Tag: The Dividend Dream

  • 5 Simple Rules to Become a Millionaire

    5 Simple Rules to Become a Millionaire

    This week, someone asked me if I would consider writing a post about not drinking a daily coffee in order to become wealthy. I responded that I though the “daily coffee” is a red herring. By following a few simple rules up front, anyone will become a millionaire with enough time.

    Rule #1 – Invest

    Take 30% of net pay and invest it in well-diversified exchange traded fund. Do this every single time you get paid. If you get a raise, maintain that 30% proportion.

    If you can’t start with 30% right away, then start where you can and increase the percentage by 1% every chance you get. I didn’t start at 30% right away either. However, after 30 years of investing, I’ve managed to hit a 40% savings rate. It didn’t happen overnight but it did eventually happen.

    The more you can save, the faster you will hit the goal of becoming a millionaire or being financially independent. It’s important to start today.

    I promise you that if you don’t invest any money today, then you will have very little of it when you need it the most later.

    Rule #2 – Build an Emergency Fund

    Some people recommend having 3-6 months’ worth of expenses set aside in your emergency fund. I’m a little more conservative than that. Personally, I would recommend 12 months’ worth of expenses. My personal mantra when it comes to emergency funds is as follows.

    It’s better to have it and not need it, than to need it and not have it.

    You know your own comfort level far better than I do. Ask yourself if you would rather have more or less money in an emergency fund?

    Saving up this much money will take time, probably years. If it makes you feel any better, I’m still working on building up my emergency fund, and I’ve been tackling this project for a long time.

    Rule #3 – Pay off your debt

    Much like building an emergency fund, it may take some years to pay off all your debt. And I do mean “all” of it: vehicle loans, personal loans, student loans, credit cards, mortgage, etc… If you owe money, pay it off.

    A mortgage may take decades to pay off. This is why I think it’s best to invest while paying down a mortgage and building your emergency fund. Should you get an inheritance, a lottery win, an insurance payout, or a huge raise/bonus at work, then maybe you can consider paying off the whole mortgage. There are a many factors to consider before this decision is made so consider it carefully and don’t make any hasty moves.

    It might make more sense to invest the inheritance/lottery win/insurance payout/ raise-or-bonus in the stock market for long-term growth, then use the dividends generated to pay off your mortgage. That way, when the mortgage is gone you will still have a cash machine churning out an income for you. Check out this video for more details of this plan in action.

    If you spend the inheritance/lottery win/insurance payout/ raise-or-bonus right away, then it’s gone for good.

    Rule #4 – Use sinking funds

    When there’s something you want to buy, save up for it first before you buy it.

    Sinking funds force you to prioritize where you want your money to be spent. I believe that when you work hard for your money, it should be spend on the priorities that will make you happiest. Wasting money on the things that don’t bring you joy seems to be a poor choice. You will never get back the time and energy spent at work. Instead, you get a paycheque. It should be directed to building the life you really want because it represents your precious, precious time and energy.

    I realize that our capitalist society does not encourage this way of life. The Ad Man and his trusty sidekick, the Creditor, are relentlessly exhorting everyone to buy everything they want immediately. My rule is about delayed gratification, not a popular choice for most folks.

    However, if you want to become a millionaire, then it’s better to not send interest payments to creditors. It’s better that you invest that money so that you can reach millionaires status as soon as possible, if that’s what you really want.

    Rule #5 – Spend your money

    That’s right. After you’ve eliminated debt and you’ve funded your emergency fund, then it’s time for you to spend your money however you choose without going into debt.

    Your investments are happily compounding in the background. Dividends are compounding each year on a DRIP, aka: dividend re-investment plan. You’re continuing to contribute 30% of your net pay even after paying off your debt and fully funding your emergency account. You’re saving up for everything before you buy it.

    Keep investing. Stay out of debt. Maintain a fully-funded emergency fund. Rely on your sinking funds to meet your life’s goals.

    If you’re doing these things, then you’re following the first 4 rules. Your day-to-day purchases will have no impact on your path to becoming a millionaire.

    So spend the rest of your money however you want. Coffee? Travel? Brunch? Spa days? Pets? Hobbies? Wine club? Sporting events? Clothes? Shoes? Vehicles?

    It doesn’t matter how you spend your money once the first 4 rules are being followed. Again, spend the rest of your money however you want so long as you stay out of debt.

  • Using a Cash Machine to Fund Your Dreams

    Using a Cash Machine to Fund Your Dreams

    This weekend, I happened across a wonderful video about building a cash machine to fund dreams. It was created by a YouTuber that I discovered about 2 months ago. She goes under the handle “The Dividend Dream” and I’ve learned a lot from her videos. The one that I’ve bookmarked in my Favorites folder is the one about how she plans to use her dividends to buy a beach house.

    Mind blown! What?!?!?!

    Anyway, I want to unpack some of the things she talks about in this video. Feel free to watch the video first or watch it after you’ve read my Sunday afternoon ramblings. Just so you know, I’ve watched her video several times already and plan to watch it a few more times. Her example is one that I hope to follow because I think it’s repeatable for anyone, both on a large scale and a small one. Your mileage may vary.

    Poor People Thinking

    As explained by the TDD, poor people thinking is to earn, cut expenses, save up money, and use that money to pay off debt. This isn’t a terrible plan. Truthfully, it’s a bajillion times better than staying in debt and paying unlimited amount of interest to creditors over your lifetime.

    However, it’s not an optimized plan. Poor people thinking doesn’t allow for the creation and maintenance of a cash machine.

    If you watch TDD’s video, you’ll hear her say that she started a brokerage account to save up enough to pay off her mortgage. She doesn’t say how long it took her to save up $425,000, but that doesn’t matter. The point is that she started to save and invest her money in dividend-paying stocks. While she was investing her money, she continued to learn strategies for optimizing her wealth. In other words, she never stopped learning. By the time her mortgage was down to $430,000 and her mortgage-payoff account was up to a balance of $425,000, her MPA was earning $23,677 annually in dividends. Her mortgage payment amount was $22,404.

    By this point, TDD realized that her MPA could pay her mortgage payments every month. Eventually, her mortgage would be paid and she would continue to earn $23,677 in dividends every year. In fact, she would earn more than that because she would still be investing money into her MPA thereby earning more dividends.

    TDD had transitioned to rich people thinking.

    Rich People Thinking

    While it’s rarely called by this moniker, rich people thinking is to create a cash machine that will pay for life’s expenses. In TDD’s case, her MPA is a cash machine. It generates enough money to pay for her mortgage every month until her mortgage is gone. When that $430K debt is out of her life, she will still have an intact cash machine that will pay her over $23K in dividends every year.

    I’m not suggesting that it’s super-fast to invest enough money to generate $23K every year. Of course not! I’m living proof of that. I started investing 30 years ago, and am only now on the edge of earning $40K per year from my portfolio. I made a lot of mistakes over the years, but mid-5 figures of dividends isn’t to shabby.

    However, when I started, it didn’t take very long to earn $18 per month. That’s enough to cover my Netflix bill each month. By the following year, I could’ve covered Netflix and something else***. Go and watch TDD’s video and pay attention to the main lesson: once the cash machine is paying for an expense, it will continue to do so forever.

    Your assignment, should you choose to accept it, is to start building your own cash machine. Do not be discouraged by how long it will take! Start with small goals and move up from there. The magic of compound interest takes times to impress. Going from $1 of dividends per month to $2 won’t exactly blow your socks off. That’s just a taste of better things to come. Believe me when I tell you that I was very pleased the first time I earned $1,000 worth of dividends in a month. The first time I earned over $5,000 in a month was even better. And now that my portfolio generates more than a full-time employee earning minimum wage in my province ($15/hr)… well, let’s just say that I do very much believe in the power of my cash machine.

    *** In the interests of clarity, I will admit that I didn’t spend my dividends…and I still don’t. Instead, I re-invested them automatically through a dividend re-investment plan. What I do instead is track my annual expenses against my monthly dividend payments. Symbolically, my dividends currently pay for 97% of my current expenses. This is a huge jump from only 4.5 years ago! And I’m still investing a chunk of each paycheque on a monthly basis.

    When I retire, my cash machine will cover all of my life’s expenses. If I continue to invest a little bit each month, then it will still continue to grow and kick off even more dividends each year.

    Your cash machine can do the same thing for you. All you have to do is feed it consistently by investing a part of every paycheque until its returns are enough to cover your expenses. So go back to the start of this article and watch TDD’s video, then watch it a few more times. Do what TDD and I have done and reap the rewards. You’re welcome!