Bill Watson
En-Route
"So he cut out the things he didn’t need — like the $1,000 a month he was spending on flying lessons and flight time"
Boooo!
NYTimes Supersavers
Boooo!
NYTimes Supersavers
Eff that..... I'm gonna blow it all now when I still have a medical and **** to do. I don't subcribe to the save it all for retirement nonsense. Money ain't no good for fun when all you do is go to golden coral daily at 430 and get in bed by 7.
I'm leaning more and more toward the saver. Plus if I save that kind of money I can finally afford to own and operate a king air. I figure 500k purchase and 500k for operating should keep me going for a few years. I would say that guy went to the extreme, but I think he enjoyed the process of saving so I say more power to him.
I'm not a big fan of debt and do want to pay off my house before I get a plane. Then I can live the dream!
I understand the aversion to debt, but I think that you may be making a mistake. There is a balance. I purchased all of my toys with some debt. Usually 50% down. I own them all now and had a lot of fun and use while paying them off. If you waited until you could pay cash for your house you would be waiting a long time. There are a lot of fun planes out there going for very little. Life is short.
So someone that makes $75k a year "saves" his way to $1.2 million in 5 years?
B.S.
The key was the mention of a "brokerage account." A better headline would be "guy places big bets in the stock market and had some good wins."
Saving is important, but this article is silly.
I think he'll need to skip more than one year to get his PPL, and buy a Mooney or Bo. Besides, the vacations he enjoys would be pretty difficult in a Mooney or Bo.His yearly trip is probably $10-15K. He could skip one year, buy a plane, get his PPL, upgrade to a Mooney or Bo, cut his travel time and expenses for probably 80% of his traveling and still enjoy retirement.
Mr. Reining and his girlfriend go on an overseas vacation each year, last year to England and Italy, the year before to Argentina. They are planning a safari in Tanzania in January.
So someone that makes $75k a year "saves" his way to $1.2 million in 5 years?
B.S.
The key was the mention of a "brokerage account." A better headline would be "guy places big bets in the stock market and had some good wins."
Saving is important, but this article is silly.
I understand your argument as well, but for me I'm still in my 20's and am having fun renting airplanes for now. I would rather have more money for flying in 5-10 years when I would want to use the plane for family travel. I can pay off my house without too much difficulty before I'm 40 and then have the rest of my life (which I don't know how long it will be, I get your point) with a little extra cash flow.
I'm not saying there is a right way or a wrong way and I certainly think there is a balance. For now that balance puts me at renting a plane for about 40 hours a year, but paying off debts early in life (while also saving for retirement and kids college). That balance could have me buying a 150,172, m20 or straight tail bonanza and I could easily put 20% down, but I'm also aware of the elevated cost risk that owning an airplane entails. Right now I'm focusing on paying off the mortgage so I can buy the plane without feeling guilty. Again, a personal choice.
The New York Times is the last place to learn about anything real or practical about life.
ROFLMAO. Best thread comment in months.
I think he'll need to skip more than one year to get his PPL, and buy a Mooney or Bo. Besides, the vacations he enjoys would be pretty difficult in a Mooney or Bo.
A friend and I were chatting about this the other day (both pilots who fly twins).
We agreed we'd both have a bunch more money if we'd not become pilots.
We also agreed we didn't care.
Besides, that $1.2M number is completely based on the rise of the stock market after the crash. Sure, anyone who was smart enough to buy Ford at $1/share made out like a bandit.
Mr. Reining and his girlfriend go on an overseas vacation each year, last year to England and Italy, the year before to Argentina. They are planning a safari in Tanzania in January.
Own your airplane, rent your house.
With rental airplanes there are other renters, maintenance "methodologies", scheduling constraints, etc.
With rental homes you have sole use, can control maintenance, etc. Sure you can't move a wall, but squawks are addressed.
The one thing the planes and houses have in common: They are worth more to YOU than every buyer.
Exactly. It is like the folks that are complete health and fitness nuts that end up dying at 45 or 50 from a heart attack.Saving for retirement is one thing. Being so frugal in the process that you miss out on life's experiences at a younger age is foolish. I know people who saved all their lives to live well in retirement only to die of cancer just after they retired.
I'd rather have 100K at 40 and live life while I'm healthy than 1 million at 60 and start to develope medical problems.
I think enjoying life while living within your means is much more fulfilling.
So someone that makes $75k a year "saves" his way to $1.2 million in 5 years?
A better savings would be to move out of new york. Then he could afford to fly as much as he wants.
You likely wouldn't have more money, you'd have a boat. Or another house.
Isn't his job in New York?
Isn't his job in New York?
He can find another one in the IT industry.
Even if he saved 100% of that, if he did not start with anything he would have to have had a 40% return to make 1.2mil. Hardly a rate of return that people can expect from the stock market.