this post was submitted on 15 Jul 2024
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FIRE (Financial Independence Retire Early)

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Welcome!

FIRE is a lifestyle movement with the goal of gaining financial independence and retiring early.


Flow Charts:

Personal Income Spending Flow Chart (US)

Personal Income Spending Flow Chart (Canada)

Finance Flow Chart (UK)

Personal Income Spending Flow Chart (Australia)

Personal Finance Flow Chart (Ireland)


Useful Links:

Bogleheads Wiki

Mr. Money Moustache - a frugal lifestyle blog

The Earth Awaits


Related Communities:

/c/PersonalFinance@lemmy.ml

/c/PersonalFinance@lemmy.world

/c/PersonalFinanceCanada@lemmy.ca

/c/AusFinance@aussie.zone


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[–] yenahmik@lemmy.world 4 points 4 months ago (1 children)

Holy compounding growth! I can't believe that I just crossed the $500k invested mark in January and I'm already just one more good day from hitting $600k. I very well could cross that line in time for the end of month spreadsheet day. (Don't worry, now that I've put that thought out there, we'll certainly see a market crash)

Yup, I've recently hit some arbitrary milestones as well. I also just finished a moderately large transfer, so it's the perfect time for a crash.

Congrats!

[–] myrmidex 4 points 4 months ago* (last edited 4 months ago) (2 children)

How would you peeps go about allocating an amount for an apartment that'll be built over the next 2 years, with tranches to be paid every few months?

Keep the money invested, or already move the entire amount to a savings account, or just move the amount needed for the next tranch(es)?

With such a short timeline, I'd just keep it in cash. Put it in bonds or something for a little better yield.

If I can cash flow part of it, I'd only keep the portion I couldn't cash flow in that cash bucket.

[–] yenahmik@lemmy.world 3 points 4 months ago

I'd consider a CD ladder with the amount needed for each tranche maturing at the time I'd need it (depending on rates I could get compared to HYSA rates).