London edition: How much have you saved?

I have seen a lot of these type of threads but they all relate to the US so thought I would start one for London. So how much have you saved? Include any portfolio/investments or assets you own so if you own a house include that .

Age: 29

Role: Investment Banking VP

Savings: £200k total across cash and investments. No house, still renting.

Thoughts: I'm a little disappointed with my savings, I felt I could have done much better.

Curious to hear from others in London.

 

that's incredible well done for the success. I understand your family loaned you some money but I'm a little confused how you managed to accumulate ~£1.5m net worth so early in your career? Especially given you came from Big4 which has very low salaries. Would be great if you could provide some details around how you managed to build that. thanks

 

Oh and I should add - never underestimate having a stable partner throughout the years and the magic it does to your finances. I wouldn’t have saved half as much if I wasn’t able to split the costs all these years, also didn’t have someone to back me financially when I was running out like during my MBA
 

I would say in general relationships matter a lot. I had friends loan me 20k when I needed it even if they weren’t rich (were waiting to save more for a deposit), I levered my family’s connections for my commercial tenant and for all the construction supplies, negotiating discounts, etc. There is no way I would have done it and made it this profitable at market terms if I was to be ripped off by every contractor. I could go on…  

 
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I beg to differ. I came to the UK and studied in a very sub standard university here because I just didn’t know better when I was applying. On top of my poor academic credentials I am Eastern European and a woman and have faced plenty of discrimination, especially 10 years ago before the me too movement. I started in the big4 because there was nothing else that would consider me at the time. 
 

I have been fairly transparent about the help I’ve had along the way, and I appreciate it wasn’t something accessible to everyone. But you’re discounting what I did with that and the value I managed to add to it. I’ve saved aggressively despite what you deem as silver spoon.
 

If I compare myself with the analysts we hire (private schools, excellent universities, family holidays in Maldives, some living at home and paying no rent, etc) I find it hard in that context, seeing the people around me in IB, to call myself a silver spoon. 

 

My reading is that about 1M  (400k + 600k) of the 1.5M is family money, one way or another. So likely >8% CAGR return over perhaps 5-year, which makes sense. Caveat is that the valuation of the real estate assets are likely to be way down if mark to market, as I assume those are still based on 2021 multiples.

 

£13k after 4 years of audit (just qualified a few months ago), and it would have been much less had I gone skiing with my friends, to Australia/Japan or to any other holidays I held back on. Will probably do an MBA next year so who knows when I'll have a positive net worth. At almost 29 years old and coming from top private schools and unis in the UK it feels a bit rough but just gotta keep grinding. I am going to Australia this September on holiday but hopefully by the time I do this MBA I'll be able to at least pay for my accommodation , whether that's in the US or INSEAD, though the massive mountain of debt really scares me. I'm honestly just hoping my career takes off like a rocket ship in my 30s! I have no idea how I'd have kids otherwise, my school costs £30k/Yr now!

Being a US citizen I also can't invest in the UK (well, I can't take advantage of the ISA scheme at least) which makes this all even worse, I'll renounce that passport unless I move there at some point soon.

OP you're doing incredibly well and honestly, even for someone ambitious who went to international/good private schools, this is pretty incredible savings to have by your age, really well done!

 

Interesting - I took the opposite view and paid off the loan as I don’t expect S&S ISA returns to exceed the extortionate interest cost over the next 3-5Y (and just to have the weight off my shoulders).

Granted the tax-like repayments provide a safety net, but at one point before the cap was implemented, the cost was above 13%!

 
AstronomyDomine

Associate 1 @ an EB

Have around £100k in savings (ISA, …), £35k in pension and £25k in student loan (which I’m paying down as slowly as possible given very low interest rate on it)

Going to wait a year or two and sell my ISAs for a flat deposit.

Very low interest rate on your student loan? Bro, depending on which plan you're on you are paying either 7.6% or 6.25%....

 

~5 years of professional work experience

£260k in equities (made some good and bad investment decisions over COVID and then afterwards). £10k cash (should be £30k as an "emergency supply" so will top up after bonus) and I guess ~£100k in equity value in my flat? 

Array
 

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