3 Money Moves You Shouldn’t Make When Your Savings Reach $50K

3 Money Moves You Shouldn’t Make When Your Savings Reach $50K

Fernanda Reyes / iStock.com

Reaching $50,000 in savings is a huge milestone for the average person. It’s the kind of lump sum that makes you feel invincible. While you’re likely tempted to do something with that amount of money, experts caution against making certain money moves.

“As a certified financial planner, I have seen how liberating this moment can be,” said Adam Garcia, certified financial planner and founder of The Stock Dork.

Find Out: I’m a Bank Teller: 4 Reasons You Should Withdraw Your Savings Right Now

See More: 6 Things the Middle Class Should Sell To Build Their Savings

However, he said it is also a moment that is very crucial in the sense that some decisions, even the most rational ones, can derail your long-term objectives. Below, he shared three of them and the rationale behind why you should be evading them.

In contrast, here are some money moves you should be making.

“One of the errors I typically witness is upgrading one’s lifestyle a tad too soon,” Garcia said. “For example taking out finance for a new vehicle or making an expensive down payment on a house.”

While these moves are juicy and seem to be the next step, he said they wipe out your liquidity and place other monthly responsibilities that can prevent one from dealing with emergencies or from investing in opportunities.

“First things first, mobility and financial flexibility form the order of things,” he added.

David Milo, financial advisor and owner of Independent Lending, agreed. “It is fine to indulge oneself, but emptying one’s savings just for a few luxury items is putting oneself in trouble,” he said.

Rather, Milo advised setting aside a sliver of your savings for this purpose (about 5 to 10%) and continuing to work hard on your financial plan and goals with the remaining portion.

Read Next: 4 Secrets of the Truly Wealthy, According to Dave Ramsey

Another error in judgment that people often commit, Garcia explained, is risk-taking in excess. “Which is sometimes motivated by investing in high-yield assets such as cryptocurrencies or that are in fashion stocks,” he said. “Many believe, ‘Now that I have $50,000, I can afford to take a chance.’”

Without diversification, however, he said those bets can wipe out profits and all progress you worked for is lost. “Rather work on a balanced portfolio designed for the goals and personal risk appetite,” Garcia added.

Milo agreed that focusing on risky assets is the wrong move. “When a person achieves valued savings of $50,000, trust increases to the extent that money is dumped into assets such as cryptocurrency or speculative stocks.

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

Back To Top