Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 130 total)
  • how financially stable / screwed are you?
  • jota180
    Free Member

    Would it all come tumbling down if you lost your job?

    I’m the sole bread winner but we have no debts
    So not tumbling down but losing 90% of our income would start to hurt our lifestyle hard a few months in, maybe 6
    Sort of depends how well we could switch to survival mode only

    boblo
    Free Member

    We’re probably stable and having no debt and savings means we could exist for a year or two without income (or selling body parts). This would eat away our savings which would obviously put us in a much less comfortable position. Both of us are in transferable roles so we should be able to get going again if we needed to.

    We’ve (well me really) deliberately cut back on expenditure over the past couple of years and I’m not nearly as much of a spend thrift as I was. Any excess now goes into cash savings. I have a bit in the stock market and my pension is obviously tied to that but performance is pi$$ poor so we’ll be relying on property and cash come the day….

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    At the moment since we have no house and have small out goings we could live for 3 years on our savings alone without finding other jobs

    I have a varied skill set and can work hard so dont think id find it hard to get a paying job – it wont be what i do now but i could get work .

    With respect to my current job im trying to stay in ops for a while despite my boss pushing me towards middle management because as an ops man im versatile across alot of product lines in the offshore industry – as a middlemanager im a drain on resources where ever i go. Long as i am willing to travel i might as well stay in ops

    My mrs is a teacher on the other hand – none are safe !

    Which is why im loathe to go out and get a sizable mortgage despite being able to “afford ” it

    FunkyDunc
    Free Member

    Ton – why though? 15 years ago I nearly lost my home when I was made redundant and didnt have a penny to my name. Mrs FD was in a similar stuation 10 years ago (we only got together 6 years ago).

    So both of us in the last 15 years have been absoltuely broke. We have both worked dam hard since to get to where we are now where we have a nice comfortable home, nice cars etc. Yes we use credit, but we use credit we can afford. As I said above credit/debt is only bad when you can not afford it. We know their is a risk if tomorrow we both loose our jobs, but the risk is minimised in our opinion and would still leave us with cash if we had to sell everything up.

    “So that’s assunmong you could sell your current property then?”

    Yes agreed dependant on us selling our houses, but one currently has over £100k equity in it based on current market value in the area, so we could sell way below market value, and the houses are selling in our area.

    smogmonster
    Full Member

    We could never afford to but the house we live in..nice area, great schools etc, so we rent instead (£1000 a month unfortunately), but i also put over £1000 a month into my pension as well. 2 (oldish) cars paid for, 3 bikes paid for, trying to save for a house deposit but lif e aint cheap, so it isnt going that well!

    Gary_M
    Free Member

    £1000 a month to rent a house, that would serioulsy stick in my throat.

    hilldodger
    Free Member

    No kids, no car, no mortgage, no loans or CC bills.
    Very secure public sector job which gives me ‘key worker’ status for low rent property plus two small but growing businesses whose running costs are just a website plus my own time and expertise.

    Never been more secure or financially stable and hope to be able to expand my businesses next year – may even take early retirement and cash in my public sector pension if my plans comes good 😀

    plop_pants
    Free Member

    Own our house.
    Wife in work.
    I’m not, been looking for 9 months.
    Very lucky to have been the saving sort over the years and have 6 figure savings otherwise we’d be sunk.

    simon_g
    Full Member

    £1000 a month to rent a house, that would serioulsy stick in my throat.

    It’s all relative. We pay just over that to rent a 2-bed flat. Similar one in our block is up for sale at 370k – that would cost me £1700+ to mortgage and wipe out my savings in the process, assuming I could find someone willing to lend to me in the first place. Just interest only is nearly as much as our rent, but we’re not liable for service charges, fixing the boiler, etc. Plus we would lose a load of money upfront in taxes and fees to buy, and more again when we came to sell.

    Who’d buy in this sort of market? Either you give a grand a month to a landlord to provide a roof over your head or give the same to the bank for lending you the money to be lumbered with some bricks and mortar.

    BoardinBob
    Full Member

    It’s all relative. We pay just over that to rent a 2-bed flat. Similar one in our block is up for sale at 370k

    £370,000 for a flat??? Whereabouts, Kensington? 😯

    trail_rat
    Free Member

    Paying 700 including electricity for a recently refurbed to modern regs for efficency 2 bed cottage in the country near services

    A similar property in a similar area on deeside would be 900-1300 and need refurbed to be as efficient and as nice frankly at the moment i think it makes sense to stay put ! – doesnt mean im not looking for that break though

    Depends largely on your area though

    Also means that why my boss presents such oportunities such as last week ” how would you feel about moving to perth austrailia for a couple of years” are fiesable

    wors
    Full Member

    Very lucky to have been the saving sort over the years and have 6 figure savings otherwise we’d be sunk.

    What sre your outgoings 😯

    5lab
    Full Member

    Of those that are ‘financially stable’ how secure are you in your job?

    Would it all come tumbling down if you lost your job?

    if i lost my job I’d get a reasonable (~50% of salery) payout (tax free). I could drop the mortgauge to interest only and cover it comfortably for a good few years before that money ran out, and the OH (teacher) could probably cover it with her wages anyway. It’d obviously mean a change in lifestyle, but it’d not be game ending

    for those of you who think £1k/month is a lot in rent – you can pay over a million for a flat here (brighton)

    http://www.rightmove.co.uk/property-for-sale/property-20934831.html

    singletrackmind
    Full Member

    Financially OK
    Single bloke. Employed C£25k pa.
    Mtg paid off on my flat.
    £90k on a second Buy to Let 1.6 X cover on std variable so room for rate swing.
    Over £10k in bank.
    No CC , tiny overdraft coz I have several accounts and loose track.
    3 pensions , started 1st at 17.
    Multiple inheritances in a short timeline helped me out massively.
    Very lucky I guess , am risk averse so wouldnt ever get out of my depth.

    plop_pants
    Free Member

    What sre your outgoings

    Not that much. Don’t have big holidays. The house is pretty cheap to run.
    Don’t drink or smoke or go to restaurants. Just like to ride my bike.
    My wife’s earnings and the interest from our savings in total are probably around the average wage, don’t need any more tbh, that said I would very much like to be working and contributing to the economy.

    mcboo
    Free Member

    Mrs stopped working 10yrs ago, been part time for the last couple of years, about to go back to work on a good salary. I earn less than I used to but am happier. Zero job security but thats part of the deal.

    Mortgage down to 8% now and only paying 2.5% so thats fine.

    No other debt

    but….3 kids in private school = £40k a year for the next 10yrs then will drop off after that. Thats a chunk of change.

    landcruiser
    Free Member

    I am surprised how many people here have paid off their mortgages. That for me is the biggest monthly outgoing and I thought that having 60% ish equity in our property was doing ok………….

    Seems it’s not 🙁

    mcboo
    Free Member

    I thought that having 60% ish equity in our property was doing ok………….

    It’s not a race fella, nothing wrong with having some debt if you have the income and stability that can service it without putting your sanity at risk. 60% equity is great.

    landcruiser
    Free Member

    Mcboo- I understand that, though of course it would be more desirable to not have the outgoing. I am just surprised how many people are saying they have paid/cleared their mortgage debt…….

    Mind you I suppose the majority that have it all upside down are probably working too hard to post stuff on this forum at 17:25 on a week day !!

    Gary_M
    Free Member

    This is the Internet therefor some may be lies.

    LHS
    Free Member

    Debt free and stable apart from mortgages ~ £700k.

    orange
    Free Member

    consider myself to be ‘on the fence’

    total debt £100k
    house worth around £150k – mortgage got another 11 years to go
    stable job, but still 25 years till i retire
    £5k in savings, no real assets
    couple of pensions
    single (again) and no kids

    like ‘UK Plc’ its not the total debt i worry about but the monthly deficit – always go over and use the overdraft

    i won’t consider myself fully secure until the house is actually mine

    often feel guilty about thinking about my potential future inheritance in 20-30 years time, never considered it – once I had a small mortgage and a great final pay pension and everything was rosey until my plc employer screwed that out of us and now my pension will be largely my risk and I guarantee not worth half the valuation being quoted

    sadly i’m worth much much more dead than alive

    can’t help but feel that 95% of the population has been royally **** over big style, but no i don’t agree with the strike having got caught in the traffic in manchester this afternoon 😉

    jota180
    Free Member

    I am surprised how many people here have paid off their mortgages. That for me is the biggest monthly outgoing and I thought that having 60% ish equity in our property was doing ok………….

    Some of us have been paying them for a long time
    got mine in 90, finished it last year

    5lab
    Full Member

    am surprised how many people here have paid off their mortgages. That for me is the biggest monthly outgoing and I thought that having 60% ish equity in our property was doing ok………….

    you also don’t know how old everyone is. Mortgage paid off at 30 is impressive. Mortgage paid off at 60 is less so 🙂

    loddrik
    Free Member

    38, no job, no pension, huge student debt, lots of other debt and terrible credit rating, house has 26 years of mortgage left to run, pretty darn big too.

    But I’m pretty happy in my life, don’t really care about accruing material and financial wealth, I find it all rather distasteful. Main targets are to get back into work, get rid of debt (although not in the slightest bit bothered about the student debt and it looks like it’s going to get a significant hike anyhow) and at least pay something towards a pension.

    Married with 2 & 6 year old girls.

    I didn’t work and was pretty comfortable financially for much of my 20s & early 30s so I guess I’ve already had my retirement…

    Just applied to go back and do teaching as it looks like I’m gonna be working for a, while to come.

    wrightyson
    Free Member

    Married two kids half the house is mine half is the banks!! Our biggest worry is we spend 200 every month over our income v outgoings figure! We thankfully have savings but they are slowly and surely being eaten away!! I accredit it all to the cost of living just going up and up!!!

    nedrapier
    Full Member

    .

    GJP
    Free Member

    Remaining Mortgage of say £75k against a property value of £300k. No other debt. High salary. Shed loads in the bank. Very little job security but I would receive a very generous pay off owing to the length of my notice period and length of service. No dependents.

    So in theory on paper I am financially secure, but do I feel financially secure then no I do not.

    Merchant-Banker
    Free Member

    39, just separated / dumped

    2 children

    paying £700 mortgage

    renting a £650 a month 2 bed terrace

    £320 a month for my children

    £3000 on credit cards

    £7000 loan with 36 mth to run.

    £6000 on a new catering trailer delivered in the next 28 days.

    CSA want more money.

    And just when you thought it couldn’t get any worse, Trafford council have put double yellow lines on my pitch, but taken my money to trade there.

    So now entering a legal battle with the licensing officer/ department.

    But my best mates dad has just been diagnosed with spinal cancer, and Christie’s have told him there is nothing they can do.

    1 of my other mates has just lost their first child to cot death.

    My brother in laws Brother, has just committed suicide at the age of 24.

    so in some respect im glad my problems are only financial,

    Because in the last 14 days ive experienced every human emotion possible, and am just about at the end of my tether.

    Todays happy go lucky post was brought to you in association with “Chin Up” productions

    MB

    redthunder
    Free Member

    😉

    Northwind
    Full Member

    Extremely stable for now, but on short term contracts so no guarantee I’ll be working past February. TBH I’ve cut my fixed outgoings to the bone and I could keep myself going for a couple of years before I ran out of savings though. So let’s say weak, but stable.

    MrSmith
    Free Member

    how do you all think you will be if interest rates return to a historical norm of 6% in a few years time and your fixed has run out?

    Blackhound
    Full Member

    Retired on company pension, buy-to-let income and interest on savings added together is close to national average wage, and good for East Mids.

    52 and single, Mrs B lives separate life 125 miles away, mortgages paid and put my daughter through university. So done ok but I have probably always been a bit careful and saved a bit. Always balanced saving between risky and safe – some have worked and others not.

    5lab
    Full Member

    Absolutely fine. Currently pay 2k a month, of which £300/month is interest. If the interest doubled it’d annoy me but that’s it.

    5lab
    Full Member

    Absolutely fine. Currently pay 2k a month, of which £300/month is interest. If the interest doubled it’d annoy me but that’s it.

    Edukator
    Free Member

    I own everything I really want, Madame’s income exceeds our expenditure, there’s money in the banks for many rainy years.

    I’ve just asked Madame if she has everything she wants and she said she’d quite like a camper (we had (lived in) a T2 when we were poor). I guess that’ll be whatever a foul polluting camper caosts less in the bank then.

    Oh no!!! What have you lot started? Madame is now looking at campers on Le Bon Coin.

    Blackhound
    Full Member

    Looking to buy a little retirement bungalow and room for a camper van is on the check list. Already turned one down due to a low car port.

    hofnar
    Free Member

    Just passed the 30 mark

    income 300 a month as I took of for a year from work.

    Own a shack with no electricity and one working tap(source fed) that I am doing up currently in France.

    No debts

    had about 100 k when my year off started(after purchase off house) not sure where I am now hope 2012 brings me electricty, heating and a bathroom. Probably end up with a house and a no or small debt then.

    Working offshore and so related so virtually no expenses when I work.

    Its all about what you spend excpet for my ten bikes some 50 quid others 3K and the occasional holiday I can’t be arsed on any luxuries

    RichPenny
    Free Member

    Mr Smith, my fixed is at about 5.5% so it won’t make too much difference 😉
    Me, my wife and 6 month old daughter in a 2 bed flat.
    100k mortgage, about 80% LTV.
    No debts but no real savings either.
    Combined household income maybe £35-40k depending on what hours my wife does.

    We are currently saving 4-500 a month though so will aim to maintain that and cut the cloth accordingly. My wife and child fill me with joy so as long as we can pay the bills we are fine. If I lost my job we’d be in a bit of trouble, but we wouldn’t go homeless or hungry. We can always move to Poland and live on cabbages 😉

    steveh
    Full Member

    I’m pretty solid. Single 32.
    Mortgage has about 45k left on it but the house is worth at least 120k.
    Job for as long as I want it and not impossible to find another by any means earning ~50k.
    Enough in the bank to pay the mortgage off (which I’m going to do very soon) and have about 10k left.
    No other debts.
    Plan to buy myself a camper van again shortly but with other vehicle sales I’ll still have no mortgage and 5-8k in the bank.

    It’s all in my long term plan not to work too much or too hard or too long.

Viewing 40 posts - 81 through 120 (of 130 total)

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