OKLibrarian
Recycles dryer sheets
- Joined
- Mar 21, 2007
- Messages
- 211
Hi! Been lurking for the past week or so (found the board while doing research on retirement investing), and thought I'd introduce myself, as this seems like an intelligent/friendly bunch. I just turned 30, DH is 31, and we're both finally settled down into our careers and are ready to do some long-term planning. I'm a college librarian--hence the user name, and he's a software developer. we both love our jobs, but they are stressful (his especially), and we don't want to work any longer than necessary--but then does anyone? : We don't have kids, nor do we plan to--our talents lie in different areas. We have a fair amount in savings, but that's earmarked for a down payment on our first house--we hope to buy later this year. Aside from a small student loan, we're debt free. We haven't done much on our retirement accounts--though we've got several IRAs and 401Ks that are probably in the low to mid 5 figures total. The next to-do is obviously buying a (cheap but nice) house, but retirement planning is the next thing on the agenda after that.
We've run some preliminary numbers, and retiring in our mid-to-late 40s sounds like a distinct possibility, though I may stay a bit longer at my job to qualify for a higher pension from the state (I'm not including that in my calculations, as I see that as "fun money" that we'll use for trips, toys, etc.). Also, once I'm with the state for 10+ years, I will retire with full health coverage to 65 (and DH will get cheap coverage), so that's one worry off the table. The tech bust did a number on both our careers (I was in telecom before getting laid off and going to grad school), as well as our savings plans, and it's really only been the last year or two that we've been back on track. I feel like we're a bit behind, but FIREcalc and the other things I've played with make me fairly confident that our frugal lifestyle (we live on 50% of our take-home with no real trouble) should help us make up for lost time. I'm still playing with numbers on our allocations, something along the lines of 70/30 stocks/bonds +an emergency fund in cash equivalents sounds logical, but I'm still sorting out if I should distribute things differently in our taxable vs. non-taxable accounts, how much I need to diversify within those stock/bond buckets, all that stuff. I'm currently reading Random Walk down Wall street and Intelligent Investor, which are helping all this make more sense--though I wished I'd read them in 1999!
I think we're in a pretty good place, but comments, suggestions, etc. are welcome. Thanks!
Sarah
We've run some preliminary numbers, and retiring in our mid-to-late 40s sounds like a distinct possibility, though I may stay a bit longer at my job to qualify for a higher pension from the state (I'm not including that in my calculations, as I see that as "fun money" that we'll use for trips, toys, etc.). Also, once I'm with the state for 10+ years, I will retire with full health coverage to 65 (and DH will get cheap coverage), so that's one worry off the table. The tech bust did a number on both our careers (I was in telecom before getting laid off and going to grad school), as well as our savings plans, and it's really only been the last year or two that we've been back on track. I feel like we're a bit behind, but FIREcalc and the other things I've played with make me fairly confident that our frugal lifestyle (we live on 50% of our take-home with no real trouble) should help us make up for lost time. I'm still playing with numbers on our allocations, something along the lines of 70/30 stocks/bonds +an emergency fund in cash equivalents sounds logical, but I'm still sorting out if I should distribute things differently in our taxable vs. non-taxable accounts, how much I need to diversify within those stock/bond buckets, all that stuff. I'm currently reading Random Walk down Wall street and Intelligent Investor, which are helping all this make more sense--though I wished I'd read them in 1999!
I think we're in a pretty good place, but comments, suggestions, etc. are welcome. Thanks!
Sarah