This annual review is usually a very quantitative personal finance review and for those readers looking for that please bear with me I’ll get there I promise. I’m firstly going to go off piste a little because for me (and really for the first time on this journey) the FIRE challenges of 2017 weren’t about quantitative finances but more about qualitative mental FIRE readiness. You only have to look back at some of my 2017 posts to see the difficulties I’ve had:
- I came into 2017 ready to FIRE.
- Towards the end of the first quarter excitement was starting to build in the RIT household.
- But then early in the third quarter the decision was made to do One More Year. I blamed Brexit primarily and then secondly further justified it by suggesting it would give us further fun money. Looking back I honestly can’t tell you if that was the real reason. I still tell myself it was but I also know that running against the herd and pulling the FIRE pin at age 44 when all those around you will work for many years more is a little scary. Was that the real reason? For me Early Retirement has always been defined as work becoming optional rather than I won’t ever work again. That’s easy to say but right now I’ve also manoeuvred myself into a position where I can build wealth quite quickly and it would take a lot of effort to do that again if I decided that FIRE wasn’t for me in 5 years time. Was that the real reason? ...
- Whatever the real reason for holding back, I guess it’s not so important in the grand scheme of things as by the end of the third quarter frustration at my faffing was clearly creeping in.
- Then phase 1 of the Brexit negotiations closed out and we again called FIRE readiness. This time given my thinking around lasts I really do hope it was just a Brexit thing and we really are ready this time.
SAVE HARD
I unapologetically continue to define Saving Hard differently than most personal finance bloggers. For me it’s Gross Earnings (ie before taxes, a crucial difference) plus Employer Pension Contributions minus Spending minus Taxes. Earn more and one is winning. Spend less or pay less taxes and you’re also winning. Savings Rate is then Saving Hard divided by Gross Earnings plus Employee Pension Contributions. To make it a little more conservative Taxes include any taxes on investments but Earnings include no investment returns. This encourages me to continually look for the most tax efficient investment methods. I finished the quarter with an uninspiring Savings Rate of 42.3% against a plan of 55.0%.
Click to enlarge, RIT Savings Rate