The historic numbers I mentioned with regards to profit from investments take into account historic inflation numbers. The numbers are based on the Dutch book 'De Schitterende Eenvoud van Indexbeleggen'[0].
Inflation should not be an issue.
Still the bigger plan is to make extra money by working full-time on my own projects. So the goal is to increase investments every year and also the profit from investments.
@onion2k: The book isn't saying you can live forever for that amount. It's a calculation I made for myself based on the historic average profits of the stock market in the long term (based on ~100 years of data). I'm living for 2 months in Thailand and I can have a basic living here for 500 EUR a month, especially if I have a fully paid for apartment. That's a basic living without much luxury, but a good starting point to full-time commit myself to my own projects. And hopefully build more income that way. I also don't have wife, kids, etc…
I don't read Dutch, but I can assure you that if it's saying you can invest 100.000 EUR and live off the interest forever without reinvesting it then it is wrong.
Since economics shows that if everyone believes in 7% return , and capital is so efficient to move as it is now with digital systems, that grown would be already priced in. Hence the absurd 50-100x P/E ratios we see. It is unsustainable.
It's only unsustainable if the underlying assets don't allow for 7% return in the long run. It's possible capital is scarce relative to the opportunities for investment such that 7% real returns are the norm. In that case, it doesn't matter if everyone believes in the 7% rate, there will be no crash.
Inflation should not be an issue.
Still the bigger plan is to make extra money by working full-time on my own projects. So the goal is to increase investments every year and also the profit from investments.
@onion2k: The book isn't saying you can live forever for that amount. It's a calculation I made for myself based on the historic average profits of the stock market in the long term (based on ~100 years of data). I'm living for 2 months in Thailand and I can have a basic living here for 500 EUR a month, especially if I have a fully paid for apartment. That's a basic living without much luxury, but a good starting point to full-time commit myself to my own projects. And hopefully build more income that way. I also don't have wife, kids, etc…
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[0]: http://www.bol.com/nl/p/de-schitterende-eenvoud-van-indexbel...