Wednesday, June 11, 2008

Part I - Wealth Roadmap

Wealth always somehow takes precedence in the human mind and I am no different. So, as promised here is the Part I of my plan - Wealth

(1) Where I am in this pursuit?

I am a fairly young professional. About four years ago I graduated from business school and began my career with a net worth of about negative (-) $85,000. My balance sheet had no assets and huge liabilities - predominantly student loans and car loan. However, in my mind, I was living the high life of LA and burying myself deeper in debt. It took me about 6 months to realize what a rut I was in and that the first thing I need to do was stop digging the hole further. After many sleepless nights, I develop a game plan to get out of the bad financial situation. Had to make some very drastic decisions and choices about life and money (e.g., moving to a ultra-low cost city for a few years and finding ways to live rent-free or for very low-rent. By God's grace, the plan worked and the situation turned around to where it stands today. Below is a breakdown of my current net worth as of May 2008

Assets
Cash $36,292
Stocks $102,338
Home $440,000
401K $48,153
Other $15,000
Total $641,783

Liabilities
Mortgage $250,622
Credit Cards $7,010
Total $257,632

Net Worth $384,151

(2) Wealth Goals

Long-Term - Accumulate $10 million by 2030 (before I turn 50)
Intermediate Term - Accumulate $1 million by 2015 (Before I turn 35)

I neither like nor believe in "retirement". I have too much energy to imagine or even dream of a time when I will be sitting and doing nothing. The wealth goals I have is not for retirement but for independence. I always imaging myself as an 85-year old actively working on something I absolutely love and continuing to create wealth and acquiring wisdom.

(3) Road map

Simple - being a true capitalist.

The greatest strength of America is its capitalistic society. If anyone wants maximum benefits of America - there is only one way - being an intelligent capitalist - putting capital to work intelligently and diligently. The assets of choice could be diverse and often present themselves at deep bargains. All anyone needs to do is be ready when those situations arise. On a regular basis, I evaluate a wide number of asset classes for personal investing and I will share with you my thoughts as we progress.

Obviously, the question is - where will I find capital to be a capitalist. I have a good paying job that I don't absolutely love (but that's a separate discussion topic) and so till my investments generate enough income, I'll stick with some job but hope to consistently decrease my commitment to a job. Here is my 2008 personal capital allocation plan

Income - 100%
Fixed Expenses (Mortgage, health club membership, charity donations, utilities, etc.) - 35%
Variable Expenses (Grocery, entertainment, dry cleaning/laundry, etc.) - 30%
Savings (capital for investing) - 35%

For the past 4 years I have created and adhered to strict household budgets and will be sharing the details with you as we go forward.

3 comments:

a0z0ra said...

It's amazing how you convert your negative networth to > $300k in such a short time. Hope to learn a lot from your journey.

Unknown said...

Nice job! At a monthly savings & investment of 35%, you appear to be a master of frugality. I thought I was doing well saving 25% of income! Luagh. Out of curiousity, do you have children to care for? I have 4, and the monthly food bills are killing me lately. Later.

Nirvana said...

a0z0ra - thank you and welcome to the blog
VegasStephen - I don't have any kids yet but I think I can understand about the food bills - they have started to make dents in my budget too.