How much $ have you saved?

Just genuinely curious how I'm doing regarding savings as I consider business school. I've done well in the markets by sheer luck of picking some winning stocks in 2020, but sports gambling has definitely cut into my net worth more than I'm proud to admit lol. For reference, I'm about to turn 27 and have ~160k in retirement savings (IRA and 401K) and $70k in brokerage and savings accounts. I haven't had any big life expenses yet at this point (ring, car, house, etc) and am considering business school so just curious to hear where others are at regarding savings.

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Got a big scholarship and was always a watch guy. dad bought me a black sub for 20% off (Local AD is a family friend) in 2016. Watch is now valued at ~2x what he paid. I worked 3 jobs throughout college (that I regret) but made decent money. This doesn’t include my stub which is about 15k post tax but I saved a ton of money since I’m still living at home 

 

29 yrs old. 125 across retirement and brokerage, 25 cash. Used my own savings to pay for about 1/3rd of b school. Ring and wedding didn't help! Worked in AM prior to school.

Deciding whether or not to use this bonus to pay off outstanding loan or just keep the monthly payments coming. Next year's bonus hopefully will be used as down-payment.

 

22, $140k liquid and $5k retirement 

update: 23, $200k liquid 10k retirement 

 

graduated with 40k no debt, been saving up since i started in Aug, got a 25k stub a month ago, and dumped half my money in bitcoin at 10-15k

 

6 months into my first year and my BB matches just 6% so that's how much i have in

 

Nice. How much of your $1.2M is invested? 

Essentially all of it - spend a lot of time (which I enjoy) thinking of ways to put money to work and obviously the last few years especially has been a great investing environment.

To the other question, same as the previous responder - have to hold for 30 days, no options, no shorting, etc. Also generally can't invest in names in the sector I cover

 
Most Helpful

Just a reminder to not feel discouraged when reading this thread. I'm a second-year analyst and I'm still paying off my student debt and I have about 20k in savings. It's likely that the first year analysts in this thread claiming to have over 100k saved probably came from a family that was well off financially. Not that there's anything wrong with that...but it's important to consider since they likely did not have to worry about any college tuition expenses or funding summer housing payments through part-time jobs throughout the school year. I mean one of the analysts above got a Rolex as a gift...my parents would punch me in the face if I ever considered buying a watch that cost more than $150 (I'm still grinding for that submariner tho lmao). Again, there's nothing wrong with coming from a well off background, but it's important to keep in mind when comparing numbers in terms of savings achieved early in one's career.

 

Yeah just calm down. If you are in a finance field (IB/HF/PE) you are extremely fortunate and your compensation is in the top (small number)% of households. Just be responsible but have a life. I had $80k of student loans coming out of school, took me a while to pay it off, many people won’t save substantial amounts right off the bat. It takes time. 

 

Man, if you don't understand the investment side of buying a Rolex I honestly doubt you'll ever succeed in your career 

 

Yep good advice. The quantum of savings early on will pale in comparison to your year 5-10 savings and beyond in high finance. However that is only if you use your first few years to 1) develop good savings and spending habits and 2) understand your risk tolerance level and find good, sensible long-term investments to grow your net worth.

I posted a big number above but started similar to most grads with 30K of debt and no savings and a credit card balance. After year 1 I had savings of $15K (and some debt), after year 2 $50K (no debt), year 3 $150K, year 4 $300K and up to year 8 over $1M now.

 

Thank you for sharing this progression, and huge respect to you for being able to grow your net worth consistently and more aggressively after ~3 years of college. I’m definitely hoping to follow your steps - come from a poor background and net worth of ~$35k ($35k cash, car that I will sell soon for $10k, but $10k student loans) as a current first year analyst (age 23.5). Work from home has been very good for me financially. Unfortunately (but happily) have to help parents pay rent due to us never having enough to own a home growing up, so there should be a major expense in the future when I buy them a house, but hoping I can get to the $1mm spot by age 32.

Only thing is that I do sometimes feel trapped that I HAVE to stay in finance and chase after the highest paying jobs (with worst work life balance) in order to both help my parents and reach my personal goals. Moved to a top EB/BB a couple months ago just so I can have better exits to buyout firms even though I hate working with sponsor buysides...

 

I'm one of the above posts but I also agree with analyst2 that it'll be a pretty skewed group of folks answering (already on a forum skewing towards top % earners, and those even on the higher end of that group are the ones wanting to post on this question). Mostly dumb luck for me doing risky stuff tbh with finally having money from internships/jobs piling up during this crash and incredible market recovery. If you were consistently dumping money into the markets last year anywhere you'd most likely be up quite a bit already. 

 

I graduated college with about 7k from fidelity account my dad made me contribute to starting in high school. For me I've pretty much figured out I can live off of 1/2 my paychecks, thankfully in IB in a low COL city so don't have to worry about expenses of NY. But automatic withdrawals into retirement accounts of 10-20% and then throwing a few hundred bucks into savings accounts as soon as paycheck hits forces me to live off whatever is left over (essentially the salary of my big 4 friends), you might be surprised how quickly this can build up over a year. Now obviously there are more factors that can change this (debt, rent, etc) but reading all these numbers from 23 year olds with over 100k in savings sounds incredibly daunting and makes you feel way behind, but those guys are insane outliers. Start small and commit to a plan (simple as "spend less than what you bring in") and don't worry about trying to hit it big on investment gambles until you have a strong base beneath you, and the wealth will grow. 

 

I think 100K is pretty reasonable savings to walk away from your analyst stint with (deduct any Student loans from this number). Hell Im in Pub fin and I should be able to hit that with solid bonuses.  

Personal Timeline:

Year 0: -7K (Student loans)

Year 1 (Actual):  15K - (bonus not included)

Year 2(Projected): 50K - (year 1 bonus (10K), Plus maxing out Retirement accounts)

Year 3 (Projected): 100K( year 2 bonus (15K), Plus maxing out retirement accounts, Plus some market returns) 

hopefully, becoming an associate and savings rate greatly increasing after year 3.  

Correct me if my math is wrong. and yes I am probably very underpaid.

Edit: change Careers making much more now

 

23 in May. Have ~12k in retirement accounts, dollar cost averaging 25% of each paycheck, ~30k in cash, ( i know sounds dumb in this market, but the piece of mind having ~1 years worth of expenses is important to me, need to get a HY account though). Come august plan to dumb entire bonus and then some into index funds. Hoping to be around 100k by the end of the year if all goes well. 

 

26; 2.5 yrs of banking (2 bonuses that were well-below market).

Received a full scholarship for school and did not start with any debt.

As others have said there has to be a balance, there was a kid in my class that saved aggressively (think never ate a meal that wasn't expensed, owned 1 suit and 3 shirts, lived in the worst section of town, etc.) He had saved over $100K after first bonus. He ended up burnt out and works in a $70K position now that works better hours but has no opps for advancement. 

Another kid in my class would go to the club every week pre-COVID. Talked to him recently and he said he's amazed how much money he's saved during WFH. Apparently, he just hit $60K in savings (we've both made $350K+...)
 

As for myself, I'm at $180K before coming up on my 3rd bonus this summer. For getting paid what I've gotten paid (which is a decent amount below street) I consider it fairly decent, will be near $250K after 3 years off of just analyst comp. If you're able to live within your means you can save enough money to sort of make the lifestyle sacrifice worth it.

$100K 401(k)

$30K IRA

$20K Brokerage

$30K Crypto

 

Driven by a few reasons: 

- My growing disinterest in banking. I've been doing it since I was an analyst so I'm feeling a little burnt out. I've been thinking a lot about FIRE but in order to maintain the lifestyle I want I would need more investable capital.  I'm using this job as a way to fund those efforts.

- Comparison is the thief of joy. As you become wealthier, you find your self in circles with people just as wealthy or considerably more wealthy than you. It can have the unfortunate (sometimes subconscious) effect of making you want more -- so you may never be satisfied.  I've seen it happen to others. 

Ultimately, it boils down to the fact that I want the ability to maintain a similar lifestyle without actually sacrificing my time haha. In order to do that, I need a lot more money.

 

25. About 150k spread across retirement, crypto, and brokerage/cash. Almost entirely from living very frugally (I don't work in banking or even finance, yet so don't have a 'great' income) and getting lucky with how the markets have been over the past couple years. As others noted, I was fortunate to not have any student loans.

 

19 years old, 19k between savings and checkings, 7.5k in robinhood and 200 in webull. Currently working unpaid internship.

 

Yes, I know but not too sure what to invest in the market right now. Not too optimistic with future outcomes. 

 

30k in 6 months is great. If you don't mind me asking, was that all from salary or did you have stuff saved pre-work.

 

got about 20k saved as a fresh in college just thru portfolio and job earnings, but who gives a shit. Username = ELITE

 

25 yr old analyst--about 400k across various brokerages and cash. About 250k of this was the result of two very lucrative investments (not GME) I made over the last year, so I wouldn't consider this to be a normal amount, just very very very lucky. Went into 2020 with about 80k total savings.

Dayman?
 

The biggest one was a ~20k investment in a stock called Microvision. Went in at just under a buck, sold at a little over $9. Big gains for sure. The stock actually dipped down right after it hit nine but looks like it bounced up to $14 this week. Maybe I shoulda held lol. My $20k in PENN has also done quite well over the last year.

Dayman?
 

24 y/o. Transitioning to finance and a developed economy.

Sitting on $12.5k cash after having spent a considerable chunk on my family of five for COVID-19 treatment.
No student debt, yet. This thread is turning out to be thought-provoking. 

 

Random question, If you're bank does not match 401K contributions is it still worth it to max that out or should you look to other saving strategies?

 

It's definitely personal preference/need (like do you have any big expenses in the near term like a down payment or wedding ring that require liquid savings). But I've usually done 10-15% in my 401K (company did 5% match) and then put additional savings in my IRA and brokerage. Everybody is different and some would say to max out 401K because that way you don't even have to think about it and it is just taken out of your paycheck. But I enjoy having more savings that I can invest on my own in my own accounts. Bare minimum you should always contribute to your 401K up to company match. 

 

I'm old. 37 - 3 kids, Canada, MBA, CFA, running my own company now, ~35 people.

Net worth $6.5M, $500K in cash, rest in fairly liquid stock.

Own a house with $250K on the mortgage,  renting it out.

Renting the house that I'm in right now.

 

24 y/o - CD associate with some less desirable M/O roles out of school

- $80k brokerage

- $35k roth

- $10k cash

- $5k watch I don't really consider this "net worth" as it was something jointly picked by myself and my dad for a big life event and I'd never sell.

Savings accelerated a bit lately (though nothing crazy since I was relatively frugal before COVID). Anticipating another 6 months at home which should help add another 30-40k in compounded savings. Goal is to hit 250k total in the next 2 yrs.

 

One of the benefits, in hindsight, of being underage throughout almost the entirety of college (and not having a fake), is that you never end up spending 50 bucks at a bar and then 30 bucks on chicken wings right after. I would say of course that I probably didn't get to hang out with friends as much as I could, but I learned a couple good spending habits.

 

No college debt, scholarships covers most other expenses. I have 31k total right now, live extremely below my means, and work a pretty nice part time job during the school year that is going almost entirely into my savings. Given that I'll make 20k this summer (likely remote and will live at home for free) and am keeping my part time job until I graduate, I should have no problem getting to 50k (?)

 

Just turned 29 - $260k TC and $475k NW (all CAD). About $200k in retirement accounts and the rest in brokerage / cash. 

Comp is on the "low" side (has probably gone up 15%-20% annually so started much lower) but a good lifestyle tradeoff (MM DL). Paid off ~$30k in student loans a long time ago. I'm happy, only concern is eventually buying real estate in the crazy market up here.

 

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