Hey All -
My wife and I at a bit of an inflection point in my life (new [to us] house, new job, 2nd kid on the way, etc.) and as a result have been rethinking our approach to finances. Currently, we are following the traditional recommendation to max 401k, Roth, then contribute remaining amount to Brokerage. My wife and I have been very fortunate with our incomes which has helped us to get to where we are today.
Age: 33/34
Location: MCOL
Income: ~$330,000/yr
Mortgage: $580,000 [3%]
Investments: $622,000 [12% brokerage, 85% retirement, 3% UTMA/HSA]
Cash: $30,000
Net worth: $652,000 [I don't include home equity, just assets]
I'm still new to "early retirement math", but I believe our retirement accounts are at "CoastFI" status. Meaning, if we stop contributing to retirement, and those assets continue to grow at ~7%, then those accounts will grow to $4-5mm by traditional retirement age. That is much more than we will need. With that in mind, I've been considering reducing my retirement contributions in favor of growing other less-efficient accounts [see below]. I'm sure this approach is less favorable "by the numbers", but the thought is to bulletproof our finances, mitigate any risk, and achieve piece of mind. Especially, since our income may not always be this high.
1) Reduce retirement contributions to only employer match
2) Increase cash holdings to 50k, perhaps higher?
3) Increase brokerage contributions, get account to 500k?
4) [Only after 2+3] reduce brokerage contributions and pay off mortgage
5) Back to brokerage until we retire
All feedback is welcomed [positive or negative]. Is it better to stay the course? Or pivot for financial security? Any changes to the above?
Thank you in advance.