Lars Juel & Mónika Juel —
Long-Term Savings Strategy
A behavioural-economics-based analysis identifying which savings solution produces more money after 10 years — in reality, not in theory.
A behavioural-economics-based analysis identifying which savings solution produces more money after 10 years — in reality, not in theory.
01 · Why invest?
Romania's inflation rate ranged between 9% and 15% over 2022–2024, with a five-year average exceeding 9% per year. Against a typical bank deposit yielding 1–2%, this translates into a real return of −7% to −8% per year. Over a 10-year period, the purchasing power of money sitting in a bank account is effectively cut in half.
The state pension system is under severe demographic pressure: current projections indicate that today's workers will receive roughly one-third of their active income as a pension. For Lars and Mónika, private wealth accumulation is not an option — it is a necessity.
Passive "saving" — setting aside whatever is left at the end of the month — is statistically equivalent to wealth erosion. Nobel laureate Richard Thaler's research demonstrates that people consistently over-value money available today versus future wealth. This hyperbolic discounting produces a predictable pattern: repeated postponement, missed months, and wealth that is never built.
02 · Client profile
€200,000 diversified portfolio (ETF, equities, Revolut), 2 properties. Built systematically over 8 years — proving long-term commitment capacity.
€47,500 net monthly household income, €20,000 discretionary free income. Emergency reserves already in place. The €1,000/month allocation is highly sustainable — only 5% of free income.
Self-described: "Some experience, but I prefer advice on important decisions." No automated system in use — occasional months are skipped during busy or uncertain periods.
Healthcare costs, travel (Norway), financial independence. Target: ~€6,000/month retirement income or a large accumulated capital base. Time horizon: 13–15 years.
03 · Options compared
| Dimension | Government bonds | DIY ETF / other | Unit Linked |
|---|---|---|---|
| Required expertise | Low | HighAllocation, rebalancing, fund selection | None requiredFull delegation to manager |
| Annual cost / yield drag | ~0%But low return ceiling | ~0.2%/yr (ETF TER)+ transaction & platform fees | 2.5%/yr at 10 yrs1.2%/yr at 20 yrs — decreases linearly |
| Gross return potential | ~6.5%/yrRomanian gov. bonds 2025 | ~10%/yrGlobal ETF long-run historical | ~10%/yrSame underlying assets, managed |
| Capital gains tax (Romania) | 10% interest tax | 16% CGT (Cod Fiscal) | 0% (insurance wrapper) |
| Liquidity | MediumLocked until maturity | HighSellable at any time | RestrictedLong-term by design — a feature, not a bug |
| Persistence probability (10 yrs) | ~70%Renewal risk at maturity | ~40%FCA / Vanguard data | ~92%Auto direct debit + contractual commitment |
| Behavioural risk | MediumPanic withdrawal at maturity | HighPanic selling, skipped months, abandonment | LowSystem protects client from themselves |
| Wealth management | None | Self-managedRequires ongoing attention | Full serviceProfessional fund manager included |
| Goal attainment probability | ~55% | ~35–40% | ~90% |
04 · Behavioural reality
According to FCA (UK Financial Conduct Authority) and Vanguard research, only 40% of DIY investors save consistently over a 10-year period. This is not a character flaw — it is a documented feature of how the human brain works, validated by the research of Thaler, Kahneman, and James Clear across domains including fitness, dieting, and personal finance.
The gym analogy is precise: 100 people buy a membership in January. By end of February, 70 still attend. By June, 40. By December, 20. Investing works identically: the intent is there, but the monthly decision — "should I transfer the money this month?" — fails before a holiday, at Christmas, in January after bonuses were spent, or during a market correction. The average 1.5–2 missed months per year maps directly to these predictable behavioural failure points.
A Unit Linked plan removes this decision entirely: the monthly amount is collected automatically via direct debit, requires zero willpower, and the contractual structure creates a commitment device — a concept formalized by Richard Thaler — that is the single most effective mechanism for long-term savings behaviour.
05 · 10-year projection
Methodology: DIY ETF: 10% gross annual return, average 15 skipped months over 10 years (1.5/year), invested capital probability-weighted (40% persist for full term; 60% stop on average at year 5). Capital gains tax: 16% on profit (Cod Fiscal). Unit Linked: 10% gross − 2.5% annual cost = 7.5% net; full 120 months invested; 0% tax; 92% persistence weighted.
| Factor | DIY ETF impact | Unit Linked impact |
|---|---|---|
| Capital invested (10 yrs) | €105,000 (15 months skipped) | €120,000 (full 120 months) |
| Lost compound growth — skipped months | −€24,680 in missed compounding | €0 — no gaps |
| Capital gains tax | −€11,900 (16% Cod Fiscal) | €0 (insurance wrapper) |
| Dropout probability weighting | −~€40,000 expected value reduction | Minimal (92% persistence) |
| Final outcome (expected value) | ~€127,300 | ~€177,900 |
Unit Linked produces approximately €50,600 more than DIY ETF on a realistic, probability-weighted expected value basis over 10 years. This advantage does not come primarily from the return rate — it comes from behavioural factors: skipped months, capital gains tax, and dropout probability. These are not estimated risks; they are measured, empirically documented statistics.
06 · Conclusion
If Lars and Mónika begin their €1,000/month plan today, the first month's contribution compounds for 120 months. A one-year delay eliminates that entire compounding window permanently — nothing restores it. Compound interest is highly asymmetric: the earliest contributions generate the largest share of total returns. At ages 47 and 53, this is the last optimal window for 10–15 year long-term accumulation within comfortable retirement reach. Starting in 2027 instead of 2026 costs approximately €8,000–€12,000 in final portfolio value — for inaction of 12 months.