Reader says...
I started following your blog about 6 months ago.
I will like to seek your advice on my financial aspiration.
I did purchased some stock during my early work year and most of them are below IPO price.
My paper lost is around 16k and my investment sum is around 35k.
Due to this experience, we are very scare to do any stock purchase.
However, we try our very best to save up as much as we could since we have not much idea on investment.
We have around 200k in a FD account and two 60k BOC smartsaver account.
As we are both employee, we wish to be obtain financial independence by having a backup income.
But we were divided on how to start the cycle.
My wife prefer purchasing another property for rent while i prefer your way which is to invest in REIT as i believe with our current cash reserve we are unable to get any good property.
In your opinion, which is a better way?
(This is not the full email.)
AK says...
Alamak. I don't give advice.
I anyhow talk to myself in my blog lah.
You eavesdrop at your own risk. ;p
You have to decide for yourself what works for you and what gives you peace of mind. ;)
Reader says...
Thank for your reply.
Let say if you are in my position, what will you do?
I will be eavesdropping.
Thank you.
AK says...
I would do what gives me peace of mind.
What gives me peace of mind would be different from what gives you peace of mind.
I don't have a wife but my friends who do tell me "happy wife, happy life". ;)
Sometimes, it is too dangerous to be a kaypoh and AK knows it.
"Honey, who told you something like this?
"Tell me. I kill him!"
You better believe it.
Related post:
Buy that second residential property!
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...

Archives
Pageviews since Dec'09
Recent Comments
ASSI's Guest bloggers
- ENZA (3)
- EY (7)
- Elsie (1)
- Elvin H. Liang (1)
- FunShine (5)
- Invest Apprentice (2)
- JK (2)
- Jean (1)
- 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)
- STE (9)
- Serejouir (1)
- Solace (13)
- Song StoneCold (2)
- TheMinimalist (4)
- Vic (1)
- boon sun (1)
- skipper (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?
Safe investment tip for married couples.
Monday, May 1, 2017Posted by AK71 at 9:58 AM 7 comments
Labels:
investment,
money management,
wealth
Worried about upgrading your home?
Sunday, April 30, 2017
Reader:
I remembered you mentioned that our home is consumable. Not a asset.
AK:
Our home, if fully paid, is an asset. It is just not an income generating asset. ;)
Reader:
I'm contemplating job change after many years in same company so upgrading also a bit worried.
AK:
It would be very nice to do something you love.
Reader:
Just like you now.. be farmer at home and watch Anime😄
AK:
Alamak!
How a 30-something couple got rich and retired by not joining home ownership 'cult'. (See related post at the end of this blog.)
If we upgrade our home, we should not downgrade our mental health.
If we have good reason to worry about upgrading our home, don't upgrade.
Most of us are not super rich but even for the super rich, peace of mind is priceless.
Is there any guarantee that we will make a capital gain when we sell our home in future?
Can we treat money paid for our home as money in a Fixed Deposit which is, in case you don't know, almost risk free?
There are usually many perspectives on any one issue.
Who is right?
Who is wrong?
I don't know.
Maybe, you know.
Salesmen would want to sell.
They have to.
It is their job.
Our job as consumers is to separate facts from opinions and then decide if we should buy.
Related posts:
1. Wife wants to sell HDB flat to buy condo.
"Our home is a consumption item. It would not be wise to overstretch our finances to stay in a more expensive home and I know a few people who overstretched."
2. Financial independence over home ownership.
"...would you rather have $1 million in income producing assets (e.g. income stocks) or a $1 million home (which doesn't generate income but instead would incur expenses)?"
Posted by AK71 at 10:03 AM 7 comments
Labels:
money management,
real estate

Monthly Popular Blog Posts
-
With the end of 2011 more or less in sight, I decided to take a look at how my aim to generate at least $50K in annual passive income from t...
-
Time for another update. First, on the personal front, I have been spending more time on other stuff in life as I have been feeling that too...
-
On 7 Dec, income distribution from AIMS AMP Capital Industrial REIT was received. It was also the final income distribution to be received f...
-
In the latest issue of The EDGE, there is a very good 2 page write up by Kelvin Tan on the current CPF rate debate. For anyone who would...
-
When I first invested in Yongnam, it was beginning to reward shareholders by paying dividends and being the biggest outside of Japan in what...
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...
-
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...