A foundational question about defining wealth is, "How much is enough?" As it turns out, the answer - and the definition of a rich life - is largely personal. [Liberty Through Wealth]( SPONSORED [5G Megastock Trades Under SECRET Name]( [Woman with Secret]( You won't find this 5G megastock on the NYSE, the AMEX or the Nasdaq. It's attracted more than $2 billion in investments from Wall Street... And it trades for only $3 a share. How will you discover the SECRET trade name? [Get the urgent details from market mastermind Alexander Green in his latest TEK Talk. Click here to see more.]( THE SHORTEST WAY TO A RICH LIFE How Much Is Enough? Alexander Green | Chief Investment Strategist | The Oxford Club [Alexander Green] One of the foundational questions about money is one that few agree on: How much is enough? In our increasingly competitive world, some believe that money is the way we measure competence, success and even our worth as individuals. This isn't just wrongheaded, in my view. It's offensive. There are plenty of folks doing incredibly skilled and underpaid work as teachers, coaches, social workers, nurses or soldiers, to name just a few. However, many feel - not unreasonably - that there is [a gap between how they live and the way they should be living](. And that money would make up the difference. Perhaps it would. Money is a linchpin issue in all our lives. We need and want things. And it usually takes money to get them. Some live openly with the accumulation of money as a primary goal. Others think it isn't important - or shouldn't be. Yet millions harbor a chronic fear that they will never truly have enough - or be able to keep it. It's easy for those of us with money - even if we were born into modest circumstances - to forget what a struggle life can be without it. Studies show the majority of Americans spend almost everything they make, shouldering enormous stress as [they live paycheck to paycheck](. It's not just the poor and lower middle class, by the way. A realtor friend once said I'd be shocked to discover how many neighbors in his gated community were "just two mortgage payments from the edge." Money can do great things and promote important causes. But it can also dissolve business partnerships, cause friction between family and friends, and end marriages. Even in households where the cash flow is ample, partners often fight over how much to spend, how much to save or how to invest. If you're reading an investment column like this one, you almost certainly have more money than most. ([Or soon will.]( SPONSORED [The Best 5G Stock to Buy Under $20]( [3D render CPU Technology]( With stocks hitting all-time highs virtually every day, it's hard to find a good bargain. But this 5G stock is an exception. Its shares trade for less than $20, and it's locked in partnerships with ALL the major telecoms. That's why you need to get in NOW - before it's all over the mainstream press. [Details here...]( Our primary concern here, of course, is not wages or savings, but wealth - and its successful management. So let's be clear in our terms. [Wealth is not what you make.]( It's what you own: stocks, bonds, cash, real estate, precious metals and other financial assets. Most decide who is "rich" with a particular number: $1 million... or $3 million... or $20 million. I can tell you that as a kid growing up in a middle-class household, I thought anyone worth a million dollars was unspeakably rich. While that is still not an inconsequential sum, it is no longer rare. Thanks to inflation and our society's increasing affluence, a million-dollar net worth - total assets minus total liabilities of a million dollars or more - is now pedestrian. Market researchers Spectrem Group counted 13.6 million millionaire households in the U.S in 2020. That's 1 in 9. (And given the strong real estate and stock markets of the past year, the 2021 number will be considerably larger.) Are the folks in these millionaire households satisfied? Do they feel like they have enough? Not necessarily. According to a report from Ameriprise Financial, only 13% of millionaire respondents considered themselves wealthy. No matter what some people have, [they will consider it inadequate when they learn what others have](. (Even the men and women on the Forbes 400 are acutely aware of who is ahead of or behind them.) How much you "need," of course, is very much tied to where you live, the size of your family, your monthly overhead, and how much you desire to travel or [enjoy the finer things in life](. "The finer things" are hardly necessities, of course. I grew up without them and could easily live without them again. Indeed, many of my most enjoyable years were spent as a largely impecunious bachelor in my 20s. (I learned that some women don't care what kind of car you drive if you can work small miracles on the grill.) Bottom line: When it comes to how much is enough, only your own definition matters. My view is, you're wealthy if you have the resources to [live the way you want to live](. Money unspent - capital - is power. It gives you the freedom to make choices, help others and enjoy what's most important to you. It's hard to argue with the words often attributed to Mae West: "I've been rich, and I've been poor - and believe me, rich is better." Good investing, Alex [Leave a Comment]( [This Is All Wrong]( [Click here]( to watch Alex's latest video update. For Alex's latest video updates, subscribe on [YouTube](. JOIN THE CONVERSATION [Facebook](
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