I took Huggard's personal finance class several years ago. I seem to remember him saying that if you made a one time $2500 initial investment with a 12% rate of return it would be 1,000,000 in 25 years. I don't know if this is right, I cannot get the math to work out to be $1,000,000. Does anyone know how to work these time value of money problems, or if this is even possbile.
2/14/2006 9:11:37 PM
in excel:=FV(0.12,25,0,2500)it ends up being around 42500[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 9:15 PM. Reason : .]
2/14/2006 9:15:34 PM
Yea I was about to say, you are way off.
2/14/2006 9:16:38 PM
Lets assume you put 2500 in yearly for 25 years with a 12% rate of return then what do you have?
2/14/2006 9:17:17 PM
tell me where you get 12% returned guaranteed.
2/14/2006 9:17:20 PM
1. change the 0 in the formula above to 25002. learn excel3. ...4. profitthe stock market [Edited on February 14, 2006 at 9:20 PM. Reason : ]
2/14/2006 9:20:14 PM
http://www.moneychimp.com/calculator/compound_interest_calculator.htmThere are better ones than this, but you'd end up between 400k-450k depending on the type of compounding.[Edited on February 14, 2006 at 9:27 PM. Reason : k]
2/14/2006 9:24:26 PM
Except that 25 years is a long time that the Go'vt/Fed will have to steal that return away with inflation. At least 3/5, probably more, of that million (even if you did get that), after 25 years, will be eaten up entirely by it.It's an impressive-sounding number that assumes an absurdly high consistent return, but it still ain't even close to what you'll need to be, compared to today, a "millionaire."
2/15/2006 1:30:51 PM
Probably safe to say you need to put away 10-15% of your income every year for about 40 years if you wanna be really well off after inflation and taxes. Invested of course.[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 2:35 PM. Reason : .]
2/15/2006 2:35:07 PM
^ Or make a whole lot of money for 10 years instead of just working a j-o-b for the man for 40.
2/15/2006 2:57:19 PM
^If you can make that kind of money coming out of college, more power to you. Otherwise, the rest of us have debts to pay off, families to raise, etc. etc.What I do: -Save 10% strictly for retirement. Using that calculator, ~$5000/yr, 5% (ridiculously low rate), 50 years = $1.1 mil.-Save another 10% in other savings accounts (vacation, house down payment, oh shit fund, etc.).
2/15/2006 5:07:48 PM
One time deposit: FV=PV(1+i)^N[Edited on February 15, 2006 at 5:11 PM. Reason : tryh]
2/15/2006 5:09:59 PM
Huggard's examples of investing to make $1,000,000 state you and your wife each make $25,000 and invest 15% (50,000 x .15 = $7500) per year and earn a 12% rate of return.He said inflation wouldn't have any affect because your income will rise so as long as you stay at15% the $7500 now will adjust with inflation, as will the $1,000,000.And the 12% ror is the long run average of the stock market. So it's definately not a sure thing, but a well diversified portfolio could potentially give you that. Of course its all hypothetical, but not completely unreasonable.
2/15/2006 7:04:32 PM
huggard is a stupid fuck
2/15/2006 8:25:01 PM
Most personal finance experts say that you should only expect to make 4-5% above inflatation annually, after investment fees, in the stock market over the long term.
2/16/2006 3:19:20 PM
I think it'd be wise to go into working in finance... look how many people need financial advising.
2/16/2006 3:38:58 PM