{"id":4437,"date":"2022-07-13T23:05:46","date_gmt":"2022-07-14T05:05:46","guid":{"rendered":"https:\/\/modernfimily.com\/?p=4437"},"modified":"2022-07-06T23:45:57","modified_gmt":"2022-07-07T05:45:57","slug":"quarterly-net-worth-q2-2022","status":"publish","type":"post","link":"https:\/\/modernfimily.com\/quarterly-net-worth-q2-2022\/","title":{"rendered":"Quarterly Net Worth Update: Q2 2022"},"content":{"rendered":"

Hey everyone!\u00a0 Last week we tackled the life and spending side of things and this week we\u2019re back with a net worth update.<\/p>\n

How Do We Stand<\/b><\/h2>\n

As noted in our recent post with\u00a0our updated FIRE goals\/numbers<\/a>, we are aiming to get to the ~$1.26M mark as our FatFIRE goal.\u00a0 When I took off on parental leave, my goal was to somehow reach this figure by the time my parental leave is up thanks to my 1\/2 year bonus for 2021 that I recently received in March + compounding doing its thing + our low spend allowing us to keep our capital preserved while living off EI (pay for parental leave) + CCB (Canada Child Benefit) for the most part.\u00a0 In Q1 2022 we were sitting soooo close at $1,253,476 without the mortgage so $6,524 to go.\u00a0 So closeee!\u00a0 And then… the markets really decided to tank on us!\u00a0 Gee thanks!\u00a0 Let see how we compare with our goal.<\/p>\n

Our current liquid portfolio is sitting at:<\/p>\n

$1,398,380<\/p>\n

Wait, what?!\u00a0 How is it up from last quarter with the markets being down?!<\/p>\n

Townhouse Update<\/h2>\n

We sold the townhouse! Ta-da! Money magic!<\/p>\n

We (Court) were crazy lunatics the week after getting back from Vancouver Island as our townhouse was now vacant and we were cleaning and fixing minor items to get it ready to list.\u00a0 We ended up selling it within 24 hours of listing – it sounds short but man oh man that was a whirlwind of a time!\u00a0 Surprise, surprise – we sold it to a family from ON looking to move back to AB.\u00a0 While the rental income was easy and relatively hassle free, we are glad to no longer be landlords.<\/p>\n

We listed it for $379,000 and sold it for $385,100.\u00a0 After lawyer and realtor fees, we ended up with a deposit of $367,000 in our bank account.<\/p>\n

Note, 1.5 years ago we tried to sell it – no luck, hence why we rented it out.\u00a0 We listed it for $313,000 thinking if someone offered anything over $300,000 we’d take it.\u00a0 Glad we waited and got rental income for 1.5 year + a higher sell price!<\/p>\n

We do still have the mortgage in place on our home (~$250,000) which is why our liquid portfolio is so high above.\u00a0 Rather than take the proceeds from the townhouse sale and pay off the mortgage on our primary home completely, we have decided that we will set up a GIC ladder to continue paying the monthly amounts for the remainder of our 5 year term and once that is up in ~3 years, then pay off the mortgage completely.<\/p>\n

Why?<\/p>\n

We have a 5 year fixed rate term sitting at 2.04% interest.\u00a0 Remember those good ole days of low interest rates?\u00a0 We were lucky to have gotten in then.\u00a0 3 year GICs are currently offering interest rates of 4.74% (and rising).\u00a0 We will gladly pay 2.04% interest knowing we will get 4.74% on that same money.\u00a0 Overall this will bring us ahead by ~$15k doing this vs paying off the mortgage in full today.\u00a0 Major thanks to our FIRE friend Chelsey for nerding out all of this and creating some spreadsheets digging into different options for us!!<\/p>\n

Prior to running all these scenarios we sent a large lump sum of ~$48,000 to the mortgage as part of my work bonus payout so the mortgage went from ~$300,000 to ~$250,000 this quarter.\u00a0 Looking back, this was a silly move but oh well!<\/p>\n

So really, we need to take out the amount being earmarked for the mortgage payments \/ GICs as all of that cash has a plan over the next 3 years to go towards the house, not towards our day-to-day spending in a post-FIRE world.\u00a0 For simplicity, we will remove the mortgage balance remaining from the liquid portfolio to see our true FIRE number.<\/p>\n

Mortgage Balance Remaining: -$252,071<\/p>\n

Net Portfolio: $1,146,309<\/p>\n

(This is the number that we really care about!)<\/p>\n

Changes This Quarter<\/h2>\n