Dear Scott,
Thank you for this reply--this is making more sense to me. So, it is a balance between living well in the present and being prepared for a future with quite a few challenges--inflation, weaker dollar, higher taxes, lower investment returns, and reduced government benefits. I was just feeling a bit of whiplash between the message to "batton down the hatches" in The Coming Generational Storm and the "live it up a little" message I am getting from E$Planner, your and Larry's consumption-smoothing articles, and now, the teriffically engaging Spend 'til the End. Thank you for writing the book!
My wife and I (ages 31 and 32, respectively) are trying to find this balance--namely, we're trying to decide when to move "up" to a bigger house as we plan to try having 2 or 3 children in the near future. Here are our details:
Combined Roth IRAs & Roth 403(b)s: $172,000
Combined 403(b)s & SEP-IRA: $143,000
Fidelity Variable annuity: $12,000
Taxable: $55,000
529 (originially opened for me; not used; saving to change beneficiary to future child): $9200
Cash reserve: $13,000--about 3 months of living expenses
House: $200,000 w/ $135,000 4.625% 5/1 ARM (to reset 5/2009) & $12,500 15-yr. 6.99% fixed 2nd mort.
Annual income: around $200,000 (w/ excellent credit)
I'm the "oversaver," but my wife is conscientious as well. We would like to be financially independent sooner rather than later (i.e., not dependent on an employer) and also able to help with the chunk of future college expenses that are not covered by scholarships and our children's required contributions. Because of compounding, I have been happy to delay gratification to "front load" our investments. We're trying to decide on how much we can pay for the next house--between the large range of $300,000 and $500,000. I am fearful of saddling us with payments that are too large, but I also want to raise our living standard some in the present as a result of your book, E$Planner, etc. Also, we tithe at least 10% of our income, so the mortgage interest deduction is good for us, especially for our age and proclivity for investing mostly in stocks.
Do you have any guidance about where in the housing price range we should be looking? Also, how many years away is a likely "Financial Independence Day?" Finally, given that our 2-3 children may all be geniuses and receive full scholarships OR may need a good chunk of help paying for college, how much & where should we save for them? (All three of these questions have kept us in a "triple bind" of "if this, then that, but not that or that....")
Thank you for your help, Scott--we appreciate it.
Bradley