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	<title>Comments on: 3 Simple Steps For A Successful Retirement *</title>
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	<description>Dividend Investing &#38; Value Investing For A Superior Portfolio</description>
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		<title>By: Richard</title>
		<link>http://dividendsvalue.com/3428/3-simple-steps-for-a-successful-retirement/comment-page-1/#comment-37541</link>
		<dc:creator>Richard</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 08 Jul 2010 13:14:57 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dividendsvalue.com/?p=3428#comment-37541</guid>
		<description>The People Next Door

It seems easy to understand why the people next door drive a car that must be 14 years old, dress quite plainly and don’t much if anything on landscaping.  He is a sell-employed carpenter and she is an assistant in a doctor’s office.  Neither has a college education.  But, each of their three children went to an Ivy League undergraduate college and then on to an Ivy League business, medical or law school.  One of the children mentioned to you how grateful they were to have left school without a cent of debt. When you’ve spoken with either of the parents over the years, they’ve never complained about their children’s educational expenses or indeed about anything to do with money.  How can this be?  Their combined incomes can’t be over $100,000, yet it seems they may have paid over a half million dollars in educational expense for their children.  Your annual household income is $250,000 but you live paycheck to paycheck.

The main difference between you and your neighbors is that they are sitting on a stock portfolio worth $4 million, throwing off more than $120,000 per year in dividend income.  You couldn’t raise $10,000 if you had a month to do it.  How in God’s name did this come to be?  Neither of the neighbors inherited anything.

Here’s what happened.  In the early 1970’s, when your neighbors and you were in the early 20’s, they realized they would probably not make great incomes so they decided to live beneath their means, utterly to ignore advertising, to buy used cars, stay out of bar rooms, restaurants and malls, and to invest what little they could spare in the stocks of companies that sold things to other people, such as you.  

They bought shares in what was then Philip Morris, and of Johnson &amp; Johnson, Colgate Palmolive, Procter &amp; Gamble, GE, Wal-Mart, Coca Cola, William Wrigley, and Abbott Laboratories.  They got into Microsoft in the late 1980’s at 10 cents per share.  They had the broker deliver the shares to them so that they could reinvest the dividends and buy more shares without paying brokerage commissions.  Over a period of some 35 years, your neighbors invested maybe $200,000 of their own savings plus all the dividend income.  While you were going through your considerable income buying new cars, running up big credit card balances shopping at Burberry’s, Barney’s and Brooks Brothers, Neiman Marcus, and Bloomindales, eating out 5 times a week, ordering drinks made with premium priced liquor and leaving money on the tables of Indian-run casinos, your neighbors were reserving against their future obligations and for a time when they might not want or indeed be able to work.  While you were unable to separate your wants from your needs, your less well educated neighbors had no trouble doing that for themselves.  The result is that capitalism turned your income into your neighbors’ principal.  One not so small consequence was that their children could apply to Stanford, Princeton and the University of Chicago without requesting a cent of financial aid.  If you don’t think that sways the minds of top college admission committee members, think again.

Now, your neighbors love their jobs, in large part because they know they don’t need them and could cease working on any given day.  You and your spouse hate your jobs because you know you have to keep them and maybe to work until you are 70 or older.  You might want to continue to be most cordial to your neighbors’ children.  When you end up looking for a job, one of them might give you a reference.

Oh, wait…you suddenly awaken from the horror of this wretched scenario and discover it was but a dream and a nightmare at that.  You are still only 28 and what has been written above is but one possible outcome.  Fortune has favored you and given you a second chance.  If you are comfortable with the future outlined above, keep doing what you’re doing and you’ll get it.  Keep spending all your income on consumer junk and trying to live as if you were a person with money and be sure to plan to work for a high school kid when you are 70, maybe parking cars.  

If, on the other hand, you want to be able to live more or less without financial worry, curb your spending now and begin investing.  Sure, driving a flashy car, having $50 lunches and $100 dinners, drinking martinis made with Grey Goose vodka and buying $500 Jimmy Chu shoes seems stunningly enjoyable now, but, I assure you, it won’t come up to having $4 million when you are 60.</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>The People Next Door</p>
<p>It seems easy to understand why the people next door drive a car that must be 14 years old, dress quite plainly and don’t much if anything on landscaping.  He is a sell-employed carpenter and she is an assistant in a doctor’s office.  Neither has a college education.  But, each of their three children went to an Ivy League undergraduate college and then on to an Ivy League business, medical or law school.  One of the children mentioned to you how grateful they were to have left school without a cent of debt. When you’ve spoken with either of the parents over the years, they’ve never complained about their children’s educational expenses or indeed about anything to do with money.  How can this be?  Their combined incomes can’t be over $100,000, yet it seems they may have paid over a half million dollars in educational expense for their children.  Your annual household income is $250,000 but you live paycheck to paycheck.</p>
<p>The main difference between you and your neighbors is that they are sitting on a stock portfolio worth $4 million, throwing off more than $120,000 per year in dividend income.  You couldn’t raise $10,000 if you had a month to do it.  How in God’s name did this come to be?  Neither of the neighbors inherited anything.</p>
<p>Here’s what happened.  In the early 1970’s, when your neighbors and you were in the early 20’s, they realized they would probably not make great incomes so they decided to live beneath their means, utterly to ignore advertising, to buy used cars, stay out of bar rooms, restaurants and malls, and to invest what little they could spare in the stocks of companies that sold things to other people, such as you.  </p>
<p>They bought shares in what was then Philip Morris, and of Johnson &amp; Johnson, Colgate Palmolive, Procter &amp; Gamble, GE, Wal-Mart, Coca Cola, William Wrigley, and Abbott Laboratories.  They got into Microsoft in the late 1980’s at 10 cents per share.  They had the broker deliver the shares to them so that they could reinvest the dividends and buy more shares without paying brokerage commissions.  Over a period of some 35 years, your neighbors invested maybe $200,000 of their own savings plus all the dividend income.  While you were going through your considerable income buying new cars, running up big credit card balances shopping at Burberry’s, Barney’s and Brooks Brothers, Neiman Marcus, and Bloomindales, eating out 5 times a week, ordering drinks made with premium priced liquor and leaving money on the tables of Indian-run casinos, your neighbors were reserving against their future obligations and for a time when they might not want or indeed be able to work.  While you were unable to separate your wants from your needs, your less well educated neighbors had no trouble doing that for themselves.  The result is that capitalism turned your income into your neighbors’ principal.  One not so small consequence was that their children could apply to Stanford, Princeton and the University of Chicago without requesting a cent of financial aid.  If you don’t think that sways the minds of top college admission committee members, think again.</p>
<p>Now, your neighbors love their jobs, in large part because they know they don’t need them and could cease working on any given day.  You and your spouse hate your jobs because you know you have to keep them and maybe to work until you are 70 or older.  You might want to continue to be most cordial to your neighbors’ children.  When you end up looking for a job, one of them might give you a reference.</p>
<p>Oh, wait…you suddenly awaken from the horror of this wretched scenario and discover it was but a dream and a nightmare at that.  You are still only 28 and what has been written above is but one possible outcome.  Fortune has favored you and given you a second chance.  If you are comfortable with the future outlined above, keep doing what you’re doing and you’ll get it.  Keep spending all your income on consumer junk and trying to live as if you were a person with money and be sure to plan to work for a high school kid when you are 70, maybe parking cars.  </p>
<p>If, on the other hand, you want to be able to live more or less without financial worry, curb your spending now and begin investing.  Sure, driving a flashy car, having $50 lunches and $100 dinners, drinking martinis made with Grey Goose vodka and buying $500 Jimmy Chu shoes seems stunningly enjoyable now, but, I assure you, it won’t come up to having $4 million when you are 60.</p>
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		<title>By: Carnival of Personal Finance #211: Burn Notice Edition</title>
		<link>http://dividendsvalue.com/3428/3-simple-steps-for-a-successful-retirement/comment-page-1/#comment-8699</link>
		<dc:creator>Carnival of Personal Finance #211: Burn Notice Edition</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 30 Jun 2009 12:04:15 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dividendsvalue.com/?p=3428#comment-8699</guid>
		<description>[...] Value has 3 Simple Steps For A Successful Retirement, reviewing some investing principles that could prepare you for [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] Value has 3 Simple Steps For A Successful Retirement, reviewing some investing principles that could prepare you for [...]</p>
]]></content:encoded>
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		<title>By: Weekly Dividend Investing Roundup - June 27, 2009 &#124; The Dividend Guy Blog</title>
		<link>http://dividendsvalue.com/3428/3-simple-steps-for-a-successful-retirement/comment-page-1/#comment-8545</link>
		<dc:creator>Weekly Dividend Investing Roundup - June 27, 2009 &#124; The Dividend Guy Blog</dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 27 Jun 2009 11:01:02 +0000</pubDate>
		<guid isPermaLink="false">http://dividendsvalue.com/?p=3428#comment-8545</guid>
		<description>[...] 3 Simple Steps For A Successful Retirement [...]</description>
		<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p>[...] 3 Simple Steps For A Successful Retirement [...]</p>
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