Liked by: roxanne9153, Tarantado, Susan L., kimmiemae, myst4au, Capurato, NinS, Candy Kane, Luna126, sestrahelena
@maverick1 wrote:
Just search for the FIRE movement and you'll find people like me who were able to be responsible adults and enter the double comma club. It just takes ambition and time. Most people can do it. People with bad habits or poor learning skills will not.
Liked by: Candy Kane, sestrahelena
@maverick1 wrote:
Just search for the FIRE movement and you'll find people like me who were able to be responsible adults and enter the double comma club. It just takes ambition and time. Most people can do it. People with bad habits or poor learning skills will not.
Liked by: Candy Kane
@SoCalMama wrote:
I have seen the FIRE movement things, and they are interesting. I wonder if it has changed at all during the pandemic?
My co-worker found some guy (millennial) on tik toc today that was claiming that if you put $1200 a year into an IRA for 40 years, you'd have $1,000,000 when you retired. Thing is ... you can't count on 12% return, which is what this idiot claimed. So, yes, at 12%, you could have $1,000,000. At a more realistic 7%, I think it was $250,000. People will believe all kinds of crap on the internet without checking it out.
Liked by: Madetoshop
Anne Scheiber is another inspiration.@ wrote:
Anne Scheiber worked for the IRS back in the 1920s, 1930s, and 1940s.
Although she had a law degree and by all accounts was a solid worker, she was never promoted, and it is argued that the fact she was a woman and Jewish in that era was the key reason. Women having the right to vote was still a new thing back then, after all.
Eventually she retired at the age of 51, and received a small pension and social security from then on.
But that’s where the story begins.
Over the next 50 years, she lived frugally in her New York apartment, read the financial statements of various companies, and invested in a number of blue chip dividend-paying companies.
When she died at 101, she left $22 million to Yeshiva University’s Stern College for Women and Albert Einstein School of Medicine, for the purpose of providing scholarships to young women.
She invested in things she knew about- companies that owned theaters and pharmaceuticals, and Coca Cola.
Liked by: Candy Kane
Liked by: Candy Kane
Liked by: Madetoshop
Liked by: maverick1, Madetoshop
Liked by: Candy Kane
Liked by: maverick1, Candy Kane
Liked by: Candy Kane, Madetoshop