10-27-2021, 11:50 PM | #23 | |
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God that thing was fast compared to my 328 Ever since then, I've been looking at E46 M3s and what not. But, I myself don't like monthly payments and don't have $29k+ to cash out on a car.
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10-27-2021, 11:51 PM | #24 |
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Ahhh my mom's got a 18 E-300. Same motor that your GLC-300 has.
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10-27-2021, 11:55 PM | #25 | ||
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10-28-2021, 12:09 AM | #26 |
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The motor is not my complaint. The fit and finish, the crappy transmission, the god-awful rain-sensing wipers, the stupid "crash avoidance" warnings, the fickle keyless locking/entry...I could go on, but you get the point. Shit just doesn't work as it should.
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10-28-2021, 12:15 AM | #27 | |
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Tell me about it. I drove my mom's E-300 to the dealer for warranty work. She's got the Premium 3 package which comes with all the safety features like lane keep assist and what not. The thing is sensitive asl. Good thing there's a button to turn that crap off. |
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10-28-2021, 12:40 AM | #28 |
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Apparently I can open a retirement account with my job. 3% is $53 per pay period.
I've got the option of either before taxes or ROTH.
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10-28-2021, 03:50 AM | #29 | |
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10-28-2021, 07:19 AM | #31 |
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To add to the advice and if I were you, I would fund a Roth with as much money as allowed by IRS rules. A Roth allows you to take after tax dollars to be invested in a retirement account. The great thing about a Roth is any appreciation in the account taken out at retirement age is tax free. There are also two other good things about a Roth. If you need to take out any money that you've put in (and not any of the appreciation) prior to retirement, there is no penalty. The other good thing is there is no minimum distribution requirements at retirement. What this means is you're not forced to take out a minimum amount so you can leave the money in to allow it to continue to grow. With a 401k/IRA, you're required to take out a minimum amount per year at retirement.
What a 401k will do for you is allow you to put pre-tax money into a retirement account. The appreciation/money you put in is not taxed until you take it out. The tax on the money you take out is taxed as ordinary income. If you take the money out prior to age 59.5, you'll be subject to a 10% penalty along with I think a minimum of 20% automatically withheld for Federal taxes. There are three advantages with 401ks. The money you put in lowers your current year tax basis as your adjusted gross income will be lower. Many 401ks set up by an employer will have an employer match. If this is in play, always put in at least the minimum amount to get the full match. And the last thing which is obvious, all the money that is in it grows tax free until you take it out. My advice would be to do a three pronged investment strategy. First, is to fund a Roth to the maximum allowed. Two, fund your 401k at least up to the amount you will get a full match by your employer. Three, open up an after tax investment account and put some money there at least into a no load index mutual fund. Having an after tax investment account gives you so much flexibility as it allows you to take money out at a (currently) low tax rate as you're only dealing with capital gains taxes. It gives you a fund source to provide flexibility on where you would draw funds out in retirement. |
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10-28-2021, 07:34 AM | #32 | |
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I buy my cars 2 or 3 years old with low miles so I'm not taking the HUGE depreciation hit. My current daily driver is an '17 X6. original sticker was just under $80k... when I bought it is was,IIRC, $35k with 20K miles trade in on my last car was around $10k (a '12 550GT with over 200k miles) I'll drive this for 4 years, it'll be paid for and likely have $15-20K in residual value. I may keep it for my daughter, her A4 is getting tired I love cars... but have no need for the newest models in a daily driver. My daily pulls out of the garage, drives to the office, parks for 10 hours or so and drives home to the garage. Prepandemic I was on the road and would put 50-60K miles on a car, which is why I'm driving BMW CPO.... Financially the unlimited miles warranty makes sense My lovely wife however (she makes better money than me) drives a new Mercedes every 3-4 years. It normally when she goes in for service at the dealer and comes home with something different. However I made the same mistake as the original poster. At 22, living with my parents got my first real job out of college and came home with a P-car. an '86 964 cab with "turbo look" body. In 1991 I was making 35k . My Parent's 900sq ft home had mom's 10 year old car, dad's 7 year old ford escort, and my younger brother's mustang 2 and my 911 were parked on the sidewalk/lawn. |
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10-28-2021, 08:44 AM | #33 |
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A car (even used) is probably the worst thing you can buy right now. Get some mods for yours like wheels, etc that will help you enjoy the car again.
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10-28-2021, 09:49 AM | #34 | |
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When it came time to retire at the end of his long career, he contacted his retirement fund company to set up his monthly dispersement plan. They baffled him with their first question...which account he wanted to tap? He totally forgot about the first account, and it had sat idle for 40+ years. Believe it or not, that $1500 grew into $87K!!! If that isn't enough motivation to open a retirement account when you're 20, nothing is. With that said, I was late to the game like M_Six, and am now facing a serious health issue that may force me into early retirement with a *severely* under-funded retirement account. No male in my family going back four generations ever lived past age 50, so saving for a retirement didn't seem important since I never planned to reach that point. Learn from my mistake.....
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10-28-2021, 09:58 AM | #36 | |
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I started off by putting 3% per pay period. That's about $53 taken out of each paycheck. I'll probably increase that percentage after this year to see what my real ytd is. I picked before taxes. Idk how I feel about ROTH. Along with the retirement account, I put $5k in the stock exchange in April 2020. That's long-term investments. Thinking about putting $600 into crypto currency and seeing how that works out. If I see it's going up, I'll put $300-$400 each paycheck into crypto. Down the road, I'm hoping to buy some property and slap them on rent for passive income. Here's what my potential growth looks like. The salary was roughly calculated. |
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10-28-2021, 10:01 AM | #37 |
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If a 25-year-old starts investing $19,500 a year, their account would grow to $4.48 million by age 70. From CNBC, first link I clicked on. Note that this does not take into account employee match. $19,500 is the max you can put in btw (unless over 50).
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10-28-2021, 10:16 AM | #38 |
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I’ve become a big fan of saving and learning to invest. Because of some bad medical advice when I was a teen, I didn’t expect to live past 39. That seemed an eternity then, but I can’t even remember it now. However it made me more of a grasshopper than ant, if you remember the parable.
I’ve sung the new car song so many times I’ve lost count. I know I’ve had over 30 cars, maybe over 40, including wife-mobiles. Most used but a few new. In retrospect, I could have retired 10 years earlier if I’d saved all that money instead of trying to find joy in inanimate objects. Only one or two of those cars are memorable for me, the rest have faded into the past. I started saving late, although I’ve always put the max into a company 401(k). I gave up my first one in my divorce because I valued it at a discount (tax consequence of withdrawing) but my now ex valued it at full value. So I kept a house and she kept the 401(k). I started a new 401(k), sold the house with no tax consequence and began investing. In 11 years I was able to retire, so that is some power saving and aggressive investing (and expense reduction). The only downside to having saved more from a young age is my ex would have received half of that, so I would have half of the money. Having spent a lot on cars, I at least got 100% of the fun of those cars, although it was fleeting. Now I view cars not as assets, but as liabilities. Very few appreciate, fewer appreciate enough to cover the insurance, maintenance and carrying costs. The cheapest reliable car that meets my space, etc needs is the best one. If I want to get a car fix, I go to Cars-and-Coffee or somewhere that I can watch cool cars cruise by. Owning them no longer does anything for me. Shit, I guess I’m old |
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10-28-2021, 10:18 AM | #39 |
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I spend all my money because I'm going to die one day and then it will all be for nothing. Screw the 330, get a new M3. Didn't you say you were going to live with your parents for eternity anyways?
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10-28-2021, 10:24 AM | #40 |
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That was my attitude until I hit 50, and realized I might live past 70. By 60 I no longer expected to work until I die (die in the chair in my office). Now I’m retired and have enough to enjoy life, although no private planes or rich guy stuff. This is much better than working.
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10-28-2021, 10:35 AM | #41 | |
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Easy, simple life, when you only have yourself to take care of. |
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10-28-2021, 11:00 AM | #42 |
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10-28-2021, 11:01 AM | #43 | |
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10-28-2021, 11:11 AM | #44 |
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Relationships are expensive. Last one lasted about 6 years, and who knows at what total cost. Certainly wouldn't have what I do now if still in it. Now have a couple girls that spend time with now and then, but not committed. Leaves more money and free time.
Do what feels right for you. Save money and invest, spend everything you got, get a girlfriend, whatever. There's no right or wrong answer. Except crack, I'd suggest not spending money on crack. |
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