesn’t take into account the cost of liquidating fairly illiquid assets like houses. That’s a very real cost that you shouldn’t ignore.

In our case I wanted to account for those costs in a simple way so I’ve deducted 10% of the home value from the remaining equity number. This is 6% for realtor fees and another 4% for other expenses related to selling the house like repairs, moving and storage fees.

Our house went up in value like almost everyone else in 2021 and we paid down a good chunk of our small remaining mortgage. Since this is a primary residence and the capital gains are less than $500k it will be tax free for us as a married couple.

2021 Home Value Increase

That $130k extra is what you see in the net worth (house sold) line. I haven’t included our paid off cars in our net worth. They’re only worth about $20-25k total and will keep depreciating.

Progress To Our FI Number

Those numbers are great, but where does that put us on our FI journey?

What Is Our FI Number?

Like the status of a dysfunctional relationship, the answer is complicated. All of these calculations involve taking an educated guess at your future retirement expenses and then applying your desired safe withdrawal rate to that.

Changes to your plan for family, lifestyle, location, healthcare and a million other variables make this a constantly moving target. My advice? Don’t drive yourself crazy trying to get it in the ballpark until you’re a year or two from retiring. Below is my current snapshot but I know this plan will change.

Retirement Expenses

Our expenses from last year were $55k, but I need to know our retirement expenses. I’ve added $5k as a health insurance placeholder for now.

I’ve also added an average 10% tax expense since we’ll have to pay taxes on most of the money coming out of our accounts. Don’t forget that the 4% rule of thumb didn’t take into account taxes! That’s an important line item that you need to have in your plan.

A 10% effective tax rate should be a good educated guess since we currently have a 15% effective tax rate on our ~$250k combined income. Taxes will likely go up but on $60k in income we’ll likely have an effective tax rate of less than 10%.

For those reasons, I’m using $66k/yr as our projected retirement expenses right now.

Our FI Number(s)

The FI community likes to use the 4% rule of thumb as their measure of hitting FI. Many debate if a 4% safe withdrawal rate (SWR) is too conservative or aggressive.

Regardless of where you fall in that debate, the initial study was based on a 30 year retirement. I’m planning on a ~45 year retirement from 50 years old to 95 and you just can’t extend the timeframe 50% longer and assume that the same SWR will be successful. For those reasons we’ll shoot for a 3.33% SWR which is 30x your annual expenses.

Another idea that I’m playing with is whether to add an additional bucket of fun money. An extra $200k (or some other number) that can be used to spend more in your early “go go” years when we’ll have more energy to have ridiculous adventures.

One thing to note is that this rough calculation assumes zero social security or other income in “retirement.” I need to refine this and see the impact of adding in some income.

Tracking to Our FI Number

With our $66k retirement expenses and a 3.33% SWR, how are we tracking to FI? We’re at $1,248,000 currently in relation to a $1,980,000 FI number which puts us 63% of the way to our FI number! That’s 18.9x our projected retirement expenses.

Thanks for reading! Where are you on your path to FI? How was your 2021? Drop a comment below.

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Categories
Expenses

Reduce spending! 2020 spending recap and 2021 plan

crop payroll clerk counting money while sitting at table
Photo by Karolina Grabowska on Pexels.com

Bottom Line Up Front (BLUF): Reduced spending = faster financial independence. If you want to understand where your money is going to reduce spending then you need to track your spending, summarize, review and take action!

 “What gets measured, gets improved.”

Peter Drucker

In the 1970’s a well known consultant, Peter Drucker, said those words. He was speaking in the application of business but the quote rings true in personal finance. If you want to reduce spending to save more, you have to know where the money is going.

I was never taught to track my spending so I’ve run wild with it my whole life. “Affording” something meant having the credit to buy it and having the payment fit with my paycheck income. I looked at it from a monthly cash flow perspective, not how much it was costing me overall. I don’t remember what made me do it, but after 2018 I decided to look back for the first time in my life at my yearly spending. It was pretty eye opening.

2018 Total Spending – $80,998

2018 was the first year that I sat down at the end of the year to see what I actually spent for the year. I was bit shocked. I bought a used Corvette (2nd car) that I didn’t need and paid $17,000 towards it. I spent close to $6,000 on stuff much due to Amazon! I wasted $600 for a cell phone plan that I wasn’t using. I spent $1,300 on optional company benefits (legal advice, accidental death insurance…etc) that I didn’t need or wasn’t using.

I know it was a ridiculous purchase, but come on. It was pretty.

2019 Total Spending – $87,377

In 2019 I made changes to not pay for some services that I wasn’t using and knocked down shopping by $1,000. I did however spend $17,000 buying a used car to replace my primary car – a 15 year old SUV that was up for major repairs. We took the vacation of a lifetime to South America for $15,000 that we had saved for and paid in full. Believe it or not we did find some ways to save $3,000 on that trip but this was before I learned about travel rewards. I made a few positive changes, but they were minor.

2020 Total Spending-$66,537

In 2020, I found the FI movement and really started buying into it. I cancelled services I wasn’t using. I packed my lunch every day. I sold my Corvette. It was fun to drive and I had a couple of great years with it! However, it was also expensive, something to constantly worry about and was another thing to take care of. I sold $3,200 of stuff from around the house that we weren’t using on FB marketplace and Ebay. Obviously this little world event called a pandemic reduced some entertainment spending but that wasn’t the only driver.

Saying goodbye!

Housing: Yeah, housing! Yikes. A new roof moved the needle on that one.

Food: Food was a lot less eating out and a lot more groceries.

Vacation: We had a vacation planned for May and paid for some of it before COVID forced cancellations. We also took a trip to Maine in September that was much needed.

Transportation: No more car changes! Selling the corvette reduced insurance and maintenance costs. Gas was far reduced with much more work from home.

Shopping: This is mostly Amazon food and stuff. I need to separate this better for 2021 because it wasn’t as bad as it seems.

Pets: We have an aging pooch and he is starting to have some issues😢. He had a minor surgery, extra vet visits and a bunch of daycare costs.

Healthcare: I finally looked into options to fixing my mild sleep apnea and increasing sleep quality. I had a dental device made and wow, it has been life changing! So much more energy, I don’t snore and I sleep like a rock. Most of the cost for the year was that device and associated visits.

2021 Goal Spending < $55,000

Where do we go from here to reduce spending? Well, we dive into the 2020 spending and look for any areas to optimize in 2021. Then we take action on those areas. Start with the most expensive budget areas and then work down each one. I look for things to cut that don’t add value to our lives and wouldn’t reduce happiness. For example, entertainment such as going to concerts and events makes us happy so I will keep a larger entertainment budget. On the other hand, paying for life insurance only adds value if I have the right amount. I’m wasting money if I’m overinsured.

I make a budget based on the new target spending in MS Excel and then will track to it in 2021 using You Need A Budget (YNAB). I am brand new to YNAB but I’m impressed so far so more to come on that tool in the future.

Items highlighted in yellow are areas of planned reduction in 2021 and reflect the new target values to achieve our goal budget.

2021 areas of focus:

Housing – $26,783 -> $15,103

Okay, this one feel like cheating. A new roof was needed in 2020 so that’s a $10,850 expense that we better not need anytime soon. You hear me mother nature and vermin of the world!?! On the upside it looks pretty sexy if roofs are your thing. In the home repairs category I’ll look for repair vs. replace savings and more DIY opportunities. I didn’t pay for snow plow service this year so we’ll see if I regret that. One could certainly look into more aggressive ways to reduce spending here like rent out a room or sell the house. At the moment I’m not interested in those options.

Shopping – $4,166 -> $1,500

Damn you Amazon prime and your ultimate convenience! This actually isn’t as bad as it seems as there’s a LOT of food related spending included. Protein shake ingredients, running fuel and vitamins make up a lot of it. I will categorize things better this year. That said, I still get the urge to buy something new sometimes. I’ll give the 72 hour rule from the Frugalwoods a shot – wait for 72 hours to think about it before buying non-essential items – and see how that works.

Insurance – $2,167 -> $1,500?

A bit of a downer topic, but important to talk about. How much life and disability insurance does one need? How much when you’re approaching your FI number? I’ll be explore this topic in its own post and look at whether I can eliminate or reduce this expense substantially in 2021. I have a fancy disability insurance policy costing me $1,200/yr and term life insurance for WAY more coverage than I need for $650/yr.

halloween headstones on grassy ground
Photo by Juan Vargas on Pexels.com

Food – $9,710 -> $10,400

Umm, have you lost it sir? This is supposed to be a post about reducing spending, not increasing it. Yeah yeah, I know. This one looks bad on the surface but I’m actually reducing food spending overall to hit this number. In 2020 I bought a lot of food items on Amazon but called them shopping. It’s a little bit of a shell game but I’m actually challenging myself to reduce overall food spending. Eating out was down with the pandemic but we do enjoy that occasionally so that will go back up. Usually it’s pretty affordable like this deconstructed sushi bowl, a.k.a. sushi trasher.

But, but…food!

Actionable ways to reduce spending:

  1. Track your spending! Use a spreadsheet, Mint, YNAB or something else but you MUST understand where the money is going.
  2. Lump spending into categories that work for your lifestyle.
  3. Sort by largest category to smallest by dollar amount. Start digging into each one and look into options for ways to cut down on spending where it isn’t improving your life.
  4. Keep the goal of the spending in mind when looking to optimize. If your travel costs are high and you want to visit a city for a week, the goal is to experience the city. Where you stay when there is highly variable cost with many options like hotel, AirBnB, hostel, stay with friends and house sit. Thinking about the goal keeps the solution space open to more creative ways to solve the problem.

How did you do in 2020? How are you planning to optimize or reduce spending in 2021?

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