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Ask HN: How to save/invest/deal with money?
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37 points
by throw100g
1308 days ago
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I am a junior developer working at my first job as a software engineer. I'm studying in a part time model so I am studying 50% and working 50% of my time.
I get my salary every month but... What should I do with the money?
I am still living with my parents so I do not have to cover living costs, only pay them a little bit of rent. I never buy anything and I spend all my free time studying which I like. I have nearly 0 expenses. So I thought maybe it would be good to invest this "extra income" coming in every month. But where do I start?
I know nothing about finance or economy and whenever I try to look into it I don't even understand how to get started because the entry fees seem high.
I am in Europe, maybe that's relevant. I feel this money from my job is only a burden for me because all I do is have to pay the account fee to my bank... Highly appreciate any advice! |
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1. Read the reddit personal finance wiki https://www.reddit.com/r/personalfinance/wiki/index/
2. Read The Simple Path to Wealth by J L Collins
3. Read The Bogleheads' Guide to Investing
4. Read the Bogleheads' wiki https://www.bogleheads.org/wiki/Main_Page
5. Use a personal finance app to track budget and spending (I use Simplifi).
6. Track your Income, Expenses (just the broad category), Bills (per invoice), Assets, Debt on a spreadsheet with columns per month. I make it easy and put the hyperlink for the source of truth in the name of the row.
7. My general rule is that I need to have at least 50% savings each month from combined investments and income. This percentage is more defined by what year you want to "retire" and switch from capital accumulation to capital spending phases of your life.
8. This is the step I'm on now. I'm trying to learn finance in a far deeper capacity, so I'm spending time to learn accounting, finance, trading strategies. I'll run various accounts with different strategies and see how it goes. Those strategies will fall under the "speculative" part of my portfolio, which won't exceed more than I can afford to lose and still hit my retirement targets.