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The Funny Thing About Money Psychology (What Would You Do?)

Wishlist and Bucket List

Do you recall when you first started having a wishlist or bucket list? I didn’t have one until I was in my mid-20s. Before then, I didn’t desire much. I was simply happy just having the essentials or necessities. I understood my financial situation as a student. My mindset at the time was that my situation was temporary and wanted to focus my attention on doing well in my studies. I looked forward to the day when I finished school, secured a satisfying career and then start living the life of my dream.

What was the first item that made it to my wishlist? It was a Marc by Marc Jacobs crossbody bag. I saw that bag on a fashion magazine that I subscribed to at the time. 

Around my 25th birthday, my husband and I visited Saks Fifth Avenue. When I saw that bag sitting on the shelf, I hesitated and started having second thoughts. The price tag was $249. It was a VERY expensive bag. My most expensive bag prior to that one costed me less than $30. My husband and I walked in circles around the store as I had a very hard time deciding if I wanted us to spend that kind of money. It was just a [beautiful] crossbody bag…After perhaps 45 minutes later, my then boyfriend was paying for the bag at the cashier register. And that was my first designer bag. From there, I went on to purchase couple Michael Kors bags.

money psychology money dilemma

Deciding on the Now or Later

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Behavioral Finance, Financial Independence, Financial Journey, Financial Planning, Lifestyle, Retirement Planning

Calculate How Much Money You Need to Retire: How Safe is the 4% Withdrawal Rule

For years, my husband and I didn’t know how much money we would need to retire (you can read about our financial journey in an earlier article I wrote by clicking here). We had our guesses, with numbers anywhere between $3 million to $5 million dollars. Our logic was that by the time we’re ready to retire, our primary residence home would worth $1 million dollars (all in equity). We would also have $2 million or so dollars invested in the stock market and the dividends and interest yields from these investments would be enough to cover our annual expenses.

In that article, I also mentioned about having learned about the financial independence movement in the middle of 2016. Since then, my husband and I’ve decided that we would reach financial independence once our net worth meets 33X our annual expenses. However, in that article, I didn’t mention how we came up with the number, 33 or why we chose this particular number.

4% withdrawal rule

In this article, I’m sharing with you the 4% safe withdrawal rule (SWR) and what this number means for my family’s situation. In the past several months, I’ve read many written documents on the 4% SWR (some of them were more technical than others). It took me a while to understand the different strategies behind this financial planning tool. Feel free to ask me questions on the comment section below and I’ll try my best to respond and/or refer you to further readings.  

The Origin of the 4% Safe Withdrawal Rule

After you’ve spent years saving toward retirement, how do you know how much money you can safely withdraw annually so that you will not outlive your money?

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