Top 1%

Shooting Par Financially

 

These are tough questions.

To answer, I like to look at financial benchmarks for the general public -- and better yet, for people like me.

So far those benchmarks have been elusive. Here are the best three I've found:

  • Millionaire Next Door Formula

    Market research experts Thomas Stanley and William Danko gave us the best empirical formula to date.

    According to their research (offered in their 1996 book Millionaire Next Door), your par net worth should be a tenth of your age, times your annual income [(Age/10)*annual income].

    If you're 42 earning $100,000, that's $420,000 ($210,000 if you're 42 earning $50,000). If your net worth is twice that ($840,000 and $420,000 in our example), you're a "prodigious accumulator of wealth." That's your birdie.

    And if half that, you're an "under accumulator of wealth." Bogey.

    This benchmark serves well, but it factors in only age and income, nothing else. Still, I like it and use it a lot.

  • Federal Reserve Survey of Consumer Finances

    Published every three years by the Federal Reserve, this complex and rich study dimensions wealth by several factors, including demographics, asset class ownership and debt profiles.

    The most recent version, from 2004 data published last year, shows a median net worth for all U.S. families of $93,100.

    But it gets more interesting.

    Here, for example, are median U.S. net worth figures, cut across two simple demographics:



    Age
    Less than 35 years $14,200
    35-44 $69,400
    45-54 $144,700
    55-64 $248,700
    65-74 $180,100
    75+ $163,100
    Education
    No high school diploma $20,600
    High school diploma $68,700
    Some college $69,300
    College degree $226,100

    This just scratches the surface; I'll be back to share more in future articles.

  • A.G. Edwards Nest Egg Score

    The clever nest-egg score is an intrepid venture toward creating a single credit-score-like figure to evaluate your wealth accumulation performance. It evaluates your conditions for saving, factored by income, some simple demographics and your wealth accumulation to date. Essentially, it reads how effectively you've saved given your situation.

    Although not as direct as other wealth benchmarks, like a credit score it helps to see where you stack up. You can get your score for free and compare it with national averages. While there's more to learn about how to deploy this feature in your own planning, hats off to A.G. Edwards for providing it.

The Stanley-Danko formula doesn't take much into account besides income and age, but it is a tantalizingly simple benchmark. The others bear further study and understanding, which I will share in future articles.

Find your scorecard, tee up, and stay tuned.

>To order reprints of this article, click here: Reprints

Jennifer Openshaw, a passionate advocate for helping Americans improve their finances and build their personal fortunes, is CEO of The Millionaire Zone and America Online's personal finance editor. In addition to appearing regularly on TV shows such as "Oprah" and "Good Morning America" and on CNN, Openshaw is host of ABC Radio's "Winning Advice" and serves as an adviser to some of America's top corporations. Her new book, "The Millionaire Zone," will hit bookstores in April 2007.

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