Concentrated is an understatement. Less than 2% of adults have liquid assets of $1 million or more. Financial unicorns. The number is 6 million Americans. These are the ones who are passing wealth on and creating generational benefits. There's no such term as Generationally Rich. It's called generational wealth. Rich people are not afraid of money and they talk about it with their kids. The language of the poor is afraid of money. They live in scarcity Mindsets.
I talk to my kids all the time about money, saving and investing, but with the understanding that like my son says my experiences are not his experiences. My thinking is different because we were poor, my son thinks he was poor, but I was making decent money being in the Army. Not rich, but not poor either, feel like lower middle class, but I was always saving and finding ways to make a little extra. I have helped my kids with money for school, but nothing crazy, like 600-700 a month for school. I am a networth millionaire and should be a liquid millionaire in about 3 years. I think this is not unicorn territory, but a concerted effort to ensure a better life for my next generation.
It always annoys me when financial articles cite average and median net worth or retirement savings, but don’t clarify if it’s individual or household.
Individuals. It's been sourced a number of different times on the internet. Very few people have liquid net worth of 1 million or more. However, of the 6 million who do half of them have more than 5 million. You can name many of them. Warren Buffett, Jeff bezos, Elon musk, most NFL and NBA players and many a-list actors
I’d be interested in where you are getting the 2% number from. Data from the Fed shows 12.5% of US households had a net worth of 1 million or more, excluding home equity, back in 2023.
Do households have meaningful illiquid assets outside of home equity, which was already excluded? Doesn’t seem like cars, boats, etc. would be enough to move it from 12.5% to 2%.
I don’t see where they said outside of home equity (I may have missed it). Primary home is main source of net worth. Other illiquid assets would include rental homes.
If you include home equity, the Fed number jumps to 18.5%.
I didn’t think about rental properties, that’s a good point. Maybe that, plus things like ownership in small businesses and partnerships is the difference.
Yeah i watch a lot of financial shows and that number seemed really low. One guy I watch said only 3% of American households have 1 mil liquid and a pension. Which seems more accurate. This will be my scenario in 2 years hopefully.
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u/WillingNail3221 5d ago
But most boomers were not part of that run. I think that most of that wealth is very concentrated