Starport Seven-Five
DIS Veteran
- Joined
- Aug 16, 2019
- Messages
- 2,069
Yeah, and that portion of his advice is quite good. I just get touchy when people recommend him wholesale as I don't want to give too much credibility to his ELP's, 12% returns, paying extra for managed funds, 8% withdrawal rates, and other crap as it's major disservice to people.My major take-away from him is to be intentional with my money - know where everything is going.
I am set to FIRE at 55 in a few years. I was before reading the book, but have a renewed confidence since I started seriously and actively budgeting everything. Being debt free certainly helps.
Counterpoint: Net worth (or at least a significant portion of it) is what you will retire on. You can have a great savings rate for years and if you don't put the money to work for you... you'll just have your savings. Things that are tracked get your attention and improve because of it.To me, the primary message here is to find something accurate and consistent because otherwise you're leaving yourself open to playing games with the narrative. My thoughts on why I track savings rate and why I track it the way I do:
- Tracking my Net Worth change each year provides no value. Market Performance is not a controllable and over time will settle into a normal trend. I should not pat myself on the back if the market did well or penalize myself if it did poorly.

Ideally I'd like to track both as a consistently calculated savings rate is good for comparisons and it is what is completely under your control. Net worth includes those savings though and if only calculating one... I fall into the net worth category.
Also, the NW vs savings rate discussion probably depends a lot on where you are in your FI journey. When you're just starting out your savings rate is the major contributor to your wealth while further down the road your investment strategies matter more.