Intro to personal finance

Effai.me presents

About Me

My Name is Leon. @OSPortfolio on Twitter

I've been at Twitter > 3 years.

I'm the author of effai.me/blog (go/effai)

 

Assumptions

 

  1. We are here to maximize wealth.
  2. We are interested in having as much money as possible at retirement.
  3. Opinions are biased but rooted in reason. I will skip the justifications.

Out of scope

 

  1. Becoming a billionaire
  2. Early retirement*

*If interested in early retirement read go/effai

The Plan

  1. Saving (the why)
  2. Taxes (the where)
  3. Investing (the how)

Saving

the why

Compound interest

Classic example

Lattes

Classic example

  1. $5 a day
  2. Over 20 years

5 * 365 * 20 ~ $36,000

But we forgot about compound interest

It's double

Classic example

  1. $15 a day - lunch
  2. Over 20 years

It's almost $250,000

Classic example

  1. $30 a day - lunch for you and your spouse
  2. Over 20 years

It's half way to a mil

Classic example

The point is that small early amounts add up

How much should I save?

$400 / month

$1000 / month

10% of my salary

How much should I save?

Start with 50% of your salary and work from there.

Taxes

the where

Avoid at some costs

Taxes

Remember the half a million dollars you can have by skipping lunch?

That wasn't the full story.

You earn $100,000 / year

You pay $20,000 in taxes

You save $40,000

To save $40,000 you need to earn $100,000

That half a million you saved was worth ~600,000 in salary

Taxes

Taxes are likely to be your #1 or #2 cost

It's worth while to minimize them.

Taxes

3 steps of taxation

  1. Earned income
  2. Taxable activities
  3. Cashing out

Taxes

Earned Income

Before buying a house, you have to earn money through work. The difference between your salary and your take home pay is income taxes.

Taxes

Taxable activities

If you have an asset, you pay property taxes.

Or taxes on dividends

Taxes

Cashing out

If you sell an investment property, you owe taxes on any gains in that property.

Or capital gains taxes if the shares went up in value

Taxes

Taxes on earnings

Taxes on activities

Taxes on

cashing out

And then there's tax acronyms:

  • 401k
  • IRA
  • HSA
  • ESPP
  • Roth
  • Traditional

Taxes

IRA vs 401k

IRA - Individual retirement account.

The money you set aside independent of your employer.

401lk - A section in the tax code

The money you set aside as part of a program sponsored by your employer.

Note: After a certain salary it doesn't make sense to participate in both

Taxes

Traditional Roth ESPP HSA Post tax Regular
Earnings 𐄂 𐄂 𐄂 𐄂
Activities 𐄂 𐄂
Cashing out 𐄂 𐄂 ? 𐄂 𐄂
Limits $19,000 $19,000 $25,000 $3,500
 
$19,000
Incentives $3,000 $3,000 $3,750 $500
 
𐄂 𐄂

Traditional

HSA

ESPP

Post tax

Regular

Investing

the how

No free lunch

Investing

3 rules to investing

  1. The higher the reward, the higher the risk.
  2. Always diversify. Never concentrate risk.
  3. Never ever trade. Buy and hold.

Investing

The higher the reward, the higher the risk.

Investing

The higher the reward, the higher the risk.

If someone is promising a higher reward with no/low risk, the risk is still there. You just can't see it.

Investing

Always diversify. Never concentrate risk.

Example:

  • Netflix
  • Tesla
  • Amazon
  • Lyft

Investing

Always diversify. Never concentrate risk.

S&P 500 is a good start.

Broad market index funds covering many industries in many countries.

Many other index funds and ETF's to choose from.

Investing

Never ever trade. Buy and hold.

Software engineers are too smart for their own good. Always trying to beat the average.

Has been shown since the 60's time and time again that it's extremely unlikely to ever happen.

Would you ever try and beat Tiger Woods in golf?

Investing

What should we do?

  1. Buy diversified funds. Look for funds that have hundreds of companies in many industries. We have limited choices in Twitter but they are decent.
  2. Choose funds with the lowest MER. Must be less than 0.25%. Anything higher is day light robbery.
  3. Never sell. A recession is just a sale. When steak is on sale we buy more; not less.
  4. Reinvest everything you earn. All dividends go contribute back to your portfolio; not your shopping habits.

 

Investing

What should we do?

Investing

What should we do?

Investing

What should we do?

You've maxed out all the tax shelters we discussed. What now?

Traditional

HSA

ESPP

Post tax

Regular

Investing

What should we do?

I recommend betterment.com

  • It's a robo advisor. There are many on the market.
  • Buy an efficient set of funds.
  • Auto invest dividends.
  • Automatic tax loss harvesting.
  • Very hands off for a relatively low price.

go/invest-better

Thank you

go/invest-better

go/effai

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