Reader:
Hi AK,
I am glad to chance upon your blog recently and is currentlu busy reading up on the various blog post which is quite informative.
I recently came across a website which was featured in (a popular personal finance blog) which indicates returns of investment up to 14% through P2P lending to SMEs.
I am in the process of checking if these are guaranteed returns which i highly doubt so.
Like to understand more of your view on this.
AK:
Hi,
You might be interested in this blog:
http://singaporeanstocksinvestor.blogspot.sg/2015/06/to-make-20-per-annum-we-could-lose-our.html
If we say junk bonds must offer higher coupons to attract lenders because they are risky (think risk of default), for example, Swiber offered a coupon in excess of 7%, what could a 14% coupon from a borrower mean?
Aiyoh, headache.
What to do?
Don't ask me.
PRIVACY POLICY
Featured blog.
1M50 CPF millionaire in 2021!
Ever since the CPFB introduced a colorful pie chart of our CPF savings a few years ago, I would look forward to mine every year like a teena...
Past blog posts now load week by week. The old style created a problem for some as the system would load 50 blog posts each time. Hope the new style is better. Search archives in box below.
Archives
Pageviews since Dec'09
Recent Comments
Get this Recent Comments Widget
ASSI's Guest bloggers
- boon sun (1)
- Elsie (1)
- Elvin H. Liang (1)
- ENZA (3)
- EY (7)
- FunShine (5)
- Invest Apprentice (2)
- Jean (1)
- JK (2)
- Kai Xiang (1)
- Kenji FX (2)
- Klein (2)
- LS (2)
- Matt (3)
- Matthew Seah (18)
- Mike (6)
- Ms. Y (2)
- Raymond Ng (1)
- Ryan (1)
- Serejouir (1)
- skipper (1)
- Solace (13)
- Song StoneCold (2)
- STE (9)
- TheMinimalist (4)
- Vic (1)
Resources & Blogs.
- 5WAVES
- AlpacaInvestments
- Bf Gf Money Blog
- Bully the Bear
- Cheaponana
- Clueless Punter
- Consumer Alerts
- Dividend simpleton
- Financial Freedom
- Forever Financial Freedom
- GH Chua Investments
- Help your own money.
- Ideas on investing in SG.
- Invest Properly Leh
- Investment Moats
- Investopedia
- JK Fund
- MoneySense (MAS)
- Next Insight
- Oddball teen's mind.
- Propwise.sg - Property
- Scg8866t Stockinvesting
- SG Man of Leisure
- SG Young Investment
- Sillyinvestor.
- SimplyJesMe
- Singapore Exchange
- Singapore IPOs
- STE's Investing Journey
- STI - Stocks Info
- T.U.B. Investing
- The Sleepy Devil
- The Tale of Azrael
- TheFinance
- Turtle Investor
- UOB Gold & Silver
- Wealth Buch
- Wealth Journey
- What's behind the numbers?
Get 14% return on investment per annum.
Thursday, March 23, 2017Posted by AK71 at 2:17 PM
Labels:
bonds,
investment
Subscribe to:
Post Comments (Atom)
Monthly Popular Blog Posts
-
In recent times, I have found it much easier to talk to myself on YouTube. It is faster than blogging. This explains the greater number of v...
-
For those of you who follow me in my YouTube channel, you would know that something unfortunate happened recently to my father. So, I expect...
-
Another quarter has gone by and it is time for another update. For a change, I will reveal the numbers first. 3Q 2024 passive income: $85.2...
-
It has been more than a week since my last blog post. Things have settled into a new normal for me. In this new normal, my expenses have inc...
-
With DBS, OCBC and UOB doing so well in 3Q 2024, I had to take time off from gaming to produce a series of videos. For those of you who do n...
All time ASSI most popular!
-
A reader pointed me to a thread in HWZ Forum which discussed about my CPF savings being more than $800K. He wanted to clarify certain que...
-
The plan was to blog about this together with my quarterly passive income report (4Q 2018) but I decided to take some time off from Neverwin...
-
Reader says... AK sifu.. Wah next year MA up to 57200... Excited siah.. Can top up again to get tax relief. Can I ask u if the i...
-
It has been a pretty long break since my last blog. I have also been spending a lot less time engaging readers both in my blog and on Face...
-
I thought of not blogging about my 2Q 2020 passive income till a couple of weeks later because Mod 19 of Neverwinter, Avernus, just went liv...
5 comments:
Mr Keith Kueh was expecting Pacific Andes Resources Development Ltd to pay back the company’s bonds last year so he could finance his son’s college bill and his own retirement. Now it’s 18 months after the Singapore-listed fishing company didn’t honor some obligations and he hasn’t gotten his money yet. (Singapore) suffered an unprecedented S$1.35 billion of local note defaults since November 2015.
Source:
http://www.todayonline.com/business/rich-singapore-investors-stuck-local-bond-restructuring-drags
Swiber offered a coupon in excess of 7%, what could a 14% coupon from a borrower mean?
I had a foreign colleague who used to participate in "micro loans biz" --- he would be one of the "financiers" & getting 5% monthly coupons i.e. 60% annual coupons.
Now, what could a 60% coupon from borrowers mean? ;)
At 60% interest rates, the borrowers are probably in greater danger than the loan operators or "investors". And I'm not talking about small matters like home foreclosures or bankruptcy proceedings. :O
My ex-colleague knew the score and was fully prepared to lose all he put in. But he had the "satisfaction" of knowing that if he didn't get his money back, there would be blood & body parts spilled. He placed about 2% of his savings, and the coupons he got was enough to cover his monthly rental, utilities & handphone bills.
And no, this high-yield "bond" is not MAS approved.
Hi spur,
Your colleague is a small time gambler and I always say there is nothing wrong with gambling if we size it properly. If he should lose 2% of his net worth, it is not going to cripple him. ;p
However, for an average Joe losing his $50,000 life savings, it would be devastating. I see so many of these crowd funding outfits targeting the masses and some "investors" are already burnt. :(
Put some money into a P2P lending platform when I was young(er) - didn't even know how to read or interpret financial statements! Most of my p2p loans matured nicely - but one defaulted halfway so it was a good lesson (500 bucks tuition fee) on the risks of investing in unsecured products.
brina
Hi Brina,
Thanks for sharing your experience. :)
Post a Comment