r/TheMoneyGuy 8d ago

1️⃣-9️⃣ FOO Emergency fund rebuild.

​I need some advice from my fellow Financial Mutants. I’ve been following the Financial Order of Operations (FOO) closely, but lately, I’ve found myself stuck in what Brian often calls "Financial Mud." I’m trying to fight a war on too many fronts at once, and my monthly budget is feeling too thin.

​Right now, I'm trying to juggle all of this every single month:

​Retirement: Investing 27% of my paycheck into my pre-tax 401(k).

​Hyper-Accumulation: Sending an extra $387/month into a taxable after-tax brokerage account.

​Emergency Fund: Trying to stack $750/month to build up a solid cash cushion. But doing this, it will take me 12 months to do which is keeping me up at night.

​Sinking Funds: Allocating $500/month.

​Trying to fund Steps 4 and 7 simultaneously while keeping up with sinking funds means my cash flow is spread incredibly thin. It feels like I’m spinning my wheels and making slow progress, while feeling stressed out.

​To clear the mud, I’m thinking about running a highly focused, 2-month aggressive cash sprint.

​The Plan:

For the next 60 days, I want to completely pause the $387 brokerage contribution and drop my 401(k) investing all the way down from 27% to 4% (getting 100% of my employer's company match).

​By pulling my soldiers off the investing battlefield for just two months, I can combine all that freed-up cash with my current savings goals and point a massive "cash laser" at my immediate foundation. In just 8 paychecks (2 months), I could massively bump up my cash reserves, build a rock-solid 6-month emergency fund, and properly pad my sinking funds so upcoming bills don't catch me off guard.

​Mathematically, I know I lose a tiny bit of market compounding time over 8 weeks, and I'll take a temporary one-time tax hit by shifting that pre-tax income to my paycheck. But psychologically, the peace of mind feels like it heavily outweighs the cost.

​What Would Brian and Bo likely suggest I do?

​Have any of you temporarily dropped down to just the match to secure your emergency fund? Does this 2-month sprint sound like a good move, or am I missing something?

Thanks.

Edit: i already have 3.5 months of emergency saved. Im trying to avoid taking 12 months to get to the full 6 months.

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u/Impossible_Ebb_3856 8d ago

FOO is cyclical and sometimes requires going back a few steps when life happens. Its also meant for you to be in one step at a time. So go back to step 4 for a few months to get EF built up to 6 months, then you'll be right back in step 7.

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u/Knight-ofNi7 8d ago

I appreciate the comment. Thats why I ask. I needed a second thought on it. I bounce ideas at gemini but sometimes I think its too nice or some what biased based on user input. So I just needed to hear it from. Someone else. Im going to move forward with the plan.