Monday, 18 May 2015

Where did our wealth come from ? Part two


I sat down recently and tried as best as possible to figure out where we accumulated our wealth over the years. I won’t be posting any absolute numbers here but will talk in percentages, which still tell the basic story. This post will aim to estimate where the wealth was made based on the various buckets of Earning (net of Spending), Saving, Investing. This will be a good start, but I’m also interested to try and draw deeper insights on what really enabled us to achieve FF in accelerated time. That will be the focus of the next post, i.e. to identify what strategies we used to accumulate wealth faster than the average person, and which of these were the most effective.

Now for the hard work of backcasting the past 17 years and analysing where the money came from.

Let’s start at the beginning : As a 20 year old bright-eyed, Uni graduate. I must admit, I was lucky to be able to start from scratch (and not negative). Two things helped me get off to a flying start: 1) I had saved money from part-time work while in Uni to buy my first car with cash and 2) my parents had paid my Uni fees so I had no HECS debt.

So, from this starting point, the task is to make a bridge from – age 20 / 0% to age 38 / 100% net worth.

Despite being a relatively detailed person, I haven’t kept budgets and financial statements that will enable me to forensically calculate this, so we will have to make some simplifying assumptions. Fortunately, I have tended to buy and hold investments, and the majority of investment has been in a handful of residential properties, so I will start by back calculating the capital gain and approx. income derived from these over the years as a percentage of current net worth:

·        Property Capital Gains (after provision for CGT) : +20%

·        Property Net Income (after interest on mortgages) : +6%

I have also been a long-term regular investor in shares, but it has always been a small allocation versus property. Regrettably I don’t have good records of all the capital gains and income from these over the years, but my best estimate of the contribution is :

·        Share/Cash Investment returns (including Superannuation returns)  : +9%
Please note, the above are contributions to net worth from these investments, they are not asset allocations. My actual asset allocations are currently something like 55% Property (too much, I know!), 15% Shares, 10% Super, 20% Cash. The point of this exercise is to identify where the money came from, not where it has been invested.



To recap so far, we have accounted for a third of my net worth being generated from Investing, with 26% from returns on residential property and 9% from returns on shares/cash. Referring back to the FF waterfall (and ignoring the Savings bucket which is included in cash), so the balance two thirds must have come from the surplus of Earnings over Spending. It’s going to be difficult for me to break it down in any more detail except to say :

·        Earning (Salary/wages) less Spending : +65%                ( = 100 – 20 – 6 – 9 %)

I guess this reinforces my position regarding the preferred pathway to FF being to focus on the “Earning less Spending” part of the equation, moreso than the Investing.

The final piece of backcasting is to reconcile our historical after tax Earnings (based on employment contracts, bonuses, tax returns etc) versus the “Earning less Spending” contribution calculated above. Again I don’t have the full records of the past 18 years at my fingertips, so this involves some degree of estimation, but here is the figure I came up with…

·        Earning (Salary/wages) : +80%

·        Implied Spending : -15%                  ( = 65 – 80 %)

I must say that before doing the sums, I was expecting the Earnings to be a much larger multiple of net worth, leaving behind a huge amount of Spending that I would have no idea where all the money went. But this result is a pleasant surprise. So much so in fact that I am questioning the accuracy of my calculations and wondering if I’ve missed a chunk of income somewhere. The inferred “savings rate” is 80% ( = 65 / 80 * 100), which is at the high end based on this poll in the MMM forums:
 
source: http://forum.mrmoneymustache.com/welcome-to-the-forum/what-is-your-savings-rate/?viewresults

In conclusion, having gone through the analysis, it seems the vast majority of net worth came from our Earning (80%), i.e. active income from salary and wages accumulated over the years. Out of this, a relatively small portion was required for Spending (15%) on our basic needs and wants, leaving behind roughly two thirds of the net worth being contributed by “Earning less Spending”. The residual third has been generated from Investing, i.e. passive income and capital gains from property (26%) and shares/cash (9%).
This has been a useful exercise and only deepens my opinion that the key to achieving FF is at the top of the waterfall. Efforts to minimize Spending and maximise Earning will have the biggest impact for most people. Of course it is always beneficial to invest wisely and put your money to work effectively, but the impact is second order in comparison. If you are serious about FF, you need to focus your mind and effort where it will make the most impact. In part three (whenever I eventually get around to writing it !), I will dig deeper into this and try to benchmark the various strategies we used to reach FF.

Wednesday, 6 May 2015

Where did our wealth come from ? Part one

I was reading this recent MMM blog http://www.mrmoneymustache.com/2015/01/26/calculating-net-worth/ and it got me thinking... Where did our stash actually come from?

Of course, I have a fair idea that a large chunk came from salaries, out of which some was spent. And then we have had lots of investment primarily in property, which has made money over the years. While I have a good handle on our balance sheet, net worth and asset allocation today, I couldn’t definitively tell you where it came from, or answer questions raised in this post e.g. what was our savings rate?

In some ways it’s an academic question, but I’m kind of curious and I guess some readers will be too. Also I’m wondering to what extent I have practiced what I preach, about controlling spending and maximizing earning as being the two most important pillars to focus on. So this is the background to the following series, which will be in three parts.

1.      Our financial story

2.      Backcasting Net Worth into FF buckets

3.      Accelerated wealth strategies

Financial chronology

Here’s a brief summary of our main financial milestones over the past 17-18 years. Sorry I’m not including all the gory details of salaries, property prices, etc – they are private and I don’t think they’re required details for the basic questions I’m trying to answer here.

 Year(s)
Milestone / Activity
0
Graduated Uni debt free. Used savings to buy new car. Moved cities to start work.
1
First year of work. Mrs FFA still studying. Company pays rent. Saving for house deposit
2
Bought property 1 (20% deposit) and moved in. Mrs FFA now working
4 to 10
Bought investment properties 2, 3 and 4. Roughly paid off each mortgage before buying next
4 to 6
Started some small share trading/investment, without huge success (or failure)
6
Expatriated overseas. Rent out property 1.
6-16
Regular monthly investment in retail actively managed funds (CFS, MLC, Perpetual etc)
10
Relocated to different country, still overseas
12
Paid off all mortgages properties 1-4. Switched from expat to local terms, paying rent again!
14
Bought property 5(overseas) and moved in
15
Parenthood ! Demolished property 4 and built new house (our intended post FIRE home). Mrs FFA becomes a SAHM.
17
Belatedly discovered ETF’s. Switched all mgd funds (2% fees) into low cost ETF’s and direct ASX blue chips
18
Quit job to return “home” to Australia!

 

Hopefully the above time-line gives you a good enough impression of our trajectory towards FF. A few key points to highlight :

·        We invested heavily in properties, but with moderate gearing and aggressive loan repayments. We did not cascade mortgages on top of each other. (Note : Just to make sure you have the right idea, these properties are villas or small houses, not McMansions !)

·        We enjoyed a lengthy period of expatriate living with company allowances for housing, etc

·        We invested consistently in shares over the long-term but at small scale and using high cost actively managed funds. At the end, our share portfolio was roughly equivalent in size to having another Australian property.

Data keeping

It has been an eye opener for me since reading FIRE blogs to see the extent to which people track living expenses. We have never really budgeted, let alone track how much we spend. Fortunately we are not big consumers or materialists, so I doubt the lack of these habits has dented our wealth too badly, but it is hard to say how much more effective we might have been over the years. One thing is for sure, the lack of such data makes it difficult to approach a task like this and figure out where the money came from. I will have to do my best to estimate and fill in the gaps.

Back in the early days, I did use to track Net Worth in a book. Initially I did it every month, but then after some years I regret I also fell out of this habit. I am trying to track down that book now, but it will take some more searching through boxes. Certainly it would be very handy for this exercise to have a timeline of our NW progress.

Coming up next

So that set’s the scene. In the next post I will analyse from our current NW all the way back to the beginning. While I don’t have records of how much we’ve spent over the past 17 years, I can estimate how much we’ve earned in salaries and the returns on our investments. From this data, I will infer spending and savings rate, as well as shed some light on what proportion of the NW was generated from active versus passive income.