Their new home: A 40-foot sailboat, currently docked in Ipswich, England, about an hour north of London.
Over the past year, they’ve used the boat as a base to visit several different countries, such as Germany, France, Iceland and India. This summer, they’ll move the boat further North to Norway to explore the countries in that region.
The couple saved up for decades to make this nautical life a reality.
“We lived below our means, paid off credit card debt. Only (got into) debt for mortgages,” said Fletcher. “This has been a long-term goal — to make enough to do this kind of thing.”
Fletcher, 59, retired last year from a longtime career as chief financial officer for several small industrial gas suppliers throughout New England. Bruce, 61, retired seven years ago from her career in advertising. More recently, she worked part-time at a local YMCA but left last spring.
The couple had tested out the boating life in the past. From 2001 to 2004, they took three years off to sail from the United States to the Mediterranean and back, visiting Cuba, Belize, Mexico, Portugal, Spain, Italy, Greece and Turkey.
These sails only reaffirmed their commitment to the sea. So they kept saving and started plotting a return.
They socked anywhere between 5% and 21% of their salaries in their employer-sponsored 401(k)s and fully funded their IRAs. Each year, they put away even more into their savings accounts.
Fletcher was also well-versed in investing. In the early 1990s, he started managing his own investments, and started investing in smaller publicly-traded companies called microcaps. One of his big investing wins at the time was a company called Isonics — a manufacturer of silicon for computer chips, that saw its stock price rise to $4 apiece from 15 cents in the span of two years. Isonics later ran into financial trouble and the stock was delisted in 2008.
Fletcher said he did well investing in microcaps, but realized they could be a risky bet.
Around 2005, he drastically changed his investing practices after reading “The Single Best Investment,” by investment manager Lowell Miller, and started investing in companies with dividend growth. Some of the companies he said he has invested in include Johnson & Johnson (JNJ), Procter & Gamble (PG), Realty Income (O) and Ventas (VTR).
“If you invest for income growth, you don’t care about what the market is doing,” Fletcher said. “The goal is to accumulate an income stream that you can live on, without ever touching the principal.”
Too young for Medicare, the couple’s biggest expense now is health insurance — for which they write a hefty check of $1,300 each month.
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