This is a quick update on my plan to save for income published in a blog at the beginning of April.
Back then, I said that I should be able to set aside $10,000 to apply for Singapore Savings Bond this month.
However, I have increased that figure to $22,000.
This is because a 5 months fixed deposit placed with DBS matured and I forgot I had it.
So, with more money at my disposal, I have decided to apply for $22,000 instead of $10,000.
Why $22,000?
If I should be successful in getting a full allotment, together with the $16,000 in Singapore Savings Bonds allotted in March, I would have hit $38,000.
$38,000 is the amount I had planned on setting aside for voluntary contribution to my CPF account in January 2024.
I also made a non-competitive bid for the T-bill auction closing on 25 April with $15,000 instead of $5,000.
Apparently, I had mistakenly thought that I had a T-bill maturing on 24 April when it matured on 18 April.
So, instead of completing soon, my T-bill ladder is actually complete.
Finally, with some excess cash on hand, I decided to put some money in an endowment plan suggested by DBS Digibank.
This is a 2 years endowment plan that pays a guaranteed 3.92% per annum.
This is almost as good as the CPF Special Account's 4% per annum.
Endowment plans are really savings plans with a tiny life insurance component thrown in.
I just think of this as a pseudo top up to my CPF Special Account which I am not allowed to do anymore, of course.
The product is "SavvyEndowment11" and it is available to anyone with a DBS Digibank account.
Minimum amount required is $5,000.
The application process is very easy and fast.
This is not an advertorial but here is the link for anyone who might be interested in saving money:
"A spokesperson for Hong Leong Finance said that rates for fixed deposits have generally dropped slightly in the past two months.Source: CNA.
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14 comments:
Hi Ak, this wld lock up your warchest for two yrs. How to fire shots if opportunity arrive sooner
Hi SgFire,
The money I used to buy the endowment plan isn't for investing in equities.
It is money that is part of the fixed income component in my portfolio.
That's why I made a comparison with the CPF SA in the blog because I treat my CPF savings as the investment grade bond component in my portfolio.
So, for example, when I used funds in my CPF OA to get T-bills, to me, they are in the same asset class.
War chest is will continue to be refilled with incoming dividends. :)
Reference:
More in equities or fixed income?
Ak, I am interested in this endowment plan. However, at the last step there is a document about the product fact stating that the guranteed maturity benefit maybe less than the premium paid. Is 3.92 guranteed? Or I misunderstood something. Sorry, I don't know how to attract the document here.
Hi Just,
I believe that the 3.92% p.a. yield is guaranteed.
They provided an example which included non-guaranteed benefit which would result in a return of 4% p.a.
I have yet to buy an endowment plan that returned less than what I put in. :)
Thanks AK for sharing. I also managed to get the same endowment plan too. timely reminder as the FD rates are sliding.
Hi YiS,
I think it is a pretty attractive income instrument in the current environment.
Huat ah! :D
Thanks AK, for sharing about this DBS endowment plan, I got some too:) Safe to follow your step 😆
Hi Sandra,
Don't thank me but thank yourself for eavesdropping on AK. ;p
With fixed deposit interest rates softening, 3.92% p.a. is not too shabby.
If the product is still available next month, I might stash away a bit more money.
I just think of it as a topping up of my CPF SA but with a relatively short lock up period of 2 years. :)
Hi AK,
I read the Manulife product documents for the Savvy Endownment11 on DBS website and my interpretation is the 3.92% "guaranteed" return is actually based on illustrative returns. It was not clear in the policy that 3.92% is really guaranteed. Seems confusing?
In any case, there is a 14 day free look / refund period if in doubt :)
Hi ironmao,
That is odd because I understood that 3.92% p.a. is guaranteed while there is a non-guaranteed portion which could bump the return to 4% p.a.
If the guaranteed return turns out to be non-guaranteed, it would be a first for me as I have bought many endowment policies in the last 30 years and guaranteed has always meant guaranteed.
Anyway, we will know 2 years later. ;p
Hi AK, how do I subscribe to your blog posts so that I can receive it via email when you update your blog? When I click on [Subscribe to: Posts (Atom)], it just brings me to this page [http://feeds.feedburner.com/ASingaporeanStockmarketInvestorassi].
Dunno why, I have not been receiving email updates on your blog posts for a while and thought you stopped blogging... I realize I have been missing a lot after I checked your blog today.
Hi Jacq,
I used to have a subscribe for email notifications widget but it broke.
Readers told me they were not receiving updates.
So, I removed it.
I checked the feedburner button and it has 2 other options apart from Atom.
Maybe, try those instead?
The follower button seems to work too.
I don't know how else you could stay updated other than maybe checking my blog once a week?
AK is IT dinosaur. (TmT)
Thank you for your reply. Hmmm... finally found the other 2 options... which require signing up for another account/service. Seems like checking your blog once a week is the way to go. Will be doing that. Cheers!
Hi Jacq,
Ah, thanks for letting me know that the other two options in Feedburner works. :)
Yes, checking my blog once a week is much easier.
Just bookmark my blog.
That's what I do for websites I visit often too. :)
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