5 Key Steps For A Comfortable Retirement From Former Wall Street Trader

By: Mauldin Economics
Harvest Exchange
April 20, 2017

5 Key Steps For A Comfortable Retirement From Former Wall Street Trader

BY JARED DILLIAN

“Are you good with money?” You hear that question a lot. But, what does it mean?

It means:

  1. Paying your bills on time

  2. Being able to put something aside

  3. Maybe investing it

  4. Fully funding your retirement accounts

  5. Retiring comfortably

It doesn’t matter what you do for a living or how much you make. I know people who have never made more than a five-figure income and are millionaires (true story—more on this later).

Financial Literacy

The funny thing about being good with money is that it doesn't necessarily mean being smart. I know plenty of dumb people who are great with money. I know certifiable geniuses who always seem to be broke. I do think there is a correlation with intelligence, but I think it is rather weak. Maybe even negative at the upper reaches of IQ.

Is it nature or nurture? Probably neither. It doesn’t seem to be passed down through generations. Some people are just born with it. Others are self-taught.

There are regional differences, too—credit scores are materially worse in certain parts of the country (like the South). Which implies that there is a cultural element to it (which is super interesting).

Source: creditnet

People lament the tragic state of financial literacy in this country. It is indeed tragic. But imagine for a second that President Trump would put aside a billion dollars for financial education. Basic financial literacy, balancing a checkbook, paying taxes, that kind of stuff.

Do you think it would do anything?

I don’t think it would.

I don’t think it prevents people from being bad with money, and the people who are good with it would probably have been good with it anyway. Doesn’t mean that teaching financial literacy isn’t a worthwhile goal, but you just have to be realistic about expectations.

So I think the reason most people read newsletters and articles like this is because they aspire to be “better with money.” (Of course, if you’re reading a newsletter like my weekly, The 10th Man (subscribe here for free), chances are you are already pretty advanced. We talk about some esoteric concepts, like trade policy and convexity and embedded short gamma.)

But today, I want to slow things down a little.

Step 1: Pay Your Bills on Time

I worked with a guy at Lehman who had a drawer full of unpaid cable bills. I struggle to see how that happens when you’re making multiple six figures. Seems a bit unmanageable to me.

A life hack I’ve discovered is that when I get a bill, I pay it immediately. I find that if I put it off for even a day, it gets buried in the pile of paper, and then I forget about it.