Friday, March 04, 2016

The Most Valuable Thing Money Can Buy

Came across another awesome article from My Money & Me about the importance of savings, and benefits of living a minimalist life.

“The most valuable thing money can buy is freedom from having to worry about money.”

I share many beliefs with the author, and I'm glad there is someone who can put across the point so well. If you hadn't notice - In Singapore, you must be a freaking "weirdo" if you have no desire to buy a car. You must be living a miserable life if you do not consume much. You must not have much ambition if you do not want to buy or upgrade to a Condo/big house.

Don't get me wrong. It is not that I do not have desire for such things - it's just that I do not see how they are worth their prices.

We work on a job we hate, so that we can buy a car to more easily get to work?

We spend years of our working life to upgrade to a bigger and better house, but leave the house vacant most of the time because we are at work?

How does that make sense?

If it doesn't, then maybe you are simply making luxurious purchases to prove something. To prove how "successful" you are, or maybe just to fit into society norms.

Do you know if you save just 5% more of your income each month, you can cut your working years by as much as 4-8 years? [See links below]

How much % of your income does a car installment cost you? 20%? You are willing to extend your retirement by 20 years just to own a car?

Remember that when you are purchasing a liability for, say $100K. You are not only losing that $100K. You are losing all the compounded money that could have grown out of that $100K for the REMAINING of your life (40+ years).

To me, their costs are far too high. I will consider them if one day I strike $10M toto and their costs become negligible compare to my networth. Until then, I find such things frivolous.

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"If you are spending 100% (or more) of your income, you will never be prepared to retire, unless someone else is doing the saving for you (wealthy parents, social security, pension fund, etc.). So your work career will be Infinite.

If you are spending 0% of your income (you live for free somehow), and can maintain this after retirement, you can retire right now. So your working career can be Zero.

In between, there are some very interesting considerations. As soon as you start saving and investing your money, it starts earning money all by itself. Then the earnings on those earnings start earning their own money. It can quickly become a runaway exponential snowball of income. As soon as this income is enough to pay for your living expenses, while leaving enough of the gains invested each year to keep up with inflation, you are ready to retire."

Mr Money Mustache 

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"But to some people, wealth is the most important thing in their life, and they are forever endeavouring to accumulate more wealth. Whenever they gain more, it is never enough, and they then plan or plot to gain even more. It is an endless pursuit in self-gratification with no meaningful purpose in life.

Happiness, in whatever form one sees it, becomes more elusive the harder one tries to pursue it.

That’s why my personal aim is much more realistic: All I ask for is calmness and contentment. These at least are partially within my control."

Pursuit of Happiness (Dr Lee Wei Ling)

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