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FINALLY! From Millennial to millionaire - - in 5 steps! (forget the fastlane)

MoneyDoc

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Millennials have a super-charged advantage in growing wealth: time.
It's the most important factor in what I call the prosperity formula. Savings multiplied by time equals wealth.

Millennials have it in spades. Here's how to use it.

1. Save early. Invest $5,000 a year starting at age 25. Boom! By 65, that's more than a million bucks. In fact, if you invest $5,000 annually during just the 10 years between ages 25 and 35, you'll have more than if you invested the same amount over 30 years starting at age 35. (Check out slide number 16 in this JP Morgan (JPM) retirement guide.)

2. Save a lot. Fidelity Investments studied investors who earned less than $150,000 a year but had amassed more than $1 million in their 401(k) retirement accounts. The key to their success was setting aside 14% of their pay into tax-advantaged retirement accounts. And that's before the company match.

"Save as much as you can, as early as you can, for as long as you can," advises certified financial planner Doug Flynn, of Flynn-Zito Capital Management.

3. Live below your means. To sock all that money away, you'll need to make sure you are living on 85 cents of every dollar you earn. Flynn says successful self-made people sacrifice early -- before marriage, mortgage, and parenthood -- so they don't have to sacrifice later.

4. Pay yourself first. As you progress in your career, you'll receive annual raises that can help boost both your standard of living and your investments. Put half of any new raise into savings and investments, and spend the other half as you wish. Over time, all that extra investing adds up.

5. No excuses. Always invest in your 401(k). Often companies match some of your investment. Never leave that free money on the table.

It's actually fairly simple if you follow these steps -- you will be on your way to millionairedom.

Source: http://money.cnn.com/2015/05/21/pf/...html?iid=ob_homepage_money_pool&iid=obnetwork
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

And that ladies and gentlemen is how 95% of the population is rich.
 
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Last edited:

AG356

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LateStarter

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Dafuk?!

By the time they reach retirement with this slowlane methodology a millionaire level of wealth will be middle class at best.

That line is almost as bad as this other piece of garbage I found on the weekend.

http://www.marketwatch.com/story/4-ways-to-retire-by-age-55-2015-03-11

You know it's bad when they name the book "The Millionaire Next Door" in the article. Read the book and the article at your own peril.
 

MJ DeMarco

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Millennials have a super-charged advantage in growing wealth: time.
It's the most important factor in what I call the prosperity formula. Savings multiplied by time equals wealth.

Millennials have it in spades. Here's how to use it.

1. Save early. Invest $5,000 a year starting at age 25. Boom! By 65, that's more than a million bucks. In fact, if you invest $5,000 annually during just the 10 years between ages 25 and 35, you'll have more than if you invested the same amount over 30 years starting at age 35. (Check out slide number 16 in this JP Morgan (JPM) retirement guide.)

2. Save a lot. Fidelity Investments studied investors who earned less than $150,000 a year but had amassed more than $1 million in their 401(k) retirement accounts. The key to their success was setting aside 14% of their pay into tax-advantaged retirement accounts. And that's before the company match.

"Save as much as you can, as early as you can, for as long as you can," advises certified financial planner Doug Flynn, of Flynn-Zito Capital Management.

3. Live below your means. To sock all that money away, you'll need to make sure you are living on 85 cents of every dollar you earn. Flynn says successful self-made people sacrifice early -- before marriage, mortgage, and parenthood -- so they don't have to sacrifice later.

4. Pay yourself first. As you progress in your career, you'll receive annual raises that can help boost both your standard of living and your investments. Put half of any new raise into savings and investments, and spend the other half as you wish. Over time, all that extra investing adds up.

5. No excuses. Always invest in your 401(k). Often companies match some of your investment. Never leave that free money on the table.

It's actually fairly simple if you follow these steps -- you will be on your way to millionairedom.

Source: http://money.cnn.com/2015/05/21/pf/...html?iid=ob_homepage_money_pool&iid=obnetwork

Due to this new, never-heard-before, legendary advice, the forum shall shut down operations permanently by the end of the week. No need to continue the travesty here when the secret for wealth has never been clearer, and easier.
 

Chazmania

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Damn that's brilliant!

Get rich slow via the most highly taxed market based investment, or "wealth prison" in existence and then 'forget the fastlane'. Highly targeted advice for the members of the 'fastlane' forum.

You are kidding right?! Please say that you are...

Edit: Ok upon 2nd look I realize that you are kidding around. Nice. I took the bait lol.
 
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Last edited:

Digamma

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Flynn says successful self-made people sacrifice early -- before marriage, mortgage, and parenthood -- so they don't have to sacrifice later.
I love this quote. It's so completely true and intellectually dishonest, shows how people who write this shit are not stupid - they must actually be in bad faith.
 

MJ DeMarco

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shows how people who write this shit are not stupid - they must actually be in bad faith.

Does the advice benefit them? Then it is in the best faith of their own interests. If the person owns a financial management firm (touting financial management charts by JP Morgan) then it's safe to assume the advice isn't fiduciary.

In other words, if I own a farm of cows producing milk, I'm gonna preach that milk does a body good.
 
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LibertyForMe

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You should have seen the look my banker gave me when I told him that I wasn't investing in my 401k at all. He looked at me like I was insane.

Here is the thing, even without the fastlane, your money is still locked away for 40 years. Touch it and you get a massive penalty. Too bad that it is in USD, which are linked to the inflation rate and thus the Fed's monetary policy. Also, I wouldn't put it past the government to try something shady with all the 401k money that is locked away once the debt trouble gets worse... "ohh here are some treasury notes that are a better investment...". All in all, putting money in a 401k doesn't even make sense anymore, regardless of how you look at it. The only way to have it make sense would be to make a salary of like 200k a year, and then just put some of your money into the 401k as a backup plan...
 
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MoneyDoc

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Damn that's brilliant!

Get rich slow via the most highly taxed market based investment, or "wealth prison" in existence and then 'forget the fastlane'. Highly targeted advice for the members of the 'fastlane' forum.

You are kidding right?! Please say that you are...

Edit: Ok upon 2nd look I realize that you are kidding around. Nice. I took the bait lol.
;)
 

luniac

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Millennials have a super-charged advantage in growing wealth: time.
It's the most important factor in what I call the prosperity formula. Savings multiplied by time equals wealth.

Millennials have it in spades. Here's how to use it.

1. Save early. Invest $5,000 a year starting at age 25. Boom! By 65, that's more than a million bucks. In fact, if you invest $5,000 annually during just the 10 years between ages 25 and 35, you'll have more than if you invested the same amount over 30 years starting at age 35. (Check out slide number 16 in this JP Morgan (JPM) retirement guide.)

2. Save a lot. Fidelity Investments studied investors who earned less than $150,000 a year but had amassed more than $1 million in their 401(k) retirement accounts. The key to their success was setting aside 14% of their pay into tax-advantaged retirement accounts. And that's before the company match.

"Save as much as you can, as early as you can, for as long as you can," advises certified financial planner Doug Flynn, of Flynn-Zito Capital Management.

3. Live below your means. To sock all that money away, you'll need to make sure you are living on 85 cents of every dollar you earn. Flynn says successful self-made people sacrifice early -- before marriage, mortgage, and parenthood -- so they don't have to sacrifice later.

4. Pay yourself first. As you progress in your career, you'll receive annual raises that can help boost both your standard of living and your investments. Put half of any new raise into savings and investments, and spend the other half as you wish. Over time, all that extra investing adds up.

5. No excuses. Always invest in your 401(k). Often companies match some of your investment. Never leave that free money on the table.

It's actually fairly simple if you follow these steps -- you will be on your way to millionairedom.

Source: http://money.cnn.com/2015/05/21/pf/...html?iid=ob_homepage_money_pool&iid=obnetwork
--------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------------

And that ladies and gentlemen is how 95% of the population is rich.

I think im gonna be sick...

That sounds like a lot of work actually... so much saving... i hate saving...
 
D

DeletedUser394

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i hate saving...

Saving in the context of spending less than you earn, whether that be $10/hr or $10,000/hr is essential to remaining financially independent.

Going to be in for a bad time if one's income to expense ratio is 1:1 regardless of what a person makes.

Living within one's means is sensible advice, even for millionaires. (and not just those of 'the millionaire next door' variety)
 
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luniac

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Saving in the context of spending less than you earn, whether that be $10/hr or $10,000/hr is essential to remaining financially independent.

Going to be in for a bad time if one's income to expense ratio is 1:1 regardless of what a person makes.

Living within one's means is sensible advice, even for millionaires. (and not just those of 'the millionaire next door' variety)

I know i know, i meant it more like what's the point of saving for 30 years when u make 32k a year before taxes.
I've survived on little for my entire life so if i start making 100k a year my expenses wouldn't be able to catch up lol
i hate expenses that bill you repeatedly like a car, bills, etc... i minimized all that, i never had a smartphone plan and still dont.

actually if u make 10/h its impossible to be financially independent, youll be living paycheck to paycheck till you die.
 
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D

DeletedUser394

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I know i know, i meant it more like what's the point of saving for 30 years when u make 32k a year before taxes.
I've survived on little for my entire life so if i start making 100k a year my expenses wouldn't be able to catch up lol
i hate expenses that bill you repeatedly like a car, bills, etc... i minimized all that, i never had a smartphone plan and still dont.

actually if u make 10/h its impossible to be financially independent, youll be living paycheck to paycheck till you die.

Just on that last point, if you have a business or investments that nets you $20,000/yr ($10/hr wage adjusted) and your expenses are below that (geo arbitrage in eastern europe, Asia or even like the midwest USA), then you are financially independent ;)
 

luniac

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Just on that last point, if you have a business or investments that nets you $20,000/yr ($10/hr wage adjusted) and your expenses are below that (geo arbitrage in eastern europe, Asia or even like the midwest USA), then you are financially independent ;)

Brooklyn New York here man :)
but to be honest, id survive with that amount here too.

I think i just confused financially independent with financially free. If i had a guarantee i'd receive 1000 a month every month, i'd feel pretty financially free, that's how low my needs are.
 

ZCP

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Like listening to the economics professor in college that brown bags his lunch......

Mine had been an economic advisor for Reagan. He started class with two things: 1) if you bought the textbook, he would immediately fail you, and 2) he lost more money in the last stock market crash while out windsurfing one morning than many of us would make in a lifetime. Needless to say he had our attention.....
 

shubham525

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Due to this new, never-heard-before, legendary advice, the forum shall shut down operations permanently by the end of the week. No need to continue the travesty here when the secret for wealth has never been clearer, and easier.
bring a fastlane app on appstore, will save a lot of time.
 

Kak

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Your original post just explained a very average retirement plan. Nothing special about it.

OK... The whole premise here is "FASTER" thus the "FASTLANE" 65 is 40 years away for a millennial.

Now... A good point to remember is that a younger person DOES have time on their side and socking away money at a young age means a ton more than doing it later.

I do agree with save and invest. But I'm making my money in a very different way than a slow laner and I will NEVER have a freaking 401k.

Also OP... 40 years from now a million dollars won't be nearly what it is today... Think paying 70-80 grand for a Toyota Camry. In fact, a million dollars isn't much today.
 
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IrishSpring600

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What if I die in a year OP? What if I planned to go skydiving just the day after my already fated death? What if Dan Blizerian doesn't want to party with a fellow 55 year old goof?

http://www.picgifs.com/reaction-gifs/reaction-gifs/abandon-thread-F*ck-this-shit/picgifs-abandon-thread-F*ck-this-shit-1139945.gif
 
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The Grind

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Another thread to go in that pile of nonsense?
 

SeanyHang

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bring a fastlane app on appstore, will save a lot of time.
I'm not sure if you're joking, confused as to where to post that kind of suggestion, or just truly think that a fastlane app would be so painstakingly awesome that you just NEEDED to tell MJ to create one while you saw him in this thread..

Regardless - I'm going to act like you just REALLY want the app.. SO I'm going to tell you exactly what to do!
giphy.gif

You be the cat. I'm the dude.

Your first option is downloading tapatalk which is an app that allows you to access this forum and many of the other forums all in one place. Boom. Done.

But maybe...JUSSSTTTTT MAYBE - you're like me and think that tapatalk's interface really shits the bed and you'd possibly even rather punch your mother in the face than have to use it... WELL it just so happens that you can put an icon right on your smartphones homescreen which will bring you straight to your mobile browsers version of this site!

I'm an android guy - and all that you have to do on android is go onto whatever site you want to be able to access with the tap of your screen, then go into your mobile browsers menu, and then click "Add to home screen".

If that's you in your image though, it looks like you have an i-phone - so I googled "how to add a website to an iphone desktop" and copied what looks like it made sense to me.

"Open the website you want to add to your home screen in Safari, then tap the "Share" button to open the Share menu. This button is located on the bar at the bottom of the Safari window and resembles a square with an exiting arrow; if the bottom bar is currently hidden, tap the address bar at the top of the window to display it. In the Share menu, tap "Add to Home Screen." If you wish, edit the name of the icon using the on-screen keyboard, and then tap "Add." Safari minimizes and your iPhone displays your home screen, with your newly added icon. This icon works just like app icons when it comes to repositioning or removing it."

Hopefully that will help you out, my kind sir.
 

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