I’m almost 40 and according to the wisdom found everywhere on the internet, I don’t have enough saved for retirement. Which worries me because I’ve been saving for as long as I’ve had a proper job with access to a retirement vehicle. But also because the internet wisdom doesn’t make sense or sound feasible.

According to what I’ve read, you’re supposed to have:

  • 1x your income when you’re 30
  • 3x your income when you’re 40
  • 6x at 50
  • 8x at 60
  • 10x when you retire

I’m almost 40 and I have just barely over 1x saved. So it feels like I’m 10 years behind. However, my income has grown substantially over the course of my 30s, more than doubling. So accounting for growth in income, I do have almost 3x my salary in my late 20s. But similarly, the above advice could be interpreted as needing 6x the income you had when you were 30 by they time you’re 40. And by that metric, I’m doing even worse!

  • nottelling@lemmy.world
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    1 year ago

    You know, that’s what they say, and it makes sense. You can’t play the market. But I’m not saying play the market. I’m saying that when crises come up, the indexes should rebalance before those crises flush our savings, rather than 3 months later.

    Send to me that’s what the rich people with big portfolios seem to do. The market tanks, they all move somewhere safer.

    Meanwhile, us chumps absorb the losses.

    • Thorny_Insight@lemm.ee
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      1 year ago

      I’m saying that when crises come up, the indexes should rebalance before those crises flush our savings, rather than 3 months later.

      I don’t even know what that means. Market crashes don’t flush anyone’s savings. You only lose money if you start selling when they’re going down. You don’t. You just hold and wait untill it comes back up again. It has always came back up again no matter how deep it dips.

      When you hear stories about people losing their savings during market crashes it’s either people who got nervous watching the value of their investments going down and they started selling at a loss or they were invested into individual companies that went bankrupt.