Updating My Net Worth And Having Some Regrets

It’s been a long time since I’ve done an update of my overall net worth.  As a matter of fact, in almost 4 years of blogging I’ve done exactly two of those and the last was pre-pandemic.  A reader recently emailed me asking that I do one after I posted recently about de-risking my portfolio.

That post was very popular and along with this new request from a reader I’m beginning to think that maybe folks are sick of my focus on the behaviors that drive our finance decisions and want to see more nuts and bolts. 

I’m just being me, but I do find it flattering that some people want an update on my progress.

 

My System

For new or even semi-new readers, I reached financial independence and semi-retired in my mid 40’s using a very basic and simple index fund strategy.  I had no inheritance, no real estate deals, and I only dabbled in buying individual stocks for a while in the 1990’s and early 2000’s with mixed results and some lessons about sunken costs

I found researching and buying stocks too time consuming, which costs money by the way, and frankly not much fun.  So for the past 18 years or so I’ve literally spent maybe an hour per year on my investments.  That’s time in my pocket, meaning I’m maximizing my returns. 

Most of that time is doing my monthly spreadsheet update to get my net worth, which takes about 3 – 5 minutes.  I still have my original excel file that I started in 1997, she’s now 24 years old and on her own in the world. 

She’s also a very flexible tool that allows me to make nifty charts with a few clicks, so let’s get to it.

 

The Goods

This chart shows my net worth from 1997 till present  

Net Worth

Since my spreadsheet started in May of 1997 excel automatically labeled the bottom axis from May to May and I gave up trying to change it after fiddling for 10 minutes.  So it’s May to May 🙂

Regular readers know I don’t disclose my net worth for various reasons.  New readers might be disappointed – sorry.  The point here is to show the peaks and dips, and percentages are percentages, the raw numbers don’t matter as much. 

Here’s a nifty animated gif showing the same chart with a few key periods of time and events along the way.

Net Worth

As mentioned percentages are universal so I’ll provide some here for those who like to play the comparison games.  

Here’s how much my net worth has gained since:

  • The end of the 2008-2009 recession  – 545%
  • I went part time at my W2 job in October 2017 – 64%
  • The start of the COVID pandemic in the U.S. (roughly mid-March 2020) – 37%

Many or possibly even most of you have better numbers than these.  I am not about maxing out returns wherever possible because that takes time, and time is money. 

So spending hours on end to eek out a minor percentage gain in something or jumping through endless hoops and forms for a $175 tax credit are to me unproductive and often money losers.  I value my time at a minimum of $60 an hour and more like $80 – $100 if I’m being realistic. 

To me spending an hour per year on this stuff is plenty enough, I have a body to take care of and nature is a playground that’s open 24×7.

 

I’m Making Way Less But You Can’t Tell

One thing to note about my story is that I didn’t just go part time at my W2 job in 2017, I went half-time, down to 20 hours per week.  So my salary was cut in half overnight.  That’s no small thing. 

I also had to pay a lot more for my health plan so in reality my salary was cut by more than 50%.  As mentioned above my net worth has increased 64% since that time. 

Let’s look at it on the graph again.

Net Worth

It’s clear the curve is the steepest during my part time years – even with a global pandemic thrown in!  Obviously that’s due mostly to the raging bull market that’s on a multi-year bender with no end in sight.  I’m still maxing out my TSP (401k for government workers) but besides that I’m not saving that much. 

Yes, my graphic design business has grown tremendously and now provides me a few thousand per month in extra income, but overall I still make way less than what I did when I was stuck in full time management misery with a nice big fat salary. 

What this really shows is the amazing power of compound interest.  Once you’ve accumulated some wealth things start taking off.  These days even a modest monthly increase in the stock market usually makes my overall net worth jump as much as or more than my yearly salary. 

It’s amazing to see and frankly I worry that I’m starting to take it for granted.

 

If I Could Do It Over

I find it funny when people say they have no regrets in life.  I have regrets – I regret not putting all my money in Apple and Amazon stock!  Haha, hindsight is 2020 as we all know, and such is life. 

But more seriously even though I’ve won the game and accumulated way more than enough to never have to work again, I do regret not being more aggressive when I was younger.  I started investing when I was 25, but I’ve never been 100% in equities.  If I could go back I’d definitely be 100% equities in my 20’s and 30’s. 

I really didn’t know what I was doing, all I knew was that compounding interest worked and mutual funds were cheap and easy.  Turns out that’s plenty enough to win the game.  But had I been more aggressive and not been so worried about losing all my money I’d have reached financial independence way earlier than I did. 

Either way it doesn’t matter because I have enough.  After my recent de-risking post someone commented that I’m actually taking more risk by moving money to bonds because I won’t make as much.  He obviously missed the part where I said I have enough, and that I don’t care about lagging the market. 

Enough is a great place to be.  As the blue line on my charts keeps going up, it’s nice to know that the new gains are all icing on the cake, and I can be adventurous and generous with that icing.

 

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Dave @ Accidental FIRE

I reached financial independence and semi-retired in my mid-40's through hard work, smart living, and investing. This blog chronicles my journey and explores many aspects of personal finance including the psychological and behavioral factors that drive our habits.

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32 Responses

  1. Xrayvsn says:

    It’s a nice feeling to see your net worth climb that much after you have cut down on work that much. Congrats.

  2. Stan says:

    Congratulations! The power of compound interest is such an important tool to financial freedom. It’s too bad more high schools answer colleges don’t make this compulsory. I’ve also been retired since 2017 at 54 but am full in with a little consulting on occasion. We have begun our decumulation phase using the 72T distribution tax law which allows for early withdrawal due and have found due to compound interest and a raging market we have more now than when I retired. I wonder if you have a decumulation plan and when you will begin to spend all those accumulated assets while you’re young and active.

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Congrats to you! I haven’t really thought about decumulation too much yet, but I’m well aware of the bucket strategy and others and will likely just choose the simplest solution for my situation. 72T distributions are on the tabel for sure.

  3. wow! fancy new animated graphic! as you point out it’s funny how little a salary contributes once you have built the snowball to a decent size. we’ve also barely contributed extra funds the past 3-4 years and the asset amount has just soared. i think mrs. me will pull the plug this year so we can start spending down a little of the spoils.

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Wow, that’s awesome dude, I bet if your better half wanted to she could make a bigger business out of her art. Life is good!

  4. Enjoy the rewards of your discipline and hard work!

    It looks like you followed JL Collins Simple Path and it actually worked?! Go figure… Compounding is amazing and it is very interesting to see that your market gains were higher than your salary at one point. Was that before you went part-time? If so, do you feel like that was a turning point in your mindset to begin planning to go part-time? What was that feeling like?

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Before I went part time I definitely had annual gains in my portfolio bigger than my salary, but probably not monthly. Now I get them monthly sometimes, but my salary is 50% also. As for it being a turning point in my mindset, not sure how to define that but when you see that monthly increase and realize it’s bigger than your salary it sure does hammer things home and mentally registers the power of the market. It feels amazing and as I mentioned I need to make sure I don’t become complacent about that and get used to it.

  5. It’s weird right? Every investors net worth chart looks like that, mine as well. And I thought I had enough back in 2012, which is why I left work in the first place.

    What are you spending most of your time doing nowadays? I’m trying to focus on my little ones the most.

    Sam

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Nowadays I spend most time on my graphic design business which I love, and outdoor adventures such as cycling, paddling, camping, hiking, and climbing. More familiar to you, I’m trying to get back into tennis as I used to play a lot back in the day, but struggling to find a group that’s at my rusty level, haha.

  6. I like your point about valuing your time and it not being worth agonizing over financial minutiae. I always felt that way about coupon-cutting, but it can be harder to apply the same logic to things that might save/make $50.

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Yeah time is the one non renewable asset all of us have, its the great equalizer. So many out there who pick stocks brag about how they’re marginally beating the S&P500 but they conveniently don’t count their time. If they did that they’d usually find they’re lagging the market. It matters.

  7. “Enough is a great place to be.”

    Wise words. Now, how about sharing those actual numbers? Wink. I don’t share mine either, it doesn’t add real value to the discussion and just serves the voyerists. Well played. And, I agree with your de-risking move. Once you’ve won the game…

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Yeah the voyerists want to compare, so I at least gave them some percentages to compare to. It’s not a race, and if it is I’ve already won 🙂

  8. RE@54 says:

    Congrats! Your description of not knowing what you were doing early on with investing, finding index funds, time is more valuable, etc. fits me to a T. Ha ha. My wife and I know we have won the game, but working for two more years for pension. I think the math allows us to leave next year, but my wife wants another year.

    We have a lot of leave balance so we are taking 1.5 weeks off every month for the next two years. We play pickleball, take hikes, and enjoy the day off whenever we want. We are essentially working part time as we get closer to retirement.

    Congrats again and keep taking care of the body!

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Holy smokes, 1.5 weeks a month off! Good for you, you earned that leave, so use it. I think you’re gonna be enjoying your time a helluva lot!

  9. Regrets for me is this, only just 10 years ago I had basically nothing at all in retirement investments. I wasted away a decade of high earning years prior to that and built op nothing during that time other than a bunch of stuff. But the flip side is that at least I clued into it all when I did. I have no idea what to do with my accounts now as I’m still thinking about your last post on locking in some secure funds rather than all in on equities.

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      You may have wasted time but you’ve more than made up for it, and you’re living what we know as the good healthy life in the outdoors, where we humans belong 🙂

  10. Joe says:

    My chart looks pretty similar as well. The rising tide lift all boats. 🙂 The best decision was to start investing early and stay invested. I retired from my engineering career in 2012 and I have no regrets at all. Life is great when you control your time.

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      My time is something I’m more and more protective of each day that goes by, because that’s one less day that I have. Cheers Joe!

  11. Mr. Fate says:

    Congrats! Nice chart and thanks for sharing Dave! Here’s to continued upward momentum!

  12. AK says:

    “and I can be adventurous and generous with that icing”

    Nicely put 🙂 And congratulations 💪

  13. My biggest regret as well, was not being more focused on equities and being too conservative. But I suppose you also need to learn those lessons to know what you feel comfortable with?

    P.S. Love the GIF!

  14. wealthydocmd says:

    I can relate.
    When I took a huge pay cut to leave private practice and go into academia my net worth grew.
    When I cut back to 0.6 FTE my net worth grew more.
    You can have your cake and eat it too.
    Enjoy life now and grow a great future for yourself.

  15. Mr. Tako says:

    Seems like your doing great Dave! The market certainly has been very accommodating for those of us that retired a few years back. I can’t complain. It could all end in tears of course, but for now everything is going great. Congrats!

    Always impressed by how much you make with your graphic design business too! Amazing!

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      Thanks dude, revenue of the business keeps growing but the growth has slowed some this year. I’ll do an update at the end of the year. Cheers!

  16. Rob says:

    Curious what you see as the advantage of continuing a full contribution to your TSP. Tax savings? The match is 5%. I just start back as a fed, and decided to only contribute up to the match for now, since what I have in tax deferred accounts should grow to more than enough for retirement once I get there.

    As for “not saving much” other than in TSP, anything you aren’t spending you are effectively saving, even if it’s just dividends being reinvested.

    • Dave @ Accidental FIRE says:

      I’m still saving as much as I can, it’s just that my salary is cut in half. So as I’ve always done and still recommend, the first saving priority should be an employee 401k or TSP. So I do that and max it out. But where as before I was still making enough to be able to save a lot more, now it’s not like that. I am able to put my allowed $6k in a Roth IRA, but I’m not saving much besides those. I just don’t make that much. To your point, whatever isn’t spending including taxes is saved. As a percentage I still have a huge savings rate.

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