Traditional investing advice mostly goes like this: start investing as soon as you can, and keep adding to your investments (mostly stocks) throughout your career. Keep your investments isolated in a RRSP/TFSA and don't touch that money until 30+ years later when you eventually retire. When you buy a home, keep adding to your investments even while you are paying your mortgage. In other words, stay in debt, because your investments will probably outperform the mortgage expense.
I think this creates two traps:
1. You become very dependent on employment cashflow (and therefore dependent on an employer), even if you are asset-rich. This occurred to me today when one my coworkers, a top income earner at our firm, said he has a great fear of being unable to pay his mortgage and losing his house. What this suggests to me is that he's very dependent on this job, and really needs the cashflow. The interesting thing here is that he could, obviously, find ways to pay the mortgage by liquidating his investments. But because the investments are meant to be long term and hands-off, he ends up feeling the stress of short term cashflow needs. So this discomfort is a consequence of structuring investments on a long term retirement framework.
2. You must defer enjoyment of your savings until you are quite old. In practical terms this means things like: time off, leisure, freedom from having to work, etc. You won't get to do these things until you're quite old, and you go through all your working years constantly strapped for time, with barely enough time for leisure and vacations, and certainly with no freedom from having to work.
I see these as unpleasant traps, and unnecessarily. Someone with a large net worth shouldn't have to be so worried about short term cashflow (1), nor should they defer joy of leisure and freedom until old age (2).
I am really interested in what others here think about this. Did you see similar traps during your working years? Or do you see this differently? Have you found a way to escape from these traps?
I think this creates two traps:
1. You become very dependent on employment cashflow (and therefore dependent on an employer), even if you are asset-rich. This occurred to me today when one my coworkers, a top income earner at our firm, said he has a great fear of being unable to pay his mortgage and losing his house. What this suggests to me is that he's very dependent on this job, and really needs the cashflow. The interesting thing here is that he could, obviously, find ways to pay the mortgage by liquidating his investments. But because the investments are meant to be long term and hands-off, he ends up feeling the stress of short term cashflow needs. So this discomfort is a consequence of structuring investments on a long term retirement framework.
2. You must defer enjoyment of your savings until you are quite old. In practical terms this means things like: time off, leisure, freedom from having to work, etc. You won't get to do these things until you're quite old, and you go through all your working years constantly strapped for time, with barely enough time for leisure and vacations, and certainly with no freedom from having to work.
I see these as unpleasant traps, and unnecessarily. Someone with a large net worth shouldn't have to be so worried about short term cashflow (1), nor should they defer joy of leisure and freedom until old age (2).
I am really interested in what others here think about this. Did you see similar traps during your working years? Or do you see this differently? Have you found a way to escape from these traps?