Millionaires can’t afford to take it easy – honestly
NEW YORK — Renee Weese has reached an enviable goal — she’s became a millionaire. But like many others whose net worth has risen in recent years to seven figures, she doesn’t feel particularly wealthy.
Not that long ago, the word “millionaire” conjured up visions of chauffeured limousines and extravagant shopping trips and elegant yachts. These days, a millionaire is more likely to be the guy or gal next door who saved carefully — and perhaps benefited from the sharp run-up in housing prices — but still worries about covering the exploding costs of children’s educations, caring for aging parents and funding their own retirements.
Weese, 51, of Atlanta, credits her good financial fortune to good-paying jobs and windfalls when her startup insurance company went public and, later, when it was taken over by a bigger insurer. Still, Weese worries about how far the money will go.
As she puts it: “I know I have more money than a lot of people do. But I don’t feel I can sit back on my heels. I have lots of years ahead of me, and elderly parents I help financially a bit, and kids and grandkids.”
To people living paycheck to paycheck or who haven’t saved much — which is the bulk of the U.S. population — $1 million seems far out of reach. But a growing number of Americans are accumulating that amount and more. According to research from Merrill Lynch & Co. and the consulting firm Capgemini, some 2.9 million people in the United States and Canada are worth $1 million. The New York-based companies count all of an individual’s financial assets except a primary residence.
Atlanta financial adviser Micah Porter, who has worked with Weese, estimated that about 70 percent of the wealthy clients his Minerva Planning Group sees have earned their money by building successful businesses or saving from their salaries. The others inherited all or part of their wealth.
But having that much money doesn’t necessarily mean their financial concerns are over. He said a big worry is how long the money will last because “they’ve become used to a certain standard of living that may be difficult to support” when they stop working.
And the fact is, $1 million doesn’t go as far these days as it used to. For one thing, it’s vulnerable to inflation — someone who bought $1 million worth of goods in 1957 would need $7.3 million to buy the same goods today, according to Federal Reserve figures.
It’s also vulnerable to longevity. Americans are living much longer than they used to, and that means they need larger nest eggs to get them through retirement.
Interestingly, it is workers’ focus on saving for their retirement that leads Dan Sontag, an executive in the global private client division of Merrill Lynch, to predict that a growing number of Americans will achieve the million dollar milestone.