Year in Review of My 2023 Investments
About 3.5 years ago, I set a goal to reach $10 million by age 40. However, I set this goal when I lived in an expensive city in Silicon Valley, where median home prices exceeded $1 million. In the specific neighborhood I lived in within that city, homes were easily above the $2 million mark! Now that I live in a town with a lower cost of living in the Dallas metro, it would be tempting to lower that goal. However, I still believe reaching $10 million by 40 is attainable. To help accomplish this goal, I compare my investment performance to the S&P 500’s and Nasdaq’s at the end of every year. In this post, I will share my comparisons and see how my investments fared in 2023.
Financial Resolutions with Little Effort but Big Rewards
Happy New Year! I hope your finances had as great a comeback in 2023 as mine did! Now that it’s the start of a new year, you’re probably setting some resolutions for yourself. So be sure to include some financial ones, too. Here are some practical ones that require little effort but reward you handsomely in the long run.
2022 Business and Personal Goals
Happy New Year! To kick off every new year, I like to set goals for all aspects of my life, both personal and professional. By publicizing my goals, it helps me stay accountable for the things I set out to accomplish for the year. I also hope that some of my goals inspire you to set some for yourselves, too! Let’s get started.
My 2021 Year-End Review
At the start of 2021, I set out to accomplish some business and personal finance goals for the year. By the middle of the year, I published a review of how those goals were progressing, as well as some of my personal goals (not money-related). Now that we’re at the end of 2021 (crazy how fast it went), I will do one final review of both my money & non-money goals and share how I did!
I Just FIRE’d Myself At 31
When I was studying computer science in college just over 10 years ago, I told my partner that I was going to retire early. They didn’t understand what this meant at the time, nor was I taken seriously. We hadn’t even started working yet, so how could we think about retirement already? Well, fast forward to today, and I have 2 major life updates to share with you all!
First, I have officially quit my corporate career at the age of 31, having worked for just a decade. Second, I’m relocating from Silicon Valley, California to Dallas, Texas, accelerating my FI/RE timeline by nearly a decade! These were some of the hardest decisions I’ve made in my life, but they are ultimately right for me and my family. I’m positive that at least 80% of you have thought of relocating (however fleeting) and are also wondering why I am quitting my corporate career at such a young age, so I will share my thought process and reasoning in this blog post.
How A Self-Made Millionaire Budgets
Have you ever wondered how much a millionaire spends per year? Do they even have budgets? What do they spend their money on? Speaking from firsthand experience as a self-made millionaire, I definitely do have a budget, and I know exactly where my money is spent every month. It’s important to know where my money is spent no matter how high my net worth is. Tracking my expenses and comparing them against my budget is crucial to attaining financial independence some day. Becoming a self-made millionaire in my 20s didn’t happen by sheer luck; it was calculated. Budgeting helped me get to where I am today, and I assure you that it will continue to help me reach my goal to attain financial independence by 40.
Reaching Financial Independence in Silicon Valley With $10,000,000
Financial Independence, Retire Early, AKA the FIRE movement, has become a major theme among millennials this past decade, including myself. Shortly after you start reading about it, you’ll learn that FIRE means different things to different people. In this post, I’ll give my take on what FIRE means to me, why I think it’s important, and how I determined my FIRE number. That is, how much money one needs to reach financial independence and retire early.