Category: Save Income

Are doctors outside of the United States able to retire early?

The more I travel and see the world, the more I realize that we are incredibly fortunate to live in the United States. Clean water, bountiful produce, cheap land, and awesome plumbing are just some of the perks that we benefit from in this part of the world.

Imagine paying $2 apiece for these guys in Japan! Sweetness not guaranteed!

Most professionals in America have a pretty good life too. Sure, our vacation time pales in comparison to the French, but our earning potential is not bad.  As our online financial community has shown, you can really build up a nice chunk of change relatively quickly in life if you play your cards right.  Even doctors, who spend at least a decade of our lives training, can build up a nice retirement fund and enjoy the option of retiring “early” (looking at you, PoF and WCI!).

However, the common bond between all of these achievements is that essentially all of our online financial blog gurus have worked in the United States (except for Millennial Revolution). Is America that great? Is it possible for doctors elsewhere to replicate this financial wizardry?

 

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Could a doctor in Sweden, enjoy 50+ weeks of maternity leave, work for a decade, and still build up adequate savings to meet the 4% rule to enjoy a comparable lifestyle as a U.S. doctor? Or does “socialist” medicine condemn doctors to a life of mediocre earnings and retirement under a governmental pension system?

Let’s walk through the considerations of this thought experiment:

Incubation time to become a real doctor.

If the goal is to earn and save as much as you can, you’d want to spend your time making money. Unfortunately, the 6-figure income that comes from being a doctor has to be bought with time. While some people try to shave off a few years of training through accelerated BA/MD programs, most doctors I know are at least 30 years old before starting their first real jobs. Some of us who took on medicine as a second career are even older when we finish.

In France, whose medical training is considered to be one of the most rigorous in Europe, doctors train for nine to twelve years. Starting at year 7, doctors start getting a stipend, sort of how residency works in the U.S. The difference is that this training starts right after high school.  This means that doctors in France can be fully trained by age 26 for a generalist position! They can actually start generating an income by age 23!

From talking to my international colleagues, it takes about the same amount of time to become a doctor no matter what country you train in. However, most countries start medical training right after high school. This means that you can start earning and saving at a younger age, perhaps by four years. At $100,000 a year, you could have made an extra $400,000 by skipping “college” through training in another country.

Medical education isn’t free in America either. Most doctors in the U.S. finish up with at least $200,000 in loans. Most medical training programs elsewhere, are much cheaper. Medical school in France is essentially free (thanks to a 45% tax rate for high income earners).

All in, doctors in the U.S. could be at a $600,000 disadvantage compared to doctors elsewhere by the time they finish training. You could buy a nice Lamborghini for that price. ?

Earning potential of doctors.

We have a general idea of how much U.S. doctors earn. Our work isn’t easy, but you can earn pretty good money. I work about 55 hours a week and am pretty exhausted after every day. I’d say that the 55 hours I put in is as tiring as 120 hours of writing software!  I’ve gotten the impression that many doctors in Europe might not work as many hours as those in the U.S., and doctors in Asia put in insane hours.  How do physician salaries in other countries compare?

Doctors in which of these countries have to deal with stupid insurance companies?

We have to realize that statistics are only numbers. The reported specialist salary of $230,000 for the U.S. looks more in line with university and academic positions.  One of my friends from Holland moved to the U.S. explicitly for career opportunities and higher wages.   One of my acquaintances from Australia also told me one of the orthopedic surgeons in his medical plaza makes $1,000,000 a year.

If any of the data is to be trusted, I would still conclude that doctor salaries in the U.S. should be among the highest in the world, but any of the countries we’ve listed on the chart should also be conducive to high incomes for doctors.

How do the financials look being a doctor in the Netherlands?

Suppose that you are Dutch and wanted to become an emergency medicine doctor. Let’s look through the education/career process:

Education/Training

You finish high school at age 16, and enter your medical training. This consists of 6 years of medical school (3 years undergrad and 3 years Msc). I’d estimate that the cost of education would be relatively low for the first three years (perhaps 2 000 euros a year), and then ballooning up to 20 000 euros for the last three years.

At age 24, you enter internship and EM residency (totaling 4 years), and finish at age 28. During residency, you earn approximately 40 000 euros as a stipend. Afterward, you get a great job and earn 150,000 euros annually as an attending.

This doesn’t look too much different than being an emergency room physician in the U.S., only that ER physicians might have the opportunity to earn much more in the U.S. long term.

Would I rather be a doctor in the United States?

 Let’s face it, Americans still have it good despite having to go to college before becoming a doctor. Sure, I’m biased, but America is cheap. Cheap housing. Cheap food. Cheap cost of living. Big homes. Big cars. I haven’t seen the cost of gas go over $3 a gallon in Minneapolis for years, but the average gas price in Amsterdam is around $6.50/gallon! I doubt that you’d find $0.99 Aldi strawberries in Nijmegen either. I’m sure that toilet paper is more expensive anywhere in Europe and the toilets don’t work as well either.

I might be missing something as an uncultured American. However, with such great savings opportunities, couldn’t I just travel elsewhere to enjoy the cultures that I’m missing out on?

Would you consider working your entire medical career outside of the United States?

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Welcome Physician on Fire readers!

PoF probably doesn’t use this stuff for anesthesia.

I wanted to thank my current readers and welcome newcomers to the Smart Money MD website from Physician on Fire! We’ve got a great mix of content for physicians and those who want to be more financially-inclined. If you haven’t signed up for our mailing list, please do so on the sidebar. You’ll get a FREE pocket-sized PDF financial handout like those your gunning classmates made in medical school!

Just to give the new readers an overview, I am a practicing eye surgeon who was not always financially conscientious.  I understood the basics of frugality, but I figured that most physicians had enough financial offense to withstand any sort of high spend rate. Not true, but we do fortunately have enough earning power to live very comfortably without having to sacrifice our lifestyles. This is where Smart Money MD comes in. Concise information from my mistakes so you don’t have to make them.

We try to keep the content coming at the usual schedules for dialysis patients (Yes, readers will have to deal with the bad puns). This means either Monday, Wednesday, and Friday posts, or Tuesday, Thursday, Sunday series for the non-medical folks. ?

Here are a couple of must-reads to get you guys started:

Are you turning away millions of dollars as an academic physician?

Stealth Wealth Revisited – This applies to doctors too!

Is a degree from a prestigious medical school advantageous for doctors?

You don’t have to be a doctor to be rich.

How Mustachian can a doctor be?

And here are a few non-medically related but financially frugal articles on DIY work to boot:

The Ultimate Buyer’s Guide to Consumer Car Batteries

How to fund a backdoor Roth IRA

The Basics of Home Mortgage and how not to get scammed.

That’s it for now! Comment in the posts, and interact with your fellow financially-interested peers!

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(Photo courtesy of Flickr)

How should the Smart Money MD portfolio be rebalanced?

The beauty and challenge of investing is that there is no single ideal portfolio. Do you keep all of your investments in equities or split the difference based on your age? Is there a better formula, similar to how we estimate peat heart rate during exercise (220 – Age = maximum heart rate)? Or do you go against the grain and just throw all of our investments into real estate?

Just as how there is no single method to pass your boards, there is no single solution that we should all follow to invest our earnings.  The winning portfolio is the one that leaves you with adequate funds during your entire withdrawal timeline. This element of unknown is why many of us choose to prolong our working career.  I hope that I won’t have to do the same.

 

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How did I design my investment portfolio?

I’m embarrassed to say that I started late in the finance game. I blame my shortcoming on working in a conservative field that has an overly long vesting period.  Medicine is one of the most conservative careers out there.  There is nothing radical in becoming a doctor. You study hard in college, take your MCAT, and apply for medical school. Rinse and repeat during every step of your medical career. Once you master the basic skills and keep working hard (very hard), you can really become a kick-ass doctor.  You just have to trade over a decade of your life to do it. By the time I was studying for my USMLE, @MillenialMoney had already started his journey to make millions.

Finance, on the other hand, is full of uncertainty.  Sure, there is a science to it, but I wasn’t bright enough to open a open on the subject or read a blog or two.  I spent my waking hours learning how to treat prerenal azotemia.  The problem was that I did not realize how important the financial aspects of medicine were.  I had a negative net worth with zero cash flow during medical school.  Someone in that situation isn’t like to take too many chances.

The moment I started earning minimum wage as a resident, I bought individual stocks.  The stupid way.  I bought stocks that were at their 52-week high and ready to tumble.  Tumble like the time you decided to teach yourself how to ski at age 30 by watching some Youtube videos.  I bought stocks without knowing what a stock really was.

That’s right. Indiscriminate stock purchasing marked the birth of the Smart Money MD investment portfolio.

The current Smart Money MD portfolio.

Fortunately I had so little disposable income that the individual stock purchases didn’t probably only set me back a year or two in the grand financial scheme. Over time, I did begin to index and bought funds that my employer 401k offered. With job changes came different options, and hence, the current Smart Money MD portfolio:

I love making spreadsheets during my free hour every week!

Those of you investment buffs will see that there is a bit of redundancy in the portfolio. Fidelity’s FSTVX fund essentially mimics the total stock market while Vanguard’s VINIX follows the S&P500.  Both of these funds already invest in Berkshire stock, which I have purchased separately.  In fact, most of the individual stocks that I hold are replicated in the index funds! Live and learn.

What do I intend to change in the portfolio?

The Smart Money MD portfolio is tilted towards equities, which has made 2016 a great year in growth. However, these bull runs don’t last forever. Eventually everyone will need and should have a means to temper these unsustainable runs. I have been more interest in short-term CD’s over bonds as fixed sources of income, although tax-free municipal bond funds also seem to be appealing.

The downside of CD’s is that they are taxed as ordinary income. For high-income professionals in the growth phase, this means paying taxes at the marginal rate. At the current interest rates, one would be lucky to keep up with inflation in fixed assets. Not bad, but also not great.

Other options I’m currently considering:

  • Surgical center investments. Yes, as a doctor all sorts of investment opportunities are thrown at you. Doesn’t mean that they are great, but they can be a great way to generate ancillary income. Some of these investment opportunities really seem too good to be true (and some are), but they are interesting propositions to entertain.
  • Real estate. Who doesn’t like a great flip story? Or a cash flow opportunity in a rental property? Up until now, I have only been interested in REITs as a way to get into the real estate market simply because anything else appears to be too time consuming. Fortunately there are additional startups and services that allow investors to purchase property (or shares of property) after vetting their location and potential growth options. I guess these startups are an in-between for busy working people.
  • Dividend portfolios. This is more of a variation of handpicking equities that produce some higher dividends. We’ve seen our share of portfolios with hand-picked high-yield dividend stocks like with @DvdndDiplomats. Very interesting way to get more involved with individual stock picking. However, I have been loathe to spend my free time reading about individual stocks.

How much should doctors even care about in their investment portfolios?

A good number of my colleagues are loyal users of Roboinvesting services like Betterment, Personal Capital, and to a lesser extent, Motif. I personally only use Personal Capital for tracking my expenditures and investments mainly because I didn’t feel that I had enough disposable income to invest when I started my first job. However, our needs change over time and I might reconsider in the future.

 

You might also like: A Financial plan for busy people.

 

I think that Roboinvesting isn’t a horrible idea. It actually sounds like a great idea (Note: no financial interest in the mentioned companies).   Most doctors aren’t going to retire early, so hyper-saving isn’t the goal.  I don’t expect every doctor to map out her investments in multi-page spreadsheets, and you don’t have to do it to get rich. You just need to watch your expenses (avoid time-shares, “investment clubs”, and divorces) and keep a strong savings rate.

What suggestions do you have to diversify the Smart Money MD portfolio?

The Ultimate Buyer’s Guide to Consumer Car Batteries

Understanding your car battery is a topic I expect most practical people, including doctors to know about. It doesn’t matter if you’re some hotshot neurosurgeon in New York City or dermatologist in Abilene, TX, you will be considered a smarter person if you know something about your car battery. Period.

Since this is a website that discussed finance, you’d better believe that you can save a bit of money over the years by understanding the basics of your car. You’re not going to become a multi-millionaire by saving on your car battery, but there is also no reason why you should squander your earnings on one of the easiest parts of a car to understand.

 

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The fundamentals of car batteries for everyone 

If you know nothing about car maintenance or if you don’t care about car maintenance, then you should just read this section. The bottom line is that all batteries have a limited lifespan.  Unless you lease your vehicle, you will need to replace your car battery at some point during the life of the car. It could be one year. It could be five years. We just don’t know. Most car batteries will probably last at least three years.

Here are some conditions that will shorten the life of your battery:

  • Cold weather. If you live in the Northeast or in an environment that is cold most of the year, your car battery will not last as long as it would in warmer weather simply because batteries lose voltage in cold weather. Your battery also loses voltage as it ages, so your battery will be more susceptible to failure
  • Infrequent driving. This usually isn’t a problem in America—we drive too much. However, batteries naturally self-discharge over time. Every time you run your vehicle, the alternator will recharge the battery. While it is becoming more uncommon to permanently discharge a battery completely as technologies improve, your battery might not recharge if you allow it to discharge completely. The battery can be reconditioned back to life, but that is not anything I would expect common users to have to deal with.

How will I know if my car battery needs to be replaced?

  • If your car doesn’t start, the battery is the most common cause.
  • If your car has difficulty starting, the most common cause is the battery.
  • If your car is beginning to have more difficulty starting in cold weather, your battery might be getting weak.

If you take your car to the local dealership (or if the dealership picks your car up from your house for routine maintenance), rest assumed that they will let you know when you need to replace the battery. Otherwise, an auto parts store such as Autozone will test your battery at no charge.

If your car battery needs to be replaced, and you aren’t interested in price shopping or self-installation, go to Walmart, Sam’s Club, or Advanced Auto Parts. They will install the battery for you, and you’ve effectively saved at least $100.

You’re welcome.

 

Car battery factoids for intermediate folks.

Congratulations! You’ve decided to care about your car beyond taking the car to get serviced by the dealership. You’ve already taken the step to saving money on your vehicle, which is more than what most doctors will understand.

In the interest of avoid being stranded in the middle of nowhere due to a dead car battery, everyone should know how to jumpstart their car battery. Even if your car battery should have been junked years ago, you can still start your car’s [gas] engine if you can get enough juice through the car battery.

Better yet, get a car battery jumpstarter.

Keep one of these in your car, and you won’t ever have to call AAA or wait for a friendly stranger to help.  Even if your car battery is dead beyond repair, you can get your car back home with a battery starter.

In practice, a 12v battery probably only has a few useful hours of juice. However, as mentioned above, the battery will last several years. The reason is that the alternator in your vehicle kicks on and recharges the battery as you drive. If your alternator goes bad, your battery will also die.  Batteries ultimately stop working mainly due to sulfation of the electrodes and loss of water.

 

Real-world examples of car battery pricing.

I priced out a standard 35N lead-acid battery with approximately 640 amps of cold cranking current for my 2006 Subaru Impreza. The local dealer quoted me a rate of $350 for the replacement job, with a standard warranty of 3 years.  By taking my vehicle to a local auto parts store, I’d save approximately $150. If I wanted to do the replacement myself, I’d probably save another $30.

The savings are even more dramatic if you drive a higher-end vehicle. The local Mercedes dealership quoted me a battery replacement fee of $650 for a 2014 SL AMG 63 (free car wash included with servicing). The equivalent battery costs around $160 elsewhere! The Hummer dealership charges $995 to replace an otherwise $160 battery on an H2 (free car wash also included). Sounds like an awfully expensive car wash to me.

 

How much financial gain will you truly get from understanding car batteries?

Any complex goal can be broken down into a series of discrete steps. Each individual step isn’t going to solve all of your problems, but will help you achieve your ultimate goal.  Likewise, saving money on a car battery alone isn’t the solution to reach financial freedom. However, it is a skill that builds upon your financial armamentarium.

You might also like: How to replace the cabin air filter of a Mazda 3.

Prudent selection of a car battery will probably save you $200 every three years. This is post-tax dollars. For many high-income folks this can mean $400 of pretax money. That’s like doing one extra appendectomy!

This isn’t big money, but practicing these good habits will help you save on other expense in the long term.

What examples have you taken in saving money?

Lifestyle modifications for your wallet

“Your cholesterol might improve if you’re able to lose 40 lbs!”

“Let’s strengthen those quadriceps before we do that knee replacement”

“Let’s cut back on sugar and carbohydrate consumption and see how your blood sugar  responds.”

Modern day medicine is big on lifestyle modification.  What can we do to improve our health without simply throwing chemicals and medication at the problem?  We promote these strategies in our hospitals and clinics with the intention that it could save healthcare dollars long term.  Even bariatric surgeons who offer the ‘fix’ of weight loss focus on improving metabolism, activity, and the psyche to keep that weight off while maintaining good health.  These recommendations extend beyond the exam room–every daytime talk show has had at least one segment on health. Some shows only focus on health, with @Dr. Oz’s talk show being the sine qua non of lifestyle tweaks to improve your health. Does this work for healthcare? You betcha! There’s no silver bullet for every malady, but these changes spark the conversation.

Cutting up your wallet is only a figure of speech…

Is wallet lifestyle modification even applicable to doctors? 

Ten years ago, I would have dismissed the notion of curbing spend as a pertinent strategy of building wealth for doctors.  Look at those commercial real estate developers. Lori Greiner didn’t build a real estate empire by saving money on street parking rather than springing $20 to park in a garage. The Golden State Warriors wins games with their high-powered offense (although the defense helped too).   As a doctor, shouldn’t I be able to go gangbusters, bring in $2 million a year, and not worry about that $5 latte every morning?

Okay, most doctors don’t bring in a 7-figure income annually, but a solid 6-figure income should still be attainable. Isn’t that enough? With a good offense, I wouldn’t have to worry about changing the air filter on my 10-year-old car. I still agree on this principle, and pinching pennies matters less when we become more financially stable.

Related: 41% of doctors have less than $500,000 net worth.

However, most people don’t become financially fit overnight, nor can we reap in a cool 7-figure salary each year straight out of residency (I actually have a friend who actually was able to bring in $1.1 million net his first year, but that is a highly unusual situation). While we are building our net worth, there are strategies to expedite the process without drastically changing your lifestyle.

Five quick lifestyle tips to curb your spending.

 

  1. Sell your excess clothing.  We all have clothing that we shove into the back of our closets. I definitely have shirts that I haven’t worn in years. Once we fill up our closets, we buy homes with bigger closets.  Now, this problem may be more gender specific—most male doctors who read financial websites in their free time probably cycle through a fair share of free t-shirts—but we are all guilty of owning clothes that we don’t actually wear.  Get rid of your clothing and make some money! Sell on eBay or Etsy!  It’s not that hard. The goal is not to make a flip on your old clothing (although there are people out there who make a living on eBay), but to purge unwanted items and get some return on the initial purchase. You will feel better with an emptier closet and perhaps a fuller wallet.
  2. Get audiobooks from the library. Look, you’re paying a marginal federal tax of 39% and state, county, and city taxes to boot. You’re paying to get those roads paved and for the public libraries to stay open. You probably also commute a solid 4 hours of your life every week to work. If you listen to audiobooks, save your $10 a week and check out some books through the library. You don’t even have to walk into the library to check out an audiobook! My local library has both Android and iOS audiobook streaming apps (Overdrive) that allows you to check out books. This isn’t going to make you rich, but do it for the principle!
  3. Cut down on housekeeping. Look, our time is valuable. About half of my colleagues, especially those with kids, have opted to have housekeeping. It’s a wonderful process. You pay someone and your home magically gets cleaned. The problem is that housekeeping is expensive. If your net worth is still negative or are within a few years after residency, you don’t need to have regular housekeeping. For hardwood or tile floors, use a microfiber mop. Get the most expensive microfiber cloth in existence. You’ll still save money over a weekly housekeeper.  Get a Roomba (or your favorite robot vacuum cleaner). I run my Roomba twice a week. It doesn’t wipe the counters, but it cleans up some of the dust bunnies on the floors. It’s very helpful if you have pets.
  4. Don’t be a sucker for expensive furniture, appliances, or fixtures. Your first home (or even your second home) won’t be your last. If you have young kids or misbehaving pets, your couch will take a beating. A $2000 sectional is possibly more comfortable than a $1000 sectional, but you have no need for that $10,000 handmade couch from Bali (yes, this does happen!). Likewise, I have seen numerous doctors and one business administrator who spent tens of thousands of dollars renovating and customizing a formal dining room that gets used 2-3 times a year! A friend of mine also has copper faucets and sinks in his bathrooms. Copper may look nice, but guess what? Your sinks will look like the Statue of Liberty in no time with no maintenance!
  5. Be wary of growing into overpriced niche foods. What do you mean overpriced? Take honey, for example. You can buy your standard clover honey at the grocery store, or you can buy Manuka honey from New Zealand. You’ll probably get a 1000% markup from the standard honey. Does this special honey confer health advantages that other honeys do not? The jury is still out, but you’ll surely pay a lot more if you stick it out. Going 100% organic on foods is another sure-fire way to empty out your wallet. There are many ethical and health benefits to consume certain foods ‘organically’, but if financial stability is any priority, temper the high-end grocery purchases.

 

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Related: How Mustachian can a doctor be?

 

The lifestyle modifications for your wallet will evolve throughout your career.

Don’t fret! You don’t have to suffer your entire life! I was guilty of lifestyle inflation during residency, fellowship, and during my first job. I was guilty of eating Manuka honey while having a negative net worth. I learned to align my actions with my immediate and long-term goals. Once I reached a certain financial milestone, I readjusted my trajectory.

You can too.  Lay off the Manuka honey when you’re making $50,000 a year as a resident. Once you get the firepower to generate $2 million a year from your job, you can buy all of the Manuka honey you want.

What wallet modifications have you implemented?

(Photo courtesy of Flickr)

Stealth Wealth Revisited – This applies to doctors too!

I went to buy groceries mid week and realized how simple the process was compared to the typical weekend or weeknight days that I typically go. The aisles weren’t crowded, I had my own space to pick through the avocados, and there was no line at checkout!

I wondered what the typical demographic of people are able to conveniently run errands on a weekday morning. Wouldn’t it be nice to be able to hold a job that would allow for flex time? It would even be nicer if I worked on my own time.

You might also like: FIRE for doctors

Most of the customers appeared to be mothers with young children. It wasn’t clear where everyone else fell in the spectrum. Entrepreneurs? Funemployed? People like me who took a sick day off? Better yet, perhaps some of these guys are financially independent!

 

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As I was deciding whether to buy the apple fritter or crueller in the bakery aisle, I recognized one of the emergency room doctors at the local hospital. He was sporting a beaten up t-shirt with a logo sponsoring a local 5k race, jeans, and stained shoes. Had I not known he was a doctor in the high dollar range, I would have assumed that he was one of those funemployed individuals.

In reality, he was practicing stealth wealth whether or not he was aware of it.

You might also like: How Mustachian can a Doctor be?

The premise of stealth wealth is simply not looking the part of having a bunch of zeros in your bank account.  This applies whether you’re taking the F train in Brooklyn at 2am or walking into a car dealership with the preying eyes of hungry salesmen tracking your every move. Is it simply a survival strategy? Perhaps, but I can say that I’ve saved a lot of headaches by blending into the crowd.

Sometimes attracting attention is bad for your health (read on).

As doctors, we can’t really hide from anyone. If you are a licensed physician, your credentials are public information. Ever since I obtained my first medical license, I started getting phone calls and mailings from asset management companies, random insurance companies, and ‘wealth accumulators’.

I think these companies knew that most of my colleagues were busy trying to pass our boards too—they invited us to a nice steak dinner while one of their professional advisors gave a talk.

Guess what? I’m guilty of going to these talks too. I still remember that at the last talk I went to, I didn’t understand a darn thing the advisor was talking about. What’s more embarrassing was that I had already gone to a similar talk six months ago.  It felt like one of those Embryology lectures back during first year medical school where you try to follow along but are totally lost when you talk about germ cell layers. He talked about having some “secret” but legal way to fund money into a Roth IRA after I start making real money. I still remember that I was so happy after that talk that I had leftovers to eat another day. I ended up getting GI upset the following day, didn’t associate it with the meal (because what can go wrong with free steak?), ate my leftovers several days later, and got GI upset again and a fever for two days!

I developed a Pavlovian response to these lectures and never attended any more. Sure, I was probably short-sighted to disregard my future earnings.  I also did not have any children at the time who needed to rely on my income.

Had I not gotten the attention of a wealth accumulator service, my future may have been very different. Fortunately, I think that I am able to manage my finances with the help of fellow strangers on the Internet. ?

Stealth wealth as a rebellion against materialism.

One can argue that life is more fulfilling by spending money on experiences rather than objects. It would seem that memories from experiences would sustain happiness much longer than an object like a fancy coffee table.  With memories, we can always look back these experiences and recreate happy thoughts.

I can easily see this corollary in my six-year-old nephew.  He is able to throw the most vicious tantrums in order to get an overpriced model car racetrack. He then becomes the most angelic child after an adult succumbs to his demands but soon requires the expansion pack after several brief days of enjoyment (Hopefully he will outgrow these habits).

 

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Fortunately for car dealerships, clothing stores, and electronics companies, the majority of the world does not buy into the experiences alone either. I honestly don’t either—I wouldn’t mind having a new Tesla parked in my garage any day of the week.

But buying into the concept of stealth wealth can help us reduce our materialistic tendencies. If you don’t want to be flashy making a grocery run in your Tesla, you keep your ten-year-old Subaru running as long as possible. Likewise, if you opt to wear $20 Timex watch in lieu of a giant Hublot, you’ve effectively saved a perfectly good watch from going to the trash or shoved in a drawer with no hope of future use.

Reduction of material substance will help build your wealth.

Gee, if you have a constrained outward appearance of money (stealth wealth) you actually help your bank account grow by keeping more of it in the bank.  I see many high-income professionals practicing this strategy in various degrees. I see some multi-millionaire construction company owners who put their money in their homes and the $80,000 V12 trucks. However, their clothing consists of budgetary jeans and t-shirts. Their vacations are simply camping trips with minimal recurring costs outside of the initial equipment purchases.

I’ve met other high-income individuals who live in homes that could be purchased with less than a quarter of their earning potential, but enjoy lavish vacations several times a year.  Compare that to my local orthopedic surgeon who lives in a decidedly mid-seven figure house, sends his kids to private schools, and goes on hunting expeditions throughout the world.  He might have an Ace up his sleeve, but he might also have a very long working career.

Stealth wealth can make you happier.

Having a sizable bank account could probably make you a happy person, but I’ve seen plenty of wealthy individuals who are miserable.  As doctors, dentists, lawyers, and other highly-compensated individuals, we actually have a relatively stable hold on the income generation aspect of our finances.  What leaves our wallet is more likely to impact our degree of happiness.  Stealth wealth provides us a framework to determine what is important to us, and direct our expenses towards happiness.

Who knows, that guy at Starbucks in the corner sipping his latte may be an Internet mogul practicing stealth wealth.

What part of your lifestyle do you consider Stealth?

Earn some airline miles while investing in low-cost funds

I like airline miles and fancy hotels just like everyone who has gotten themselves in this predicament. There are practical ways to redeem these perks (converting to cold hard cash), and highly luxurious ways of capitalizing on them (like flying in first class with your personal butler) that don’t actually save you money but simply allow you to travel and vacation in style.

In any case, those of us who are looking for low-fee ways to invest can choose low-fee funds from Fidelity while earning airline miles. If you are able to put $100,000 in a taxable investing account in Fidelity for at least 9 months, they will award you with 50,000 airline miles! They have offers for American, Delta, and United miles.

This can translate into at least one free domestic airline ticket (maybe $400) or something fancier if you are into that game (this may be a topic for future posts).

Fidelity lowered its index fund fees earlier this year to compete with Vanguard’s fees. The differences in savings are negligible over the long term, but worth noting:

Chart courtesy of Fidelity Investments

For instance, Fidelity’s S&P 500 index fund has an expense ratio of 0.045%, compared to Vanguard’s at 0.05%.

You can still receive a certain number of miles if you put in a smaller amount. I typically keep my taxable investments inside a Vanguard account, but given the recent change of lower fees with similar funds and airline mile perks, I plan to roll in some uninvested funds over the next year into my Fidelity account.

 

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Note: I do not have any financial interest in Fidelity or any of the airline affiliates. All of the links in this post are public links.