What do you think of the FIRE movement? 🔎Be a smart Value investor by using Seeking Alpha Premium to get 20% discount with 7-day trial: www.sahg6dtr.com/392M6MZ/R74QP/
Thank you for your kind words. I guess it's consistency; I didn't upload weekly until this year as I have another channel to manage and work, of course.
Thank you for your content. I am personally pursuing FI and I was calculating our Super numbers in it. It makes sense to leave it out of the calculations. I guess another way of looking at it would be to bridge the gap to 60yrs when Super is available. I am hoping that I don't keep saying "one more year" and delaying early retirement to enjoy the benefits.
@@walkingtofiIt's interesting that 'One more year' seems to be the catchphrase many Fire/FI pursuers say. Most of the time, your financial assets are sufficient enough to pull the trigger especially if you are on the FI iso FIRE path. Good luck and hope to hear your update when you're on the other side 😀
I always thought my super balance is my FIRE goal. Anyway it does not matter now as I just turned 60 and can access super via TTR, but will now coast along, as the super earns more than I do per year.
Take advantage of arbitrage by setting up retirement in a south east asian country. My expenses are a 50% less than if i retired in oz. Also better to have a very diverse portfolio to level things out in case of a downturn in the market and hold investments in multiple currencies is also a safer bet.
In Aus, tax free income and capital gains in super means if you believe you will live past 60 you really should be topping that out first (and I think you are doing that). The real deal for us Aussies is bridging the gap, and that is all about deferral of gratification. If you haven’t exercised that muscle from early adulthood, FIRE in any sense will be impossible, and it is why the savings rate is so abysmal (even after compulsory super!!!)
@@scottmcgilvery8511 With all the easy payment methods - tap & go, credit cards, Buy now pay later, as well as "keeping up with the Joneses". It's indeed very difficult to delay gratifications nowadays.
What do you think of the FIRE movement? 🔎Be a smart Value investor by using Seeking Alpha Premium to get 20% discount with 7-day trial: www.sahg6dtr.com/392M6MZ/R74QP/
0:30 We are now changing it to "Financial Intelligence RELAX Early".
Love it!
Still an underrated channel. No idea how you have less than 6k subs.
Thank you for your kind words. I guess it's consistency; I didn't upload weekly until this year as I have another channel to manage and work, of course.
Could you please make a video on how minimum wage earners can retire without depending on Centrelink? Thank you.
Thank you for your content. I am personally pursuing FI and I was calculating our Super numbers in it. It makes sense to leave it out of the calculations. I guess another way of looking at it would be to bridge the gap to 60yrs when Super is available. I am hoping that I don't keep saying "one more year" and delaying early retirement to enjoy the benefits.
@@walkingtofiIt's interesting that 'One more year' seems to be the catchphrase many Fire/FI pursuers say. Most of the time, your financial assets are sufficient enough to pull the trigger especially if you are on the FI iso FIRE path. Good luck and hope to hear your update when you're on the other side 😀
I always thought my super balance is my FIRE goal. Anyway it does not matter now as I just turned 60 and can access super via TTR, but will now coast along, as the super earns more than I do per year.
Take advantage of arbitrage by setting up retirement in a south east asian country. My expenses are a 50% less than if i retired in oz. Also better to have a very diverse portfolio to level things out in case of a downturn in the market and hold investments in multiple currencies is also a safer bet.
In Aus, tax free income and capital gains in super means if you believe you will live past 60 you really should be topping that out first (and I think you are doing that). The real deal for us Aussies is bridging the gap, and that is all about deferral of gratification. If you haven’t exercised that muscle from early adulthood, FIRE in any sense will be impossible, and it is why the savings rate is so abysmal (even after compulsory super!!!)
@@scottmcgilvery8511 With all the easy payment methods - tap & go, credit cards, Buy now pay later, as well as "keeping up with the Joneses". It's indeed very difficult to delay gratifications nowadays.