Metropolitan Life by Fran Lebowitz

A collection of smart and witty essays about life in the Big Apple as a young writer. Part Patti Smith. Part Sex and the City.  She has this thing she does with lists…

“Compound interest is the 8thwonder of the world.”– attributed to Albert Einstein

Principles of Wealth #36* 

Most wealth seekers believe they understand “the miracle of compound interest” – how saved money grows over time. Most see this growth as steady, like the gently ascending slope of a hill. But the curve is nothing like that. And the difference is very important.

Here’s a fact: A single $10,000 investment in a retirement account that appreciates at 10% annually will turn into $1,173,908 in 50 years.

That’s a nice little nest egg, considering it began as a one-time investment of only $10,000. The value seems almost unbelievable, don’t you think?

It’s due to what financial planners call “the miracle of compound interest.”

The beauty of compound interest is that it allows you to earn interest on your interest. And while you have to sweat to earn the money you initially invest, from then on, your money works on your behalf.

But the “miracle ” is often misunderstood. On a chart, the growth would look not like a hill but a rake. It builds very slowly for the first 20 years. It picks up a bit between 20 and 30 years. And it then moves almost vertically. So although the value of your nest egg over 50 years is still miraculously high, the values over 10, 20, 30, and 40 years are much less impressive.

After 20 years, the value is only $67,275. After 30 years, it is only $174,494. It only begins to look like an actual retirement account after 40 years (at $452,592). And it’s not until year 49 that the value breaks through the million-dollar barrier.

When I first discovered the reality of how compound interest works, I was disappointed. It meant that unless you could keep your investment compounding for a long time, nothing miraculous was going to happen.

Let’s assume you put $10,000 in an index fund when you’re 25 and add $2,400 a year to it. Forty years later, when you’re 65, you will have roughly $1.5 million in that account.

But if you don’t start saving for retirement until you are 45, it’s going to be a different story. That same $10,000 initial investment plus the same added $2,400 a year will turn into only about $205,000 when you’re 65.

Yes, the reality of compound interest is both amazing and depressing.

The amazing part is that you can pretty much guarantee that your grandchild will retire a multi-millionaire if only $10,000 is invested in his name in a stock index fund at the time of his birth.

The disappointing part is that anyone that waits until he/she is 40 or older to save for retirement is not going to be able to take advantage of this financial miracle. There is simply not enough time.

But disappointment is better than delusion. Understanding the limitations of compound interest can be a good thing if it spurs you to face reality and develop ancillary plans.

And by ancillary plans, I don’t mean buying more risky stocks. I mean creating additional streams of income and learning how to “live rich” within a budget.

* In this series of essays, I’m trying to make a book about wealth building that is based on the discoveries and observations I’ve made over the years: What wealth is, what it’s not, how it can be acquired, and how it is usually lost. 

ancillary (adjective) 

Something that’s ancillary (AN-suh-lare-ee) provides necessary support to the primary activities or operation of an organization institution, industry, or system. As I used it today: “Understanding the limitations of compound interest can be a good thing if it spurs you to face reality and develop ancillary plans.”

The February issue of Independent Healing LINK

In this issue, you’ll discover the real reason more of us than ever are suffering from chronic stomach troubles. You’ll learn:

* Why foods that are bright white in color wreck your digestion

* The real cause of the celiac epidemic (No, it’s not gluten.)

* The common food additive that’s a hidden trigger for stomach pain (Chances are, you eat it every day.)

* And much more…

“If you’re going to live, leave a legacy. Make a mark on the world that can’t be erased.”– Maya Angelou

Financial planning is a serious business. What you do and how you do it very much depends on your particular circumstances. I’ve mentioned in past blogs that I am working on “giving away” at least 80% of my net worth in the next few years. I’m doing that for several reasons…

Why I’m Giving Away My Money 

For openers, I can afford to.

As I enter my seventh decade, my appetite for spending has been reduced to a fraction of what it was when I was in my 40s and 50s. Back then, I had a desire to have extra houses and expensive vacations and lots of costly toys that I would warehouse almost as soon as I bought them. But I’ve found that though I still like the occasional luxury, the experiences I most enjoy are free or inexpensive. As a result, our yearly LBR (lifestyle burn rate) is about a third of what it once was. This I can pay for by cashing in just a portion of the dividends I’ll be getting on the 20% of my assets that I intend to keep.

The money I used to be spending on a lot of unnecessary “stuff” is now devoted to investments I’m making in my family, my friends, and various charities. And since I want these investments to continue after K and I die, I’m finding them with tranches of existing income-producing assets. That way I can rest easy, knowing they are in place in perpetuity.

I have zero faith in the likelihood that all or even any of my government-backed annuities will be operating in 10 or 20 years. That is because I believe there is a good chance that the US will be not just bankrupt but unable to continue financing its programs in the future. (This essay by Tom Dyson – “Why I’m Interested in Gold for the First Time in 17 Years” – explains one of the reasons this is so.)

So the idea has been to set up trusts for each of the projects on my bucket list and allow them to start functioning immediately.

I’ve worked hard for what I have, and I’m grateful that I am able to do this. The actions I’ve been taking are making it possible for K and me to enjoy seeing some of the benefits of all the giving we are planning while we are still alive, rather than have it happen after we are gone.

tranche (noun) 

A tranche (TRANTSH) is a portion of something, especially money. As I used it today: “Since I want [the investments I’m making in my family, friends, and various charities] to continue after K and I die, I’m finding them now with tranches of existing income-producing assets.”

For a long time, the consensus of scientific opinion was that modern man descended from a single species, Homo sapiens. Neanderthals were thought to be a distant cousin that died out. But in the past decade or so, DNA testing has proffered an alternate hypothesis that is now all but irrefutable: that Neanderthals and Homo sapiens interbred. You can read about it here. LINK