So, like many boomers, I have a 401k that represents basically my entire retirement fund. Unlike many boomers, I am under the age of 50.
I'm sure there's plenty of other millennials, and possibly even younger generations, who have simple, relatively hands-off accounts from jobs where you just diverted a percentage of your paycheck. It's not flashy or trendy, and it's kinda old-school - like the employers we got them from.
With the market being about as stable as a cement mixer full of nitroglycerin, what are we to do?
I've thrown some pocket change into the Meme War on Wall Street, but if this triggers a collapse, there goes my 'retirement' (as though that could ever happen given current trends). What should I and people like me be looking out for?
At this point I save a lot because I never succumbed to lifestyle inflation as I grew in my career, and I'd like to be done with corporate life by the time I'm 40. I see my coworkers who are still in cubicles well into their 50s or 60s, and something just seems off about that; and that's not where I want to be at that age.
And I do max out my retirement accounts, but that's because I also have a large taxable portfolio, and the retirement accounts let me rebalance my asset allocation without having to worry about the tax implications.
That's for sure. I've targeted age 50 myself. Not that I couldn't be out of it sooner, but I'm getting quite close to 40 as it is, and I'm in a good spot right now in that I have a super flexible corporate job that I enjoy doing.
The lifestyle inflation thing I something I think a lot of people get stuck in, particularly ones that inflate themselves into debt to inflate their lifestyle. I've probably done a little inflation with respect to fun things, but I've kept my housing costs way down to counter that. Having the cheap house in the slightly older part of the nice neighborhood has really been a good move for me.
I'm getting the distinct sense that I'm at a fork in the road that is my career that I will either need to publicly embrace "woke" or not be able to work for Woke Capital anymore. And that's if my refusal to embrace WuFlu restrictions don't end it first. 40 is probably optimistic; I'd say making it to 2022 is a 50/50 proposition.
I go back and forth between wishing I had gone into IT like most of my friends so I could make bank working from home, and being glad I work for a small company where my boss's dad teaches her son to reload ammo for fun and profit and I get to make jokes about Covid in front of whoever I want.
I wonder the same thing sometimes, but from the other side. The town I grew up in was one of those small towns that people tended to not leave.