Well, its been awhile...so far my Plan B is going well. I go on a years sabbatical soon and I will be able to experience the joy-of-not-working for a full 12 months to see what it is like.
I've got two concerns. One- I want to do a lot of travel, but stay "on-budget" and not spend anything over and above what I anticipate will be my yearly retirement income in 6 years time, when I will be able to leave work permanently.
Two- I'm worried about filling my days. After a lifetime of rising early and always working I find big voids in my "free" time. I am used to leaving home before 6am for work and going to bed early. Now I will be able to sleep in ...but then what?
I would strongly urge you to develop some non-work interests. They could be things like:Well, its been awhile...so far my Plan B is going well. I go on a years sabbatical soon and I will be able to experience the joy-of-not-working for a full 12 months to see what it is like.
I've got two concerns. One- I want to do a lot of travel, but stay "on-budget" and not spend anything over and above what I anticipate will be my yearly retirement income in 6 years time, when I will be able to leave work permanently.
Two- I'm worried about filling my days. After a lifetime of rising early and always working I find big voids in my "free" time. I am used to leaving home before 6am for work and going to bed early. Now I will be able to sleep in ...but then what?
My plan B is as follows -- instead of planning a full ER at (say) 50 or 55, I may plan a career change doing something I find a bit more enjoyable until (say) age 60 or so.
I can pull the plug on the Megacorp rat race sooner if I'm willing to work longer and for lower pay doing something different and somewhat fulfilling.
And the more I watch my retirement portfolio melt down, the more I'm thinking I may need a plan C...
We visited San Pedro last year. I LIKE Belize.If you'd go to Mexico, might as well keep going a bit further until you arrive in San Ignacio, Belize.![]()
I just thought I'd point out that this thread was started on Feb 9,2009
At the time the S&P closed at 869.89. The S&P is up just under 50% and the total market is up 53% since this time.
Sticking with Plan A and rebalancing into a a portfolio of 50%+ equities and the rest in total bond fund would have seen increase over 35% since the thread started. I suspect no need for a Plan B with these type of returns.
Have seen articles on this sort of thinking and some comments referring to dividend stocks as a replacement for bonds. Some of the best performing Vanguard funds had "dividend" in their name. I wonder if this is a trend that will last....(snip)...
I have taken a lot more risk in this market than I should be 65/35, it should be the other way around. But for me the new bond space is in fact Hi Dividend stocks.
Have seen articles on this sort of thinking and some comments referring to dividend stocks as a replacement for bonds. Some of the best performing Vanguard funds had "dividend" in their name. I wonder if this is a trend that will last.
I too am 65/35 equity/bonds. But this graphic shows that dividend stocks don't behave like bonds in a business downturn:
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