Monday, September 30, 2019

Check-in: Net worth $490,000

Hey it's been a few years, but here we go. So much has happened since the last post. I now have a baby, have switched to working as a contractor, and am managing 3 temporary or locum jobs.

Current net worth: $490,000 
Oh man. So this is beyond my wildest dreams right now, especially considering I don't have full-time employment right now. I left the last job because I wanted to diversify my skill set, and landed on a very nice consultancy job (in terms of content. Pay is ok, but not to the level of what I was earning before). I'm working quite a lot, but at least I'm also putting money in the bank!

About 2.5 years ago my net worth was only at $180k. 2.5 years later, it's $310k higher!

So... what happened?

Well, I bought an apartment that subsequently went up in value by $120k the month I bought it.
I also got a severance package from my former employer. Talk about a soft landing.
And I've kept working. This new employer is fantastic from the technical side - amazing boss, really interesting content. I am re-negotiating the contract right now to see if I can get paid more.


Upcoming expenses: 
Monthly living expenses $3350 x 3 months = $10,050 
With childcare, our expenses are definitely not low. But at least our rent now is not expensive. 

Trip to Canada (to see grandparents): $3000
Trip to Portugal: $500
Yep, we have to buy a plane seat now for baby - talk about increased expenses!  

Total: $13,550

Upcoming income (till Dec): 
Job 1: $30000 
Job 2: $10000 Oh the beauty of tax returns. 
Job 3: $1300 There will be a little bit of extra income. Hooray!

Total: $40,300 

Expected net worth Dec 2019: around $510,000 

So, I've been hitting (or exceeding) my net worth projections, despite having left full-time employment in Jan 2019. I must admit I didn't expect this at all - back in Jan, sitting at $400k, I thought optimistically that I could increase it to $450k by the end of the year. This is therefore incredible.

One big thing coming up is figuring out what I am going to do about savings and investment now that we have moved, likely permanently, to Switzerland. Yeah, $100k of this $510k is sitting around doing nothing. I absolutely do not need this cushion as I can find work in a day (I am not joking)... so I need to get that money working for me too. I don't think my emergency fund needs to be higher than about $5k given the work situation right now.

The goal is to keep increasing net worth by ideally $100k a year. And to switch these projections to CHF, so a very reach goal - this will take a while - is to save $10k CHF a month. My three possible paths to get there are:

1. Better investing - consider buying a property/real estate funds, make sure all my money goes into index funds now, possibly other investing such as personal lending.
2. Find a full-time job in public health - UN agency, consultancy, or university
3. (back-up) learn German, then work as a doctor

But honestly, this blog should be more about my career goals than financial goals. Because although money is important, it distracts from the real goals of life - to lead a meaningful, full life where you have a great deal of positive impact on your family and through your work. I hope to get there a lot more than I hope to have money, which is really just an enabling factor. I think I lost track of this a bit in the last decade (being in serious debt does that to you!) but I am getting perspective back, and I think that is very healthy.


Thursday, April 4, 2019

Shopping guide

So we just moved to a place where we have TONS of good shops around. This is super dangerous. With having a baby and working full time, I haven't shopped for ages so I need to "re-train" my shopping vigilance again. I just bought a $250 trench coat, and then found out I didn't like it but can't return it. Who doesn't allow returns?! So I just learned a few (expensive) shopping lessons again:

1) don't shop on a Saturday when you're tired and don't make good decisions;

2) make sure you know the return policy, in addition to: washability, where it comes from, what it's made of, and how it will look after 3 months, 6 months;

3) just because it looks good on the rack/model doesn't mean it looks good on you, and vice versa;

4) Stop trying to make COS and Comptoir des Cotonniers work for you, it just won't happen.

That's like $60 per lesson. Ouch.