Thank you ToddyHill
Not sure I follow you, RangerRick9211. $61k - (401K + Employer Contribution) ?
Not sure I follow you, RangerRick9211. $61k - (401K + Employer Contribution) ?
-FTA c/o 2013
Assuming your wife has a degree in accounting and enough hours to sit for the CPA... she has a masters too?YNWA.2013 said:
Currently my wife and I make about the same. However, her ceiling is much higher than mine. She is currently severely underpaid for the actual work she does (Re: Job Title and actual job duties don't match situation). This is why we are investing in her getting her CPA so that she qualifies for the types of jobs she wants.
aggiebq03+, that is actually something we did, more or less, before we got married but we have strayed away from that slightly. We lived together for about two year before we got married. And what we actually did is we had separate accounts. She had a federal credit union account from her hometown and I used Wells Fargo but also had a United card from Chase for miles purposes. And what we decided was that the United card would be for all joint expenditures (rent, bills, groceries, dinners, date nights) and then at the end of the month, whatever was owed on the card, we split 50/50. Once we got married, she joined my accounts on WF and we have since strayed away from tracking every dollar.
ATM9000, I tend to agree with you. Ideally, I think we would like that in the 20-25% range. But with interest rates going up, not sure how much we will be able to downsize. We would like to start trying for kid #2 in the next year and this next house will likely see our family of three grow to maybe a family of five (as much as you can plan for those things). However, I do not see the benefit of renting. I might save a few hundred dollars a month, but the equity I would gain from purchasing a home seems to outweigh that cost. Maybe I'm thinking of this wrong?
YNWA.2013 said:
Currently my wife and I make about the same. However, her ceiling is much higher than mine. She is currently severely underpaid for the actual work she does (Re: Job Title and actual job duties don't match situation). This is why we are investing in her getting her CPA so that she qualifies for the types of jobs she wants.
aggiebq03+, that is actually something we did, more or less, before we got married but we have strayed away from that slightly. We lived together for about two year before we got married. And what we actually did is we had separate accounts. She had a federal credit union account from her hometown and I used Wells Fargo but also had a United card from Chase for miles purposes. And what we decided was that the United card would be for all joint expenditures (rent, bills, groceries, dinners, date nights) and then at the end of the month, whatever was owed on the card, we split 50/50. Once we got married, she joined my accounts on WF and we have since strayed away from tracking every dollar.
ATM9000, I tend to agree with you. Ideally, I think we would like that in the 20-25% range. But with interest rates going up, not sure how much we will be able to downsize. We would like to start trying for kid #2 in the next year and this next house will likely see our family of three grow to maybe a family of five (as much as you can plan for those things). However, I do not see the benefit of renting. I might save a few hundred dollars a month, but the equity I would gain from purchasing a home seems to outweigh that cost. Maybe I'm thinking of this wrong?
Hitch your wagon to that horse. Serious question, is she hot?YNWA.2013 said:
She actually just passed the Audit section (we found out yesterday and that is her first section, so 3 more to go). She does not have a Master's. She is currently only interested in 100% remote jobs so I don't know if that will end up being difficult to achieve.
ATM9000, I think my main concern is investing for the future. I am looking for ways to maximize the dollars I have since I am still relatively young and have time on my side. I know the longer I spend time investing, the more I will have later in life.
Charismatic Megafauna said:
In the funds vs stonks discussion, you guys are talking about doing this in a roth, right? I keep seeing "regular brokerage" and thinking otherwise
Op you gotta build an emergency fund like yesterday. If you're paying down debt aggressively slow that down until you have a couple months expenses in CASH and don't touch it. Without an emergency fund a financial hiccup (plumbing, roof, etc) can result in bad debt that can follow you around for a long time. A real emergency fund is one of the keys to financial resilience
My friend at KPMG says they have one.Keeper of The Spirits said:
Which Big4 firm has a back door option? I always forget I have a Pension plan as with with my Big 4 employer
Quote:$600 on groceries $100 on fitness $200 on baby items $200-$300 on entertainment and another $100 or so into a vacation fund
northeastag said:
OP, this won't be popular advise, but here goes.
In a balanced portfolio, put your fixed income into the tax deferred accounts, and equities into the taxable accounts. The reason for this is twofold. 1. Fixed income will generate normal taxable income that will be taxed at your marginal income tax rate on a current basis (whereas the only tax you pay on stocks is dividend and cap gains, and these rates will probably be lower for you), and 2. ultimate withdrawals from 401k and IRA are taxed as normal income, so long term portfolio gains in stocks will be taxed at normal income tax rates instead of capital gains (which are likely to be lower for you). So you want your big portfolio growth to occur in your taxable accounts instead of your tax deferred accounts.
Of course, that only applies if you are buy and hold for the long term. If you plan on activity trading all the time, it doesn't really matter where you put your money.
cjsag94 said:northeastag said:
OP, this won't be popular advise, but here goes.
In a balanced portfolio, put your fixed income into the tax deferred accounts, and equities into the taxable accounts. The reason for this is twofold. 1. Fixed income will generate normal taxable income that will be taxed at your marginal income tax rate on a current basis (whereas the only tax you pay on stocks is dividend and cap gains, and these rates will probably be lower for you), and 2. ultimate withdrawals from 401k and IRA are taxed as normal income, so long term portfolio gains in stocks will be taxed at normal income tax rates instead of capital gains (which are likely to be lower for you). So you want your big portfolio growth to occur in your taxable accounts instead of your tax deferred accounts.
Of course, that only applies if you are buy and hold for the long term. If you plan on activity trading all the time, it doesn't really matter where you put your money.
This is completely opposite of what I'd do on this topic. The long term benefit of an IRA is to not pay taxes on the growth, short term benefit would be the deductibility of the contribution. So why would you put something in an IRA and try to minimize growth?
Based on OPs metrics, Roth IRA/401k is most likely the most appropriate option. So no tax deduction and no tax coming out, you want growth to occur in the sheltered account. With respect to the balanced portfolio approach across accounts, tax free income options in the taxable account would accomplish the highest efficiency for what you describe.