Following this thread for updates
Can we get a FAQ that includes this? Great post
The 'raise allocation' system is the one financial behavior hack I share most often. It's simple and it works.
The account stack breakdown is incredibly useful. I've been looking for exactly this level of specificity.
I've shared this compound interest example with more people than I can count. It's the one argument that truly lands.
The HSA max-invest strategy is the one I recommend to every colleague who complains about their HDHP. It reframes the whole calculation.
Hard disagree on this one, but I respect the take
The 'boring is good' investment philosophy is the hardest to follow in practice because nothing about it feels exciting.
The avalanche vs snowball debate always comes down to personality. Neither is objectively wrong.
Great post. The real estate time cost is the number people systematically exclude when comparing it to index fund investing.
I sent this thread to my younger sibling. The compound interest explanation is exactly what they needed to see.
The fact that you can contribute to prior year's Roth IRA until April 15 should be required financial literacy.
Great breakdown of the Roth vs traditional decision. Most guides oversimplify it to 'Roth is always better'.
The 40-year compound interest numbers are always shocking even when you know they're coming.
This needs more upvotes
Love the detail in this write-up
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Following this thread for updates
Can we get a FAQ that includes this? Great post
The 'raise allocation' system is the one financial behavior hack I share most often. It's simple and it works.
The account stack breakdown is incredibly useful. I've been looking for exactly this level of specificity.
I've shared this compound interest example with more people than I can count. It's the one argument that truly lands.
The HSA max-invest strategy is the one I recommend to every colleague who complains about their HDHP. It reframes the whole calculation.
Hard disagree on this one, but I respect the take
The 'boring is good' investment philosophy is the hardest to follow in practice because nothing about it feels exciting.
The avalanche vs snowball debate always comes down to personality. Neither is objectively wrong.
Great post. The real estate time cost is the number people systematically exclude when comparing it to index fund investing.
I sent this thread to my younger sibling. The compound interest explanation is exactly what they needed to see.
The fact that you can contribute to prior year's Roth IRA until April 15 should be required financial literacy.
Great breakdown of the Roth vs traditional decision. Most guides oversimplify it to 'Roth is always better'.
The 40-year compound interest numbers are always shocking even when you know they're coming.
This needs more upvotes
Love the detail in this write-up