From: Zachary Vance Date: Mon, 18 Jul 2022 01:24:09 +0000 (-0400) Subject: fix 2 X-Git-Url: https://git.za3k.com/?a=commitdiff_plain;h=a3debb0d4638a714372895fec2218d735391ed26;p=za3k.git fix 2 --- diff --git a/articles/retirement_math2.md b/articles/retirement_math2.md index 638a355..b4dd503 100644 --- a/articles/retirement_math2.md +++ b/articles/retirement_math2.md @@ -33,11 +33,11 @@ Well, what if you're not making $60K and spending $20K? I'll walk you through th The rough[^5] estimate is that you can retire in: **25 x expenses / (income - expenses)** years. -Working through our example, that's = 25 * 20K / (60K/y - 20K/y) = 500K / 40K per year = 12.5 years. Imaginary-use is 20, so that works out to 32.5 years old. Checks out. +Working through our example, that's = 25 * 20K / (60K/y - 20K/y) = 500K / 40K per year = 12.5 years. Imaginary you is 20, so that works out to 32.5 years old. Checks out. Okay, but what if... the stock market takes a hit? -[>> up and down](/retirement_math3.md) +[>> up and down](/articles/retirement_math3.md) [^2]: Which I am 100% in favor of. Get cracking on that science. [^3]: This is very conservative. Since it's founding in 1957, the S&P 500 on average made 7% yearly over inflation. You can ajust the numbers if you want.