Richard Golian

1995-born. Charles University alum. Head of Performance at Mixit. 10+ years in marketing and data.

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Investment Beginnings: The First €50,000 Was the Most Difficult

First 50000 euros, an investing journey
Richard Golian
Richard Golian · 3 192 reads
Hi, I am Richard. On this blog I share my thoughts, not investment advice. This is not a recommendation to buy or sell securities.
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I have often wondered whether it makes sense to publicly share my financial journey and investment strategies. My experience is unique, and my methods might be difficult for many to replicate.

Still, I have decided to give it a try.

Investing 50% of My Income: Seven Years of Low-Cost Living in Prague

From 2016, when I started university and moved to Prague, until 2023, I managed to invest 50% of my income in the stock market. That might sound like I had a high salary, but the reality was quite different. My time for work and earning was limited by my academic obligations. I usually worked around 40 to 80 hours per month. It was not until after 2021 that I began crossing the 100-hour mark. My hourly wage was above average for a student in Prague, but nothing extreme.

The real reason behind my high investment rate was a modest lifestyle. I gradually increased my working hours while keeping my expenses low.

I lived in a university dorm, cooked simple meals, and rarely bought new clothes. Most of my time went into studying, working, and self-education. I had neither the time nor the urge to spend money.

Here is a glimpse of what my student life looked like—I found a few photos.

Richard Golian Investment Beginnings
My desk in the dormitory at Charles University
Richard Golian Investment Beginnings
Richard Golian Investment Beginnings
View from the dormitory window at Charles University

Looking back, it never really felt like I was depriving myself. Back then and even now, most things I consider important—and especially the truly essential ones—cannot be bought with money.

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Disclaimer

This article is intended for informational and educational purposes only. It does not constitute financial advice, a recommendation to buy or sell any securities, or a guarantee of future market performance. The views expressed are solely those of the author, who may also be an investor. Investing in financial markets involves risk, and each reader should make their own decisions independently and, if necessary, consult with a licensed professional.

Summary

The first 50,000 was the hardest. I maintained a 50% savings rate while studying at Charles University — dormitories, simple meals, rarely buying new clothes. It never felt like deprivation. I valued studying over consumption. This is how it started.

Common questions on this article's topic

Is it possible to invest 50% of your income?
Yes, though it requires a deliberately modest lifestyle. In the article, this was achieved while studying at Charles University in Prague — living in a dormitory, cooking simple meals, and rarely buying new clothes. This approach is well-documented in the FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement, where savers routinely target 50% or more by keeping expenses low rather than earning exceptionally high salaries.
What is compound interest and why does it matter for beginners?
Compound interest means earning returns not only on your original investment but also on previously accumulated returns. Over long periods, this creates exponential growth. A common example: investing 500 euros per month at 8% annual returns, a 10-year head start can roughly double your final portfolio value compared to starting later with the same contributions. Understanding this concept early is widely considered one of the most important lessons in personal finance.
What is the real cost of delaying investing by several years?
The cost is substantial and well-documented. Research shows that delaying investment by just one year can reduce final wealth by tens of thousands of euros due to lost compounding. A person starting at 23 can accumulate roughly the same wealth as someone starting at 33 who invests three times the principal amount. Time in the market consistently outperforms trying to invest larger amounts later.
What is a financial runway?
A financial runway is the number of months or years you could cover your living expenses using existing savings if your income stopped entirely. It is calculated by dividing total liquid savings by monthly expenses. Financial advisors typically recommend 3 to 6 months as a basic emergency fund, while those pursuing financial independence often target 12 to 24 months or more. The article describes reaching a point of over three years of runway without income.
What is the FIRE movement?
FIRE stands for Financial Independence, Retire Early. It is a movement of people who aggressively save and invest — often 50 to 70 percent of their income — with the goal of accumulating enough wealth to make work optional. The core principle is that by reducing expenses and investing the difference consistently, financial independence can be reached in 10 to 20 years rather than at traditional retirement age.
Should I invest everything I save or also invest in myself?
In the article, the savings rate dropped from 50% to 30% after building a multi-year financial runway — with the freed-up resources going toward personal growth and projects. The reasoning is that once basic financial security is established, self-investment can offer both intellectual rewards and long-term returns. Financial investment and self-investment are presented as complementary, not opposed.
Richard Golian

If you have any thoughts, questions, or feedback, feel free to drop me a message at mail@richardgolian.com.

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