If you have ever carried a significant amount of debt, you know that it is rarely just a numbers problem. It is an emotional, social and physiological weight. Whether it is a heavy mortgage, a maxed-out credit card, or a spiralling personal loan, unmanageable debt dictates your mood, limits your choices, and introduces a low-grade panic into your daily life. It forces you to constantly look backwards, using today’s hard-earned income to pay for yesterday’s lifestyle. […]
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Will you enjoy the journey?
There’s a traditional approach to financial planning that relies heavily on the maths of your money. A legacy expectation of discussing asset allocation, historic yields, and projected growth. Success can be perceivably forecast with the building of beautiful spreadsheets that show exactly how a portfolio should perform over the next few decades. But a spreadsheet has a distinct advantage over a human being: a spreadsheet does not feel fear. And this is both its advantage and […]
Continue readingThe opportunity cost of ‘Inbox Zero’
Have you ever started off your day with the intent to mark off everything in your email inbox as ‘Read’? Sometimes, we have this perception that our emails need to be all read and sorted before we can move on to our next task. We are often taught to manage our time with the same rigour we use to manage our investment portfolios. We track our hours, schedule our meetings, and try to extract the maximum […]
Continue readingDesigning a frictionless recovery
When we build a financial plan, we naturally spend most of our time looking at the horizon. We focus on the big, exciting milestones: funding a comfortable retirement, selling a business, or leaving a meaningful legacy. We engineer our long-term investments to weather global economic storms. But in doing so, we often neglect the everyday potholes right in front of us. A burst pipe flooding the kitchen, a minor car accident on the school run, or […]
Continue readingRetiring to something
Have you ever thought about retiring TO something, not just from something? We spend our entire working lives focused on the mechanics of retirement. We build the plans, optimise the tax structures, and monitor the compounding. We plan meticulously for the day the regular salary stops. But we rarely plan for the day the alarm clock stops. For high-achievers, retirement is not just a financial event; it is a profound psychological transition. If you have spent […]
Continue readingThe hidden gaps in your safety net
We spend a lot of time engineering our financial futures. We carefully allocate our assets, monitor our compounding, and build portfolios designed to withstand economic storms. But one of the most profound risks to a long-term financial plan has nothing to do with the stock market. It has to do with your health. When we review a financial plan, we often find a dangerous assumption: the belief that having “medical insurance” or access to a “national […]
Continue readingScience for your money (Part 2)
In our last post, we looked at the foundational laws of money: spending less than you earn, insuring your risks, and respecting the erosive power of inflation. These are the defensive structures of a good plan. But defence alone doesn’t build the life you want. You also need to move forward. Today, we look at another three “unchangeable rules”, the principles that drive growth, manage uncertainty, and keep you sane in a crazy world. The only […]
Continue readingScience for your money (Part 1)
In finance, as in life, there are opinions, and there are facts. Opinions are everywhere. You hear them at dinner parties, read them in the news reports, and see them shouted on cable news. “Buy gold,” “Sell tech,” “Property is dead,” “Crypto is the future.” These opinions change with the wind. But beneath the noise, there are certain principles that remain true regardless of who is President, what inflation is doing, or which stock is trending. […]
Continue readingThe moat to your castle
Let’s be honest. Nobody wakes up excited to pay their car or home insurance premiums. It is the ultimate “grudge purchase”. You pay for something you hope never to use. Every month, you see that money leave your account, and if you are lucky, you get absolutely nothing in return but silence (and peace of mind!). Because of this, it is easy to view short-term insurance as a nuisance. We treat it as a commodity, something […]
Continue readingThe boring basics
In the world of finance, it is easy to get distracted by the shiny objects. We hear about the next big tech stock, cryptocurrency, or complex hedge fund strategies. We are naturally drawn to the exciting, the new, and the sophisticated. Especially after the holidays, when we’ve sat with everyone who seems to have “done so much better” than us. But true financial success is rarely built on complex, exciting moves… and it certainly isn’t based […]
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