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small investments $ work hard!

July 1st, 2024 at 09:11 pm

I just want to emphasize how investing small amounts of money can work over the long term.  How compounding really makes the biggest difference. I don't think I ever really believed it but as I watch what has happened for my two kids I just am in shock.

First we have been contributing to their Coverdell/ESA accounts since birth at $2k/year.  DK1 is 14 (2010) and has $67499.79 total from $28k in contributions.  Yep you read that right in 14 years she's got more than double.  DK2 is 11 turning 12 soon (2012) and has $52412.22.  That is $24k also doubled.  We will use this in 4 and 6 years along with contributing another $8k and 12k.  If that were all we had saved for college, I think it could easily cover the entire cost of college.

But so many people I do taxes for and know have been "saving" for college talk about how little they have.  I don't quite understand it because $2000/year is $166/month.  That's less than a car payment, less than people's cable bills, less than cell phone plans.  And I just dumped it into VOO or the SP index fund.  No special investments and no special timing just when they were born and january every year I didn't even Dollar Cost Average monthly.  I just dumped it in and forgot about it.  $166/month many people spend that on getting their haircut and colored.  Or they spend it on clothes or a meal out once a month.  Or even lunches everyday (school lunches are $4/day x 20 x 2 = $160/month for 2 kids).

Now DK1 had apple stock given I believe in 2010 or 2011. I can't exactly remember when DH's uncle gave us 2 shares of apple.  It was valued around $250 at that time so he gave DK1 $500.  The value of the stock we've never sold or done anything?  $13,348.  Ridiciulous but reinvest the dividends and hang on through the splits.  She's got 60 shares.  DK2 as well.  

I finally get it. Since DH and I did not grow up with wealth we weren't privy to seeing how generations pass on wealth.  But now we are finally seeing how people grow their wealth, preserve their homes, and pass on just tiny bits of money can make a huge difference.  How a house down payment at 22 started when the kid was born. 

I mean imagine gifting a grandchild $2k/year for 18 years let alone the gift tax $18k/year for 18 years and then when they are 18 @ a 5% return you will have given the kid $531,707.  Half a million dollars from $18k/year at 5% return.  That's lower than investing in VTI and never touching.  Imagine if you gifted them to 22 and they then turned around and used it for college, a car, and a house by age 22 and they got a job?  And they started investing in their own retirement without having to save for the house and car or pay back student loans?

I'm not saying you should but the small amounts properly invested can make a huge difference.  I mean my kids will be getting a huge head start to DH's uncle and $500 gift.  When he passed in 2017 we split the amound DH got from being the executor like $25k into their accounts and they each got $13k invested.  It's not worth about $60k each from his apple stock and VOO.  I can't believe what we are going to be able to give the kids.  It's shocking.

It's not fancy or even timed.  Just bogelhead prinicipals of index fund (just one VOO actually) and reinvesting the dividends.  

6 Responses to “small investments $ work hard!”

  1. jonelvinnaorbe Says:
    1719896633

    Your experience highlights the incredible power of consistent, long-term investing. It’s remarkable how small contributions can accumulate into substantial wealth over time, especially when compounded. 🌟πŸ’ͺπŸ“ˆ



  2. Lots of Ideas Says:
    1719898683

    Too many people think making and following a budget is some sort of punishment rather that a roadmap to financial security.
    When I see kids with pikes of unplayed with toys and I know there have been a lot of Door Dash meals I know that is money that could have build a strong platform.
    The little bits saved add up and properly inv steed, grow.

  3. GARY Says:
    1719920426

    I wonder, when you say: "...I do taxes,,," Is that full-time? CPA? And might you know what else could one fund in addition to C/ESAs?

  4. rob62521 Says:
    1720045189

    You are so right about compound interest being your friend. I worked with people who refused to even try and put money into retirement accounts, stating they couldn't afford it. But they could afford soda and coffee at the gas station each morning and afternoon and fast food and fancy purses and all that. (I worked in education, so lots of women!) One lady was married to a man who had a company that would match 401K money to a high percentage and they claimed they couldn't put any money into that. I never had the opportunity for that stuff. And I was raised by frugal parents, but no money in the family, so investing or anything like that. But there was a teacher who one day had married a man (second marriage) who told her she needed to open a tax deferred account for her retirement and he would help her. I remember listening to her thinking, I wonder what that is, so a young man at church who had just started in the finance world was more than happy to take me as client. He helped me open a 403B and although I couldn't put in very much starting out, I have seen it increase through the years, although the recession really dug a hole for a while, but it bounced back. Same with some other accounts. I'm not wealthy by any means, but I have a reasonable retirement account which so far I have not had to touch, all because of compound interest. I would take some of the new teachers aside and explain to them the importance of starting a retirement account, even if it was just a Roth and putting in $100 a month, and some would nod, but then say they couldn't, but every once in a while, I'd find one who would say, I think that is a good idea.

  5. LivingAlmostLarge Says:
    1721087171

    Maybe. but I know a friend of mine was shocked. He asked me yesterday how much we had for the kids each and I told him. It was double what they had and he was like what? I said you make 6x what we make right now and I just needed to be smarter with my money, since I had less. I put it to work earlier and longer. They can afford to cash flow college, we can't. We might in the future but right now it's no so i had to do things differently.

  6. VS_ozgirl Says:
    1721116703

    What you have done for your children is inspirational! You are giving them a great solid start to their adult lives. They will have the ability to simply concentrate on building their lives well with less stress on paying off debts. You and your DH should be very proud.

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