Saturday, December 26, 2015

To My Future FI Self

Hopefully, you've managed to achieved FI before the age of 40. Are you planning to retire/semi-retire already?

Unfortunately, this is not something that is socially acceptable in Singapore. Your friends and families probably think it's a crazy, absurd dream. In a society where we are encouraged to work until we are 67 years old, wanting to retire early sounds ridiculous. You will be criticized or deem as weird/lazy. Quote from a fellow investor who reached FIRE:

"I had trouble convincing authorities that I was not a burden to the tax-payer in spite of being an unemployed law student. Our government is still not equipped with the procedures to cover income investors. I had to compile a report on dividend cash flows and had to deal with an ICA officer who was just puzzled that "stock market sends me money on regular basis". In a more unsophisticated country, I would have been accused of practicing witchcraft.

The second incident which may have killed my retirement plan is when I tried to hire a maid to look after my dad. Without an earned income in my IRAS filings, I was not allowed to be the sponsor. My dad had to put in his spare cash of $50,000 into a fixed deposit to sponsor his own maid as all my money is tied up in my CDP. This convinced me that Singapore society, as affluent as it is, it does not have the infrastructure in place to recognise dividends cash flow as a valid substitute for earned income. A CDP statement, no matter how large, is no substitute for a FD account which puts us in a bind because of the cash drag."

Perhaps that's why I haven't been sharing this dream of mine with many people. B sums up this dilemma perfectly in his recent post.

It's like getting married. It's something we are expected to do out of social norms, regardless of how much pain it would bring us.

If you are already FI, you shall remember and follow these advice:

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1. Thou shalt not become a slave of money
It will be difficult to give up working when you realize how much income you will lose, even after you have enough passive income to live without working. It will be tempting to chase after more and more zeroes in your bank account. This will never end - humans greed are limitless.

Before you know it, you'll reach the end of your life being a slave to money. Do not let that happen to you. Do not let society norms determine your future.


2. Thou shalt follow your heart, dreams and passion
You promised that you will do that. Remember your initial goal when you started on this journey.

Your dream job pays much lesser than your current one? You can afford to switch now.

You wanted to take a long sabbatical to enjoy life? Do it.

You wanted to go back to school, learn something new? Do it.

Do not falter. Do not forget the initial reason you started on the journey to FI.


3. Thou shalt not shift your goalpost.
It's easy to shift goal post and make the criteria for achieving FI harder and harder.

While it is prudent to take inflation and cost of living into account, you must not adjust your lifestyle to chase higher material wealth, making it so you never reach the goal.

Remember the value you set initially and adjust it accordingly.


4. Thou shalt regularly evaluate your financial situation
Remember, it doesn't mean you have to stop working for the rest of your years. We need to set in buffer for financial crisis and bad times.

Do not squander your portfolio. Do not spend your invested capital. Only spend the dividends, with enough left over to reinvest and grow your portfolio.

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