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Goal-Based Investing

Stop asking β€œwhat should I buy?” and start asking β€œwhat is this dollar for?” Every goal has a horizon, an inflation rate and a target β€” and a different portfolio that gets you there. Includes goal, retirement and FIRE calculators.

1. Why goal-based investing wins

Without a goal, every market move feels personal. With a goal β€” "$60,000 down-payment in 5 years", "$2.5M retirement at 60", "$200,000 college in 12 years" β€” you can pick the right asset mix, the right account, and the right monthly amount, and you can ignore the noise. Behavioral finance research consistently shows goal-based investors outperform performance-based investors because they trade less and stay invested longer.

2. The three buckets

BucketHorizonVehiclesRisk tolerance
Short-term safety0–2 yearsHYSA, SGOV, T-bills, money marketZero loss
Medium-term goals2–7 yearsBND, TIP, balanced funds, CDsMild volatility
Long-term wealth7+ yearsVTI, VXUS, QQQ, individual stocksEquity vol acceptable

3. Inflation

$1 in 1990 has the purchasing power of about $2.50 today (β‰ˆ3.0% avg CPI). Plan in real (inflation-adjusted) dollars, not nominal. A "$2 million retirement" in 25 years at 3% inflation is the same as ~$955,000 today.

4. SIP / Goal calculator

How much do I need to invest each month?

5. Retirement number (4% rule)

The famous Trinity Study (Bengen, 1994) showed a portfolio of 60% stocks / 40% bonds could safely sustain 4% annual withdrawals (inflation-adjusted) for 30 years through the worst U.S. market history. So your retirement number is roughly:

Retirement Nest Egg = Annual Spending Γ— 25

Retirement target calculator

6. FIRE & Coast-FIRE

  • Lean FIRE β€” 25Γ— annual spending of $25–40k. Frugal early retirement.
  • FIRE β€” 25Γ— annual spending of $40–80k. Median target.
  • Fat FIRE β€” 25Γ— annual spending of $100k+. Comfortable.
  • Coast-FIRE β€” once you've saved enough that compounding alone (no new contributions) will hit your retirement number by age 65. After Coast you can scale back career intensity.

Coast-FIRE math: target / (1+r)years. Example: $2M target, 25 yrs, 7% real return β†’ Coast number today = 2,000,000 / 1.0725 β‰ˆ $368,000.

7. Allocation by goal & horizon

GoalHorizonSuggested mix
Emergency fund (3–6 mo expenses)Anytime100% HYSA / SGOV
Down payment2–4 yrs20/80 stocks/bonds, glide to 0/100 in final year
Wedding1–3 yrs0/100; CDs laddered to date
Kid's college15+ yrs falling to 5529 with age-based glide path (90/10 β†’ 30/70)
New car2 yrsSGOV / HYSA
Retirement (25+ yrs)Long80/20 or 90/10 stocks/bonds
Retirement (in 10 yrs)Medium60/40 glide
Legacy / generational50+ yrs100% diversified equity

8. Your Investment Policy Statement

A one-page IPS is the most powerful behavioral tool in personal finance. Write it once, sign it, pin it to your monitor. Re-read whenever the market scares you.

My Investment Policy Statement
  1. Goals: list each goal, target $ in today's dollars, target date.
  2. Asset allocation: stocks ___%, bonds ___%, cash ___%, alternatives ___%.
  3. Vehicles: which accounts hold which assets and why.
  4. Contribution plan: $___/month, automated on the 1st.
  5. Rebalancing rule: rebalance if any asset class drifts > 5%, or once per year, whichever is first.
  6. Risk policy: I will not sell equities during a drawdown of any size. I will continue contributions.
  7. What I will not do: trade earnings, buy single-stock options, time the market, follow tips.
  8. Review schedule: full review every January 1.