This week as I was thumping up and down the motorway on my lengthy daily commutes I couldn’t help but take some glimpses of the current and potential future life that this journey to Early Financial Independence is providing. There are of course negatives but the positives really did override my thoughts. Let me share a few random musings.
On the spending front I've also realised that Living Well Below My Means is now just an autopilot activity. I no longer crave stuff and get zero satisfaction from consumerism. I do still track spending religiously just in case I need to correct course but I no longer have any sort of budget and certainly don’t have a £0 one.
These two mind sets currently allow me to save 54% of gross earnings. Sure it’s not at my target of 55% but do you know what – I really am starting to not care anymore.
One active element with my investment portfolio is of course my High Yield Portfolio (HYP). Trailing dividend yield is a healthy 5.0% when compared to the FTSE100 at 3.5%. Capital Gain since inception is also a healthy 38% vs 31% for the FTSE100. Over the shorter term it’s not so rosy with Capital Gain year to date at 3.5% vs 6.0% for the FTSE100. So this non passive piece is not quite on autopilot but the strategy is well defined and I'm still happy with the results. The question I'm starting to ask myself though is can I really be bothered with it. I'm going to watch it for a year or two more but if results do start to converge toward the index I may just go passive.
Saving Hard
In a post back in March I shared a little about my personal life which included my ‘9 to 5’. Today is my 397th post on Retirement Investing Today and that post is right up there when it came to Comments at 51 to date. Some of them pointed to a punishing work life which prompted me to look around at my colleagues and I do agree that I work much harder than most but this is a little by design as I always want to stay in the top 10% of my peer group. The rub is that what seems a negative to some is now just normal and on autopilot to me plus on the whole my health and wellbeing is as good as it has ever been. The positive though is that this approach allows things like earnings increases of 44% in a year and I can already see a door potentially opening that may allow another step change in earnings. So while I admit to being tired come Friday night I also think my colleagues probably are as well. The difference is that I have an extra chunk of cash which I can save to power me towards Financial Independence Retire Early (FIRE) which means I’ll be done in the not too distant future and they’ll retire when the government lets them.On the spending front I've also realised that Living Well Below My Means is now just an autopilot activity. I no longer crave stuff and get zero satisfaction from consumerism. I do still track spending religiously just in case I need to correct course but I no longer have any sort of budget and certainly don’t have a £0 one.
These two mind sets currently allow me to save 54% of gross earnings. Sure it’s not at my target of 55% but do you know what – I really am starting to not care anymore.
Click to enlarge, Gross Savings Rate
Investing Wisely
My investment portfolio which is largely just a set of diversified tracker funds is running pretty close to plan through nothing more than passive portfolio rebalancing and to the end of April 2015 has grown by a Real (after inflation) Compound Annual Growth Rate after expenses of 4% since inception. It’s also now pretty close to being an autopilot activity.
Click to enlarge, Performance of £10,000 within RIT Portfolio and Benchmark vs Inflation
One active element with my investment portfolio is of course my High Yield Portfolio (HYP). Trailing dividend yield is a healthy 5.0% when compared to the FTSE100 at 3.5%. Capital Gain since inception is also a healthy 38% vs 31% for the FTSE100. Over the shorter term it’s not so rosy with Capital Gain year to date at 3.5% vs 6.0% for the FTSE100. So this non passive piece is not quite on autopilot but the strategy is well defined and I'm still happy with the results. The question I'm starting to ask myself though is can I really be bothered with it. I'm going to watch it for a year or two more but if results do start to converge toward the index I may just go passive.