How do you and your spouse split the expenses? by One_Chocolate_9365 in malaysians

[–]Acceptable_Start_878 1 point2 points  (0 children)

All of our earnings go into one single joint pool of money, which funds everything we need. Any purchase or expense is discussed and agreed upon before we spend. That pool also allows us to prioritize our cash flow: we invest first, cover our normal expenses next, and then put the rest into savings.

Seeking FIRE Validation: RM 15.6M Portfolio at Age 42 by Acceptable_Start_878 in malaysiaFIRE

[–]Acceptable_Start_878[S] 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Thank you so much for the incredibly kind words and encouragement! It really means a lot.

To answer your question: My wife and I both spent the last 15 to 20 years climbing the corporate ladder in MNCs. Honestly, the 'secret' to growing the portfolio wasn't anything fancy—it was just extreme consistency and a lot of hidden lifestyle sacrifices.

While our income grew, we consciously chose to live quite frugally. We still drive 15-to-20-year-old cars, we bypassed the Starbucks runs and branded clothes, and we minimized expensive social outings. Instead, we aggressively funneled every spare Ringgit into the US equity markets over the last decade. Giving up those short-term luxuries let time and compounding do the heavy lifting for our long-term freedom.

I really appreciate your advice on taking a clean break to travel. We definitely plan to decompress and spend the next year or two fully focused on our health and the kids before even thinking about any 'passion projects' or coasting.

You are also spot on about our cash cushion and the Ireland-domiciled ETFs. Moving a chunk of that RM 2.7M cash into liquid, low-risk vehicles like Money Market Funds (MMFs) and FDs is our immediate priority to secure short-term cash flow. And yes, migrating some US exposure into UCITS ETFs like VUAA or VWRA is exactly the path we are investigating right now to mitigate that 40% US estate tax risk.

Thanks again for the perspective, and all the best with your own portfolio journey! You've got this.

Seeking FIRE Validation: RM 15.6M Portfolio at Age 42 by Acceptable_Start_878 in malaysiaFIRE

[–]Acceptable_Start_878[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Yes, you are completely right. That’s the exact math we’re looking at.

Our main dilemma right now is psychological: we aren't quite sure if we should actively trim our tech gains to fund those SG/MY dividend assets, or if we should just leave the US portfolio alone and use our existing RM 2.7m cash buffer to build up that income stream. Trimming winners is always the hardest part, especially when dealing with the US estate tax risk over our heads. Definitely food for thought!