BleedBlueGold
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Bleed, you have your head on straight. But as Whiskey pointed out, not all debt is created equal. Nothing wrong with having some leverage. Just use your debt on stuff that will appreciate, or on what ultimately makes you happy.
This is all the validation I needed to moved forward with purchasing a new boat.
I'm not a finance guy, so take what I say with a grain of salt. I wouldn't safely assume a 6% growth rate for the next two years, and I also wouldn't assume 1.5% in a savings account. I think we're going to see some hellacious volatility in the next two quarters, because this COVID situation isn't done yet. I also think we're going into correction number two, and the bottom is really going to drop out when businesses can't get back online through the fall.
Maybe split your money: half into a few extra mortgage payments, while accruing the other half in whatever cash account you use. I follow the Buffett methodology, and his money is on the sidelines. I'm doing the same. My major 401k is also pure S&P 500 index, at this point.
As RDU pointed out, my time frame isn't very long (5-8 years) and if we do see another correction/crash, how much further does it push out the time line? But here's my answer to that: Again, as RDU pointed out, I'm not in a position of "must sell" so if I decided to continue invest and hold on to that 2.75% mortgage loan, am I losing anything besides not accomplishing my goal? One would argue, the goal wasn't the correct goal in the first place, hence my "re-evaluation" comment after a few years.
I like Buffet and I like Jack Bogle, both of whom suggest the index fund approach for someone like me. I usually keep all of my investing in the realm of 80:20 - 100:0 stock index to bond index respectively.
Good chat. Thanks again, everyone.