The email address in "Contact AK: Ads and more" above will vanish from November 2018.

PRIVACY POLICY

FAKE ASSI AK71 IN HWZ.

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

"E-book" by AK

Second "e-book".

Another free "e-book".

4th free "e-book".

Pageviews since Dec'09

Financially free and Facebook free!

Recent Comments

ASSI's Guest bloggers

When is it OK to be nice and unhappy?

Thursday, September 11, 2014

Recently, I had a chat with a reader till about 1.30am in the morning. It was on the topic of insurance. Mind you, I wasn't giving any advice. I am not allowed to and I know it. We were just bouncing ideas off each other, she said, and she overheard me talking to myself.

In a recent blog post, I said that we often meet nice people in life and the reader I chatted with is a nice person and so is her husband. How could I tell?


Many of us are nice people who are considerate towards others. Unfortunately, nice people very often get taken advantage of in life. In the case of the reader, she had wanted to make adjustments to her insurance policies but her insurance agent had objected because:

"he said he'll have financial penalty if we withdraw some policies after buying 2 new ones this year from him"

So, what is the reader's plan?

"so, we decide next year, we'll be firm with what we think is right..at least he said within 1 year, if we terminate old policies after getting new policies, he suffers. So, next year, after the 1 year is over, we'll want to terminate some."

Isn't the reader being exceptionally nice? I think so. She really has no obligation to behave like this but she is being considerate despite being rather unhappy. I hope her agent appreciates it.


Personally, I had one such experience too when I bought an insurance policy when I first started life as a working adult. It was a whole life policy bought from a relative.

When the policy was delivered to me, it had riders which I didn't want (and I told him beforehand that if the product must be sold with the riders, I would not be interested) because it bumped up the premium by some 15% and it was a lot of money for a young working adult. He ignored my wishes because he needed the sale to hit some quota to qualify for some incentive trip.

I had wanted to cancel the policy but the relative objected and sought my dad's help. My dad told me not to cancel the policy because it would jeopardise the relative's career and I kept the policy despite being very unhappy. I lost all respect for that fellow (the relative, not my dad) since.



Nice!

Sometimes, it really doesn't pay to be nice, does it? To be nice, sometimes, we end up unhappy and paying more. So, how? Is it OK to be nice and unhappy? It depends.

We have to learn not to be nice and not care what some people think of us. Some people don't matter to us and, therefore, what they think of us should not matter at all.

Do you find it hard to tell who these people are? Well, if we know who are the people who matter, then, it becomes easier. The people who matter to me, ranked in order of importance:

1. Immediate family.

2. Close friends. Extended family.

3. Co-workers we work closely with.

4. Boss (whether we work closely with him or her does not matter.)

5. Friends less close. Co-workers less close.

So, anyone else should not matter much, if at all.

What should matter more to the golfer? The golf ball or the grass?

Over the years, I have become more discerning with requests for help and mindful about taking care of my own interests. There will always be people out there who would covertly or overtly try to take advantage of us. We should know this and beware.

There is still that boy scout in me but boy scouts grow up too.

Related posts:
1. To let go or to hold on to a position?
2. Nobody cares more about our money than we do.
3. Response from AK to accusations regarding seminar.

Get VVIP discount at condo launch!

Wednesday, September 10, 2014

We always see things like "early bird discounts" or "VVIP discounts" when there are new condominium projects here and although I am not saying that they are all just a lot of hot air, I think that it is only prudent that we take claims like these with a pinch of salt.

After all, I have not come across sales people who would tell clients, "Hey, don't buy. Even after the discount, it is still not value for money." Sales people must always say optimistic stuff to their clients and look the part too.

"Being a salesman and an actor were not that dissimilar: It is a good lesson in covering up your feelings. No one wants to buy from someone who looks depressed." -------- D. Scott




Someone who recently visited a showflat received a strong dose of such optimism and shared her thoughts with me in an email. I would like to share a little bit of it here:

"So how did the agent try to convince me it is a good deal? The usual talk on

1. FH property and offering to show stats on the ROI in the area.
2. Discount is very attractive. 8% special discount + 5% VVIP discount if buy this weekend.
If you refer to the transacted prices of nearby developments which I included here, it is obvious that there is no discount to speak of."



Comparing with recent transacted prices of surrounding properties is something I do too and that was how I snagged good (i.e. undervalued) deals before. Comparative analysis is quite simple to do and I do it a lot in my investments in the stock market.


Now, in another blog post, I asked, "why would we want to buy a property that has priced in future value?"
(See: Buying a property: Affordability and value for money.)

Although this is not the motive of the question, it could give an impression that property prices would definitely go up in future but what if they were to go down instead?

Entry prices are important and if we ended up paying prices too high, we would have no margin of safety to speak of.

We should remember that nobody cares more about our money than we do.

Related posts:
1. Buying an apartment: Considerations.
2. Where to buy shoebox apartments for investment?
3. Apartments with rental yields of 4.95% to 7.3%


Monthly Popular Blog Posts

All time ASSI most popular!

 
 
Bloggy Award