Other than getting divorced, learning to invest on my own after I read random walk down wall street
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Did a Roth Conversion of my entire SEP IRA in 2010 when the taxes could be spread out over 2 years. Now I have a pretty good sized Roth and no money in IRA's so I'm able to do backdoor Roth conversions for myself and my wife every year with a zero basisComment
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We established a comprehensive financial plan with a great CFP 9 years ago while we both were still in residency, and that lit the spark of our financial education and progress. I read almost any financial book I can (Bernstein, Malkeil, Swedroe, Zwieg, etc). We still work with him, really so I'm not tempted to do stupid things with our money! He only sells us unbiased, honest advice, nothing else, no assets under management. He charges what works out to be 0.002% of our income, so that's a great deal for us!Comment
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Started to read WCI site and Sermo.
Started something that gave me 1099 income which allowed to max my retirement savings.
Having applied for and received full repayment of all my loans.
Set up some very basic low cost accounts at Vanguard. As well as a regular simple budget plan to stick to. (And we still overspend and splurge, but at least knowing where all the money is going helps a lot).Comment
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Started to read WCI site and Sermo.
Started something that gave me 1099 income which allowed to max my retirement savings.
Having applied for and received full repayment of all my loans.
Set up some very basic low cost accounts at Vanguard. As well as a regular simple budget plan to stick to. (And we still overspend and splurge, but at least knowing where all the money is going helps a lot).
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Slav4K!!!! How's the S4???Comment
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Smartest Financial Decision: chose a residency in a low-cost city with above average salary where I ride my bike to work every day. This allows me to save enough that I max out personal and spousal Roth IRA and 403(b) during residency.
Luckiest Financial Decision: Used surplus student loan money during medical school to max out Roth IRA every year (eligible due to side W-2 income); also used a large chunk of low-interest unsecured personal loan and bought in the stock market in January 2009 (missed the March 2009 market low by two months).Comment
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Purchased an existing practice that I worked as an associate even though it was over priced by quite a bit. I was confident that the practice can grow quickly with hard work and some luck. It has been 5 years and my income/practice value has more than doubled. Very grateful.Comment
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Married a beautiful woman more frugal than me.
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Ditto.
savings on this > then all other financial decisionsComment
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Let's be honest, the answer for a bunch of us here is "reading this blog for the first time (x amount of time) ago." I know that's my honest answer.
But to play the game by excluding the obvious, my best decision was a combination of tax loss harvesting three busted tech stocks (now penny stocks) that I had inherited post-bursted-bubble when we cashed in my wife's US savings bonds. The savings bonds paid off the remainder of my med school loans, giving us new found peace of mind, and the TLH made the tax bill almost nothing.Comment
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