• S_204
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    10 months ago

    This is what I did with my banking fees…

    I bought enough stock that the dividend covers my monthly fees. I reinvest the dividend so the yield keeps increasing. It’s a Canadian bank so it’s safe AF and not going anywhere and it’s up like 18%+ since I started the other year so I’m not going backwards there either.

    Weird way to cover my fees but seems to be working.

      • S_204
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        10 months ago

        I mean yeah. I also own a house and have set my life up in such a way that I can afford to live what most people consider a normal life.

        I’ll be honest if you can’t afford ~$1,000 in savings. Which is the sum that it took to cover my bank fees in dividend returns then it’s not about being rich or poor, it’s about being poor with your financial decisions. I grew up poor. Literally bankrupt poor, moving from place to place as we ran from bills. I started paying for my own clothes at age 9 and foot the bill for my entire life since age 12. Having $1,000 in the bank is not just for rich people. I’ve had that in the bank since I was 15 years old. Sometimes it wasn’t any more than that, but even when I was living on my own with zero support and bills up to my eyeballs, there was still a chunk of money earning me money along the way.

        • HappycamperNZ@lemmy.world
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          10 months ago

          Dad of 3 here, probably similar age to you.

          I am well aware of how hard we had it growing up, and how much effort it took us to get anything put aside. I remember two hours travel for an extra hour of work at my second job, 3am finishes and 6am starts, and still work weekends, public holidays and up to 26 hours in a row.

          I am also unfortunately well aware this is becoming the norm, and at least we had a few years where this got you a bit ahead. Its now not enough for many and I don’t know how then next generation will manage.

          • S_204
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            10 months ago

            Life was never easy, I don’t know when the story it was got sold to people. At the end of the day, if you can’t scrape together $1000, then shits beyond fucked up and tough decisions need to be made. I didn’t take a vacation for like 15 years other than a long weekend so I could save up. That wasn’t even tough LoL, it was just life. That was the norm around me and I expect it to continue for many if not most.

    • Atemu@lemmy.ml
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      10 months ago

      I bought enough stock that the dividend covers my monthly fees.

      That’s already a good bit of capital locked in stocks just for banking fees. Not saying that’s not worth it but not everyone has the luxury of having that capital.

      it’s up like 18%+ since I started the other year so I’m not going backwards there either.

      Note that this is mostly due to the current economic situation. As the world as a whole recovers from the pandemic, global indices rise.

      With this sort of strategy, you must expect draw downs of just as much however; a crisis usually sends stock prices down faster and further than a recovery period like ours sends them up by. As an example: The start of the Palestine war last year sent the FTSE-All-World index down 5% in just a week or so.

      Historically, the stock prices as a whole have grown around 7% p.a., so if the historical average growth continues, investing in a broad spectrum of stocks is a winning strategy.