You often hear people in the investing community talk about their FIRE number. The mysterious number that will set them free for life. But what precisely is FIRE?
The FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement is a lifestyle movement with the goal of gaining financial independence and retiring early. FIRE followers believe that retirement is no longer dependent on age, but only requires a measurable amount of liquid assets to enable early retirement.
Those seeking to attain FIRE intentionally maximise their savings rate by finding ways to increase income and/or decrease expenses, along with aggressive investments that increase their wealth and/or income. The objective is to accumulate assets until the resulting passive income provides enough money for living expenses throughout one’s retirement years.
For those in the FIRE movement, “financial independence” doesn’t necessarily mean sitting on a tropical beach or non-stop shopping trips. It means reaching the point where you don’t have to work a full-time 9-5 job if you don’t want to. You can scale back to a part-time job or simply stop working altogether. The choice really is yours – just imagine that freedom.
Personally, I know I will most likely never fully retire, because I love teaching and it doesn’t feel like work. So I’ve replaced the R and E in FIRE with “Recreational Employment” – work only on what you love.
How much you need to retire is a personal calculation (notwithstanding those pesky requirements like eating). This is where you start to determine your FIRE number.
And then, you stick to your draw-down rate:
In the first year of retirement, you should only withdraw 4% of your portfolio. You may only increase this number by inflation annually and your money will last on average 30+ years, market dependent.
If the bulk of your savings are in regulation 28 retirement funds, the mandatory retirement age continues to be relevant. But that doesn’t make retiring at 45 impossible.
Save as much of your income as possible:
Live exceptionally frugally:
Pay off all your debt, including your home loan:
Increase your income through side hustles and invest it aggressively:
You must have a three- to six-month emergency fund, so you never disturb your investments:
Invest in low-cost investment vehicles like exchange traded funds, blue-chip and dividend-paying equities:
I’ve always been an avid saver and I knew I wanted to retire a bit earlier than normal. When I started working and saving, I didn’t know of FIRE and the fancy formula. By the time I got hold of the formula and did more online research, I was amazed at the broad spectrum of people from all walks of life working towards FIRE. It wasn’t directors and presidents of companies, but everyday people yearning for freedom. Some needed very little, but everyone needed to work equally hard because the “multiply by 300” formula is universal and levels the playing field in terms of sacrifices.
But how much sacrifice FIRE requires you and your family to make really depends on your goals, your disposable income, and what you’re prepared to give up or cut back on to get your savings rate as high as possible.
If this approach interests you, give it a go. Us FIRE followers do have fun and splurge on what’s important to us, but our savings goals remain firmly intact.
Rochelle Warries is a qualified chartered accountant with 16 years of experience, and a seasoned stock market investor. Her passion is helping novice investors build healthy investment portfolios through financial education. You can find her on X: @soulfairy3.
This article is published courtesy Just One Lap.
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Any opinions, news, research, reports, analyses, prices, or other information contained within this research is provided by an employee of EasyEquities an authorised FSP (FSP no 22588) as general market commentary and does not constitute investment advice for the purposes of the Financial Advisory and Intermediary Services Act, 2002. First World Trader (Pty) Ltd t/a EasyEquities (“EasyEquities”) does not warrant the correctness, accuracy, timeliness, reliability or completeness of any information (i) contained within this research and (ii) received from third party data providers. You must rely solely upon your own judgment in all aspects of your investment and/or trading decisions and all investments and/or trades are made at your own risk. EasyEquities (including any of their employees) will not accept any liability for any direct or indirect loss or damage, including without limitation, any loss of profit, which may arise directly or indirectly from use of or reliance on the market commentary. The content contained within is subject to change at any time without notice.
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