How to Retire with $5 Million: Real-Life Strategies

Disclaimer: Good Day, Readers.  WealthBuildingPowers blog is a financial literacy/competency blog and does not provide specific investment recommendations.  

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STYRON’S INTRODUCTION

While reading the Wall Street Journal article “Discovering the Realities of a $5 Million Retirement in the U.S.,” I noticed simple, straightforward strategies that everyday Americans use to retire with several million dollars.  Some of my family members and friends embraced these very methods. While achieving a $5 million retirement doesn’t require complex maneuvers, only a tiny fraction, around 0.1 percent of households, attain this feat.  Let’s learn what works! 

The $5 Million Retirement Blueprint: Secrets Shared by Four Accomplished Families

  • Thoughtful Planning
  • Their investment portfolio predominantly comprises 95% stocks, mainly index funds, and a handful of individual equities like Apple.
  • They have consistently maximized 401(k) contributions over the years.
  • At age 25, Myer came across a book by Vanguard’s founder, John Bogle, advocating for low-cost index funds. He also dabbled in purchasing individual stocks, taking inspiration from renowned stock analyst Peter Lynch’s philosophy of investing in what you understand.
    • For Myer, now 61, this translated to technology stocks and shares from companies he engaged in software dealings, including his early investment in Home Depot at a split-adjusted price of $3 per share.
  • They have embraced frugality by driving used cars and adhering to a well-structured budget.
  • Before reaching the mandatory retirement age of 65, Hwu began immersing himself in the literature about retirement, including Wall Street Journal articles.
  • Armed with a master’s degree earned during active duty and a veterinary degree funded by an Army reserve scholarship and the GI Bill after his time at West Point, Hwu spent 26 years as a reserve officer, retiring at 60. He initiated maximum retirement plan contributions in his 30s.
  • The Freys, despite their affluence, actively shunned ostentatious displays of wealth. Bob noted that he hadn’t acquired a new sports coat in approximately two decades. Residing in Montana, the couple found formal attire unnecessary and instead preferred the comfort of jeans and sneakers.
  • Debt-free living and minimal interference with investments characterize the couple’s financial approach. Around 70% of their assets are allocated to stock funds. Bob mentioned possibly leaving about $1 million to charity after their passing.

STEPS SO SIMPLE EVEN I DID IT, AND YOU CAN TOO – TAKE ACTION TODAY! 

  • Start planning for retirement in your 20s.
  • Initiate contributions to your 401K or other retirement fund from your first paycheck and let that money remain untouched.
  • End procrastination.
  • Build your financial knowledge through reading, affordable courses, and other learning avenues.
  • Increase your strategic and critical thinking abilities.
  • Consistent investments with minimum annual increases for decades.
  • EARN MORE THAN YOU SPEND: Saving 20% or more. Remain a LIFETIME SAVER- Once-a-saver, always-a-saver!
  • Achieve your maximum 401K, etc.; contribution limits ideally in your 30s or sooner.
  • Steer clear of greed by opting for straightforward investments like the S&P 500 ETFs.
  • Embrace ‘good’ debt exclusively.
  • Pursue an affordable education and acquire skills that yield a good Return on Investment (ROI).
  • MULTIPLE STREAMS OF INCOME- When you have one primary source of income, you’re putting all your eggs in one basket. If you have only one income source and something happens to it — you lose it, {downsizing, layoffs, shut down, etc.} — your entire livelihood is at risk. I invested in income-producing rental properties as my second income and consulting as my third. SAVED MY BEHIND!
  • Invest In Yourself. The best investment by far is anything that develops YOU!
  • Be Frugal Even While Building Your Wealth. Shop smart when it comes to things like food and cars. If it is not appreciating, it is deprecating!
  • FINALLY – Take action today. Reading this blog or other ideas and doing nothing wastes your time! JUST DO IT!

These steps will secure your financial freedom and pave the way to a prosperous future.

Here’s What a $5 Million Retirement Looks Like in America

BY: Veronica Dagher at Veronica.Dagher@wsj.com and Anne Tergesen at anne.tergesen@wsj.com

Retirees open up about their financial lives and how they spend their time and money

Few Americans manage to save anywhere near that sum in their 401(k)s and individual retirement accounts. A $5 million retirement nest egg puts you in the top 0.1% of households, according to an Employee Benefit Research Institute analysis of retirement accounts using the 2019 Survey of Consumer Finances.

To find out what $5 million buys in retirement, we spoke to retirees around the country with savings in that ballpark. 

Most never expected to be multimillionaires but were diligent about saving from early on in their careers. 

Though they are less concerned about outliving their money than many retirees we have profiled, they aren’t all living in luxury. Some haven’t bought new clothes in years. Others continue to work part-time.

They splurge on world travel but, like most older Americans, worry about their health and their families. 

And money alone also doesn’t answer the other question retirees wrestle with: How to find purpose and meaning in this chapter of life?


65 years old – Paul Shemwell

PHOTO: JACK THOMPSON FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Location: Houston, Texas; Annual Spending: $144,000

Paul Shemwell landed in retirement in December after four decades flying commercial planes and jet fighters.

Though the 65-year-old feels financially secure with about $6.1 million socked away, he hasn’t mapped out a flight plan for what comes next. 

The casual approach is a big change for the former pilot, who honed his strategic thinking skills throughout his 13 years in the Air Force. His time in the service also taught him to weigh his options carefully, a philosophy guiding him in retirement. 

After 28 years working for Southwest Airlines, he stopped flying, but travel remains his passion. He has four trips planned this fall, wanderlust that costs him about $3,000 a month. He spends another roughly $9,000 monthly on property taxes and home and car insurance.

His days usually start with a workout or a tennis lesson. An avid skier, he has already purchased a pass for this season and plans at least one scuba-diving trip a year. 

Shemwell turned down several job offers to return to the cockpit, partly because he didn’t need the money.

He plans to take Social Security upon reaching full retirement age, which will add about $40,000 a year in annual income.

Paul Shemwell recently retired and will soon become an empty-nester. Jack Thompson for The Wall Street Journal

Life as an empty nester is another big change. His son is a sophomore in college, and his daughter starts college this fall. Shemwell, who is divorced with joint custody, said he prioritizes being deeply involved in his kids’ lives. 

His airline schedule allowed him to attend most of his children’s tennis and football games. They are both away at school, so he wants to travel to see them play. 

Shemwell now spends more time with his friends, meeting them for lunch most weekdays. 

He’s not an active trader, but follows the market. His portfolio is 95% stocks, mostly index funds, with a few individual equities like Apple.

Paul Shemwell has recently taken up tennis again. Photo: Jack Thompson for The Wall Street Journal

His father lived into his late 90s, so Shemwell is unworried by his heavy stock allocation.

“I plan to continue living within or below my means, stay invested and have something to leave to my kids,” he said.

Shemwell has roughly $300,000 left on the mortgage of his Houston home. He refinanced to a 2.99% interest rate, so he is in no rush to pay down the debt.

He drives a 2016 Infiniti that has about 80,000 miles. The car and the used Mercedes he bought for his daughter are paid for. He pays his credit-card bill in full each month.

“I like to keep things simple,” he said.


61 and 60 years old – Jay and Anita Myer

PHOTO: KATE MEDLEY FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Location: Cary, North Carolina; Annual Spending: $130,000

Jay Myer built up enough savings to retire early from his software sales career in 2020 after decades of maxing out contributions to his 401(k).

At 25, Myer read a book by Vanguard founder John Bogle that espoused low-cost index funds. He bought individual stocks, too, following the advice of renowned stock picker Peter Lynch to buy what you know. For Myer, now 61, that meant technology stocks and shares in companies he did software deals with, including Home Depot, which he purchased decades ago for a split-adjusted $3 a share.

“I was too young to read about retirement, but it made a lot of sense. If you lower your investment cost, you’ll keep more profits,” said Myer, whose retirement account is invested in seven Vanguard index funds.

He and his wife, Anita, 60, drove used cars and stuck to a budget so Myer could contribute the maximum annual limit to his 401(k) account from age 22 on. Anita worked as a dental hygienist until their second son was born in 2000. 

Jay Myer said his decision to retire early was relatively easy, thanks in part to the allure of traveling and spending time with grandchildren. The Myers recently moved from Atlanta to North Carolina to live near their son and his family. Kate Medley for The Wall Street Journal

Myer said his decision to retire early was partly inspired by his stepfather, a small-business owner who enjoyed traveling and spending time with grandchildren.

“He showed me you could let go of the workplace and reidentify yourself,” said Myer. 

Losing a steady paycheck was scary at first. When the market tumbled in 2020, he scrutinized the couple’s every purchase, down to the napkins, but quickly realized that doing so was unnecessary, given their healthy nest egg.

The couple now has $4.2 million, half in retirement accounts and half in taxable accounts.

Using the proceeds from the recent sale of their Atlanta home, the couple paid $925,000 for a house in Cary that is 2 miles from their older son’s family, whom they see often.

The Myers love cooking, gardening, and traveling, and plan to improve their new home. Photo: Kate Medley for The Wall Street Journal

They spend about $130,000 annually, including $5,000 on property taxes. Each month, they spend around $700 on food and $1,000 on health insurance. (Since they currently spend from cash reserves, the couple’s taxable income is low enough to qualify them for insurance subsidies.)

Myer says he’ll wait to take Social Security until age 70 to maximize his monthly benefit.

The couple considered selling some individual stocks to put more into bonds, but were deterred by the capital-gains tax they would owe on their profits. Instead, they decided to leave their biggest winners to their two sons.

The Myers, who budget about $20,000 a year for travel, are planning a trip to Spain, where their younger son is living this year.

Both love to cook and garden. Myer said he is enjoying unstructured time.

“Now that I have more time, I have learned to embrace boredom and slow down and accept sometimes that reading a book or riding my bike is enough,” he said.


72 years old – Henry Hwu

PHOTO: RYAN YOUNG FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Location: Irvine, California; Annual Spending: $250,000

For Dr. Henry Hwu, work is part of what makes for a satisfying retirement.

While the Irvine, Calif., surgeon used to put in up to 80 hours a week, he now works part time and around his vacations. “And boy do I like to travel,” Hwu, 72, said.

An immigrant from Taiwan, Hwu said he and his late wife came to the U.S. in 1979. After studying surgery for five years in Chicago and completing a fellowship in colorectal surgery in Michigan in 1986, Hwu moved to Southern California, where he and his wife raised three children.

Before reaching his medical practice’s mandatory retirement age of 65, Hwu started reading books (and, he says, Wall Street Journal articles) about retirement. He took up golf and pickleball and bought a guitar, resurrecting a hobby he had had little time for since medical school.

But after retiring in 2016, he missed work and began accepting assignments at his former practice.

Every morning, he asked himself what he would do that day. “I didn’t like that feeling,” said Hwu, whose wife died just after he retired. 

Dr. Henry Hwu officially retired in 2016 but continues to work part-time when he’s not traveling. Photo: Ryan Young for The Wall Street Journal

Hwu travels up to three months a year, visiting his 98-year-old mother in Taiwan or exploring Scotland, France, Germany, Japan, and Switzerland, where he once bought so much chocolate for friends that his suitcase broke.

Hwu often brings his guitar. While in London recently, he gave a street musician 20 pounds to step aside so he could play “Let It Be Me,” by the Everly Brothers. “I don’t know how people liked it, but there was an audience standing before me,” said Hwu.

Hwu still enjoys attending medical conferences and reading medical journals.

At a conference in 2017, he met the only surgeon at a rural hospital in Los Alamos, N.M. Hwu now travels to Los Alamos to relieve the surgeon for a few days, most months. There, he enjoys hiking and seeing his son, an accountant in Albuquerque.

When at home, Hwu takes guitar lessons and often sees his daughter and baby granddaughter.

Henry Hwu travels up to three months a year. He often takes his guitar and recently performed on a street corner in London. Ryan Young for the Wall Street Journal

His home is worth $1.5 million. He owns a second house worth $1.2 million, which he rents for $3,500 a month. He owes about $500,000 on each house but isn’t rushing to pay his mortgages off because the interest rates are below 3%.

Hwu invests over $1 million in his retirement accounts in equity funds and individual stocks, including Apple, Microsoft, and Nvidia

He gets $2,700 monthly in Social Security benefits, which he started taking at 65. He receives about $130,000 a year in pension payments and earned about $300,000 from his per diem work last year.

Travel is his big splurge, at $100,000 a year. Other expenses come to about $4,000 monthly, not counting his mortgage payments.

He also pays $6,800 annually for a long-term-care insurance policy.

“With my mom living to 98, there will be a time when I cannot take care of myself,” he said. “I want to cut down on the burden on my kids.”


80 and 75 years old: Bob and Pat Frey

PHOTO: REBECCA STUMPF FOR THE WALL STREET JOURNAL

Location: Bozeman, Montana; Annual Spending: $220,000

Growing up, Bob Frey never imagined he would retire a multimillionaire.

After graduating from West Point, he received his master’s degree while on active duty and then his veterinary degree with an Army reserve scholarship and the GI Bill. He spent 26 years as a reserve officer, retiring at age 60. He maxed out his retirement plan contributions starting in his 30s. 

Times were sometimes tough, like when he borrowed about $150,000 to start a veterinary practice. He sold three businesses over the years, including two veterinary practices. These exits greatly added to his worth, he said.

These days, Bob, 80, and his wife, Pat Frey, 75, have socked away about $6.1 million, almost half of which is invested in individual retirement accounts. 

Frey gets a $60,000 annual military pension, plus about $14,000 a year in veterans’ disability compensation because of hearing loss he developed after serving in Vietnam. The couple collects about $56,000 in total from Social Security. 

Bob and Pat Frey enjoy time together and also make a point of pursuing their hobbies. Rebecca Stumpf for The Wall Street Journal

“We have more money than we can spend in our lifetimes,” he said.

The couple, married for over 30 years, has five adult children. They moved to Bozeman, Mont., in the early 1990s for a fresh start and to be closer to nature. Pat continued her nursing career, and Bob retrained as a certified financial planner.

The Freys, despite their wealth, generally avoid its trappings. Bob said he hasn’t bought a new sports coat in about 20 years. Living in Montana, the couple said they don’t have much use for formal clothes and would rather knock around in jeans and sneakers. Pat frequently takes nature walks with a friend. 

The Freys expect to spend about $1.5 million to help pay for the education of their nine grandchildren. They also donate roughly $40,000 annually to their favorite charities, including their church.

Bob Frey goes fly fishing worldwide and close to home in the Gallatin River. Photo: Rebecca Stumpf for The Wall Street Journal

The couple has no debt and doesn’t tinker much with their investments, of which about 70% is invested in stock funds. Bob said they may leave about $1 million to charity upon their deaths.

The Freys, too, value travel and allocate about $35,000 a year to seeing the world. They have visited New Zealand five times, and Bob often combines his love for fly fishing and travel on trips to Alaska, Mexico, and South America. 

They also enjoy separate trips with their friends. Pat regularly travels to Europe and the Galápagos Islands with a friend. She skips Bob’s hunting trips. 

“I have no desire to sleep in a tent and carry an elk out of the woods,” she said.

Write to Veronica Dagher at Veronica.Dagher@wsj.com and Anne Tergesen at anne.tergesen@wsj.com

https://www.wsj.com/articles/heres-what-a-5-million-retirement-looks-like-in-america-1abc76d9?mod=hp_lead_pos9&mod=hp_lead_pos7

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ABOUT ME

I am a proud nerd (as my beautiful wife and daughter have told me) investment and finance blogger with an N.C.  State, Chemical Engineering, University Rutgers, MBA and Harvard University, Advanced Management education.

I left a corporate career because I desired to make a difference as a speaker and writer.  I was blessed to be coached and mentored by strong women and men in my family and professional life.  It is my time to serve and give back.

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I started my first business at ~13 years of age (a small but brilliantly created plant nursery). I am a successful investor in stocks, options, real estate and am happy to share my finance and investment lessons.  I am NOT a licensed financial advisor.  Please do not construe my suggestions on this blog as recommendations for your situation.  As an investor, you must establish your risk/loss tolerance.  Investment in any asset involves risk, including complete loss. 

 Please seek your licensed CPA or fiduciary financial advisors for individual financial advice.  

I write this weekly blog to make an impact by reaching an audience and demonstrating the need for Financial Literacy.  I will help you get there.

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Powers Investments Management, LLC

This blog will provide, information and simple strategies, that will assist you to achieve YOUR financial objectives and long term targets. For over 30 years, I solved multi-million dollar problems, for Fortune 10-250, companies. My formal education includes: Business, Finance and Chemical Engineering {Problem Solving} at: Harvard, Rutgers and North Carolina State. And an additional 30+ years, managing my family’s investment decisions. I currently manage/advise people with net-worths ranging from the tens of thousands to several million dollars.

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