Money 101: What is F.I.R.E.
Are you dreading the thought of working until you drop? Dive into the Financial Independence, Retire Early (F.I.R.E.) concept and learn how to save hard, invest smart and tell your 9-to-5 to kick rocks
MIDDLE FINGER ECONOMICSDISRUPTIVE FREEDOMMONEY 101FINANCIAL FREEDOMLANGUAGE OF MONEYF.I.R.E. 101
Unruly Intellectual
12/17/20242 min read


The Financial Independence, Retire Early - aka F.I.R.E.- movement isn't just a buzzword. It's a rebellion against the soul-crushing 40+ years paradigm of building someone else' dream.
Imagine ditching the office politics, endless meetings, and that one co-worker who chews too loud, decades before everyone else.
Sounds impossible? It's not.
F.I.R.E. is all about flipping the script; saving aggressively, investing smartly, and designing a life where work is optional, not mandatory.
If you're ready to torch the rat race and live life on your terms, we break down how you can start playing by your own rules.
"To become financially independent you must turn part of your income into capital; turn capital into enterprise; enterprise into profit; turn profit into investment; and turn investment into financial independence."
~ Jim Rohn
Twenty-five percent of adult members of Gen Z polled in a recent Goldman Sachs survey said they are planning on retiring before the age of 55.
Most consumers know that a credit score is used by banks to determine if they will lend money to someone applying for a loan.
What many people don't realize, however, is that a credit score is used for so much more than just lending.
Banks will check a person's credit before opening a new account.
Cell phone companies will check credit before starting a new contract.
Insurance companies use credit scores as a factor to determine an individual's level of risk.
Employers check an applicant's credit as a way to determine their level of responsibility.
Yet, as important as credit is for the average consumer, many people don't understand exactly how it works.
What is a Credit Report?
The consumer credit system is made up of 3 distinct players: The Credit Reporting Agencies; the Creditors and the Consumer.
A credit report is a record of a consumer's history with debt obligations. The information is provided to the 3 major reporting agencies by creditors on a monthly basis: Experian, Equifax and Transunion. Most creditors report to at least one of the 3 agencies, if not all three.
Credit bureaus are for-profit companies that maintain expansive databases with billions of points of financial data on each consumer that creditors can use to analyze how risky a consumer might be. The three major companies tend not to share information between each other, so most customers will discover that the information contained in each of their reports will differ.
A credit file includes information on payment history, the types of accounts, the age of accounts, the balance on accounts and other personal financial facts. All of these different factors are run through an algorithm to determine a consumer's credit score.
What is a Credit Score
A credit score is a numerical representation of how likely a borrower is to repay a debt. It is created by analyzing the information in a person's credit profile and is expressed as a 3-digit number ranging from 300-850.
Potential lenders will evaluate a loan applicant's score to determine what their interest rate will be, IF they get approved for a loan at all.
People with good credit can receive favorable interest rates when buying a vehicle or a home. They also qualify for lower interest rates on unsecured debts such as personal loans and credit cards. Credit scores can even affect a person's insurance rates.
On the other side of the coin, bad credit results in a consumer being charged higher interest rates and ultimately paying hundreds, if not thousands, of dollars more to borrow the same money.
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