$VT
Vanguard Total World Stock Index Fund ETF SharesTarget date funds — lazy or brilliant?
Been a Boglehead for 8 years. Portfolio: 60% VTI, 20% VXUS, 20% BND. Simple, cheap, diversified. Annual rebalance. 11.2% CAGR since inception.
Variable withdrawal strategies vs fixed 4% rule
Coast FIRE changed my mental model. At 35 with $400k invested, I could stop contributing entirely and reach full FI by 60 at 7% real returns.
Running the numbers: how much do I actually need to retire at 40?
The 4% rule assumes a 30-year retirement. FIRE at 40 means potentially 50+ years of portfolio withdrawals. I'm using 3.5% as my number and holding 5 years of expenses in bonds as buffer.
The math on sequence of returns finally clicked for me
Target date funds get a bad rap but for someone who won't rebalance manually, they're perfect. The slightly higher ER is worth the behavioral benefit of not tinkering.
Taxable vs tax-advantaged: how do you think about asset location?
VT is the purest expression of the Boglehead philosophy. One fund, global market cap weighted. Zero decisions to make. Expense ratio 0.07%.
Anyone using VT instead of VTI + VXUS?
International allocation debate: I landed at 30% after reading the research. Yes, US has dominated for 15 years. No, that doesn't mean it will continue. Diversification is free insurance.
Officially FI as of today — sharing my complete journey
Healthcare is the hidden FIRE variable. At 41, I'm paying $487/month for a bronze plan (ACA). Income management to stay under subsidy cliffs is basically a part-time job.
One more year syndrome is real and I can't shake it
Just hit 25x my annual expenses. FI number: $875,000. Current NW: $892k. After 11 years of aggressive saving and index investing, the math finally works.
Just switched from actively managed funds to index funds
Been a Boglehead for 8 years. Portfolio: 60% VTI, 20% VXUS, 20% BND. Simple, cheap, diversified. Annual rebalance. 11.2% CAGR since inception.
Roth vs traditional — how I model the decision
VT is the purest expression of the Boglehead philosophy. One fund, global market cap weighted. Zero decisions to make. Expense ratio 0.07%.
One more year syndrome is real and I can't shake it
Just hit 25x my annual expenses. FI number: $875,000. Current NW: $892k. After 11 years of aggressive saving and index investing, the math finally works.
Officially FI as of today — sharing my complete journey
Fat FIRE vs Lean FIRE: I'm aiming somewhere in the middle — $75k/yr. Enough to travel, eat well, and not stress about every purchase.
Lean FIRE vs Fat FIRE — where do you fall?
Coast FIRE changed my mental model. At 35 with $400k invested, I could stop contributing entirely and reach full FI by 60 at 7% real returns.
International allocation: 20% or 40%?
Switched from a 1.2% expense ratio advisor 4 years ago to a 3-fund portfolio. Best financial decision I've ever made.
Lean FIRE vs Fat FIRE — where do you fall?
The 4% rule assumes a 30-year retirement. FIRE at 40 means potentially 50+ years of portfolio withdrawals. I'm using 3.5% as my number and holding 5 years of expenses in bonds as buffer.
Target date funds — lazy or brilliant?
Switched from a 1.2% expense ratio advisor 4 years ago to a 3-fund portfolio. Best financial decision I've ever made.
Hit 50% savings rate this month — new personal record
Fat FIRE vs Lean FIRE: I'm aiming somewhere in the middle — $75k/yr. Enough to travel, eat well, and not stress about every purchase.
Variable withdrawal strategies vs fixed 4% rule
Geographic arbitrage is the FIRE cheat code nobody talks about enough. Same dollar goes 3x further in Southeast Asia or Eastern Europe. Currently in Lisbon, spending $2,800/month.
Target date funds — lazy or brilliant?
VT is the purest expression of the Boglehead philosophy. One fund, global market cap weighted. Zero decisions to make. Expense ratio 0.07%.
Taxable vs tax-advantaged: how do you think about asset location?
Been a Boglehead for 8 years. Portfolio: 60% VTI, 20% VXUS, 20% BND. Simple, cheap, diversified. Annual rebalance. 11.2% CAGR since inception.
Running the numbers: how much do I actually need to retire at 40?
Just hit 25x my annual expenses. FI number: $875,000. Current NW: $892k. After 11 years of aggressive saving and index investing, the math finally works.
Geographic arbitrage: 18 months living abroad on $30k/yr
Healthcare is the hidden FIRE variable. At 41, I'm paying $487/month for a bronze plan (ACA). Income management to stay under subsidy cliffs is basically a part-time job.
Officially FI as of today — sharing my complete journey
Fat FIRE vs Lean FIRE: I'm aiming somewhere in the middle — $75k/yr. Enough to travel, eat well, and not stress about every purchase.
International allocation: 20% or 40%?
Been a Boglehead for 8 years. Portfolio: 60% VTI, 20% VXUS, 20% BND. Simple, cheap, diversified. Annual rebalance. 11.2% CAGR since inception.
Expense ratios matter more than you think — the math
Been a Boglehead for 8 years. Portfolio: 60% VTI, 20% VXUS, 20% BND. Simple, cheap, diversified. Annual rebalance. 11.2% CAGR since inception.
Hit 50% savings rate this month — new personal record
Healthcare is the hidden FIRE variable. At 41, I'm paying $487/month for a bronze plan (ACA). Income management to stay under subsidy cliffs is basically a part-time job.
Officially FI as of today — sharing my complete journey
Geographic arbitrage is the FIRE cheat code nobody talks about enough. Same dollar goes 3x further in Southeast Asia or Eastern Europe. Currently in Lisbon, spending $2,800/month.
Expense ratios matter more than you think — the math
The math on expense ratios is eye-opening. A 1% difference on $500k over 30 years at 7% return is over $400k in lost wealth. Fees are the only guaranteed headwind in investing.
VTI vs VOO — the one true debate
VT is the purest expression of the Boglehead philosophy. One fund, global market cap weighted. Zero decisions to make. Expense ratio 0.07%.
International allocation: 20% or 40%?
International allocation debate: I landed at 30% after reading the research. Yes, US has dominated for 15 years. No, that doesn't mean it will continue. Diversification is free insurance.