Showing posts with label Lifestyle. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Lifestyle. Show all posts

Money - Personal Savings For Your Retirement




Many Singaporeans rely on the Central Provident Fund as their main source of savings for retirement.

Many have found it to be inadequate. In 1999, only one-third of people reaching age 55 had sufficient savings to meet the Minimum Sum of $60,000. The Minimum Sum has now been raised to $99,600. This is only sufficient to meet the very basic cost of living in Singapore.

For a more comfortable standard of living, you need at least two times of this Minimum Sum.
Let me share eight tips with you on how you can get adequate savings for your retirement.

Tip 1
Do not over-invest in a property using your CPF savings. As a rule of thumb, you should buy a property based on five to seven years of your total family income.

Tip 2
Set aside at least 10% of your earnings as personal savings for the future, to supplement the CPF savings. If possible, increase the saving rate to 15%.

I estimate that a saving rate of 15% over a working career of 40 years can provide you with an income of about 40% of what you earn prior to your retirement, with annual adjustment to compensate for inflation. This will be sufficient to give a comfortable standard of living to the retiree.

Tip 3
Get an attractive rate of return for your personal savings. Do not buy the wrong insurance or investment products that give a poor return.

Invest your personal savings in a large, well diversified, equity fund with low management expenses.

Look for a fund that has an expense ratio of 1% or less. There are some indexed or passively managed funds that meet this criterion. One example is the STI Exchange Traded Fund that is available from the Singapore Exchange. Some unit trusts have low expense ratio.

Invest in an equity fund, as it will give the highest return over the long term. Over the past 20 years, the average return from equity is about 7% compared to a return of 5% from bonds (see table below).

Do not worry about the risk of investing in equity. If they are investing for the long term, say ten years or longer, they will get some good years and some bad years. This will average out and give the long term average of about 7%.

Invest in a large, well diversified fund, as it average out the good and bad investments and give the average that reflects the broad market. You reduce your risk through diversification.

If you choose a fund with an expense ratio that is 1% lower, you can get 30% more at the end of 40 years.

Some people think that a fund with a high expense ratio is likely to perform better. Studies have shown that, over the long term, most actively managed funds were not able to outperform the market.

Tip 4
Buy a decreasing term insurance plan to cover you up to age 65 years. The sum assured should be between 5 to 10 years of your annual income. The cost of this insurance should be less than 1% of your monthly earnings.

If you buy a decreasing term insurance of $350,000 for 35 years, you will be covered for $350,000 during the first year. The cover will reduce by $10,000 a year over 35 years. This will be compensated by the increase in your savings.

The term insurance will cease completely at 65. At that time, your total savings will be more than adequate to cover your future needs and you will not need any life insurance any more.

Tip 5
If your employer provides medical benefit, there is really no need for you to buy your personal medical insurance. If you want to have personal insurance to provide continuing coverage after your retirement, you can buy the basic Medishield plan, as the cost is lowest.

Do not spend more than 2% of your earnings on medical insurance, including the insurance for your family. If possible, keep it down to 1%

Tip 6
Have a budget for your monthly expenses. Set aside the required amounts for your mandatory expenses, such as taxes, mortgage repayment, transport, food, utilities and telephone. Be frugal with the discretionary items.

Set aside not more than 3% on your insurance and 10% to 15% as savings for the future. If you still have money left, you can use it for entertainment, holidays, car and splurging.

Tip 7
Look for an honest adviser to help you to make the financial and insurance decisions. Be aware that some advisers are likely to offer you the more expensive products where they can earn a higher commission. They may also get you to insure more than necessary.

Tip 8
Be educated about the fundamentals, so that you can make the right decision.

Source

Recipes - Almond Biscotti




Preparation Time
50 min

Servings
50 servings


Ingredients
· 4 Egg Whites
· 80g Castor Sugar
· 1/2 teaspoon Vanilla Extract
· 150g raw whole Almonds
· 60g sieved All-Purpose Flour

Procedures
1.
Roast almonds in preheated oven for 20min to preserve the crunchiness
2. Beat egg whites & sugar till firm mousse-like
3. Add vanilla essence
4. Fold in almonds & flour
5. Pour mixture into a baking tin
6. Bake in oven for 30min at 180°C
7. Cool and slice into thin slices
8. Return to oven and bake for another 10min at 130°C
9. Cool & store in air-tight container

Bernice - The Blue Doll Says :


Travel - Krabi, Thailand



Genie - The Green Doll Says :


Entertainment - Singapore Fireworks Celebrations 22 & 23 Aug 08


When:
22 Aug 08 Fri 9.00pm
23 Aug 08 Sat 9.00pm

Location: Marina Bay Floating Platform

Event Website:
Singapore Fireworks Celebration 2008

National Day Celebrations 2008 Highlight - Singapore Fireworks Festival NDP 2008 @ Celebrating the Singapore Spirit Jul – August 2008

The Singapore Fireworks Celebrations is an annual event held in Singapore as part of its National Day celebrations. It features several local and foreign teams which launch fireworks displays on different nights.

The Fireworks display is always a perennial public and photographers' favourite event. The 2008 Singapore Fireworks Celebrations promises to excite spectators with spectacular visuals on 22 and 23 Aug 08 at the Marina Bay Floating Platform. Spectators will be treated to a colourful and stunning kaleidoscope of choreographed fireworks set against the Singapore Skyline.

Source
http://www.fireworks.com.sg/

Money - Budgeting in Six Easy Steps



Budgeting in Six Easy Steps
Creating and sticking to a personal budget is a vital part of personal financial planning. Consumer Credit Counseling Service of Greater Washington offers an easy, six-step method for arriving at a budget you can live with:

Step 1

Determine your monthly income. Take into consideration your payroll deductions (health insurance or other group benefits, income taxes, union dues, pension) and other sources of income.

Add together all income, less deductions. On a piece of paper record the resulting figure as VALUE A.

Step 2
List your "fixed" and "variable" monthly expenses, such as housing, utilities, food and transportation. Remember to allocate funds for clothing, medical care, child care, personal expenses, recreation and emergencies/repairs.

Break down your annual, semi-annual and quarterly expenses (taxes, insurance) into a monthly figure that can be put aside and withdrawn when these bills become due. Example: car insurance that is $150 every six months needs $25 per month set aside. You will earn interest on these funds and will have no problems meeting all other expenses in the months these become payable.

Remember not to duplicate expenses that may already be deducted from your paycheck.
Add all of your expenses-this is VALUE B.

Step 3

The next step is to find your "discretionary income" by subtracting your total expenses (B) from your total net income (A).

Write this number down on a piece of paper as VALUE C.

Step 4
List all unsecured debts (credit cards etc.), the monthly payments and the balances. If you don't know your exact debt amount, now is the time to determine it.

Record your monthly total as VALUE D and continue with the next step.

Step 5

Some of your discretionary income is committed to the installment debt listed above. Step 5 is to determine if you have any remaining discretionary income after making these installment payments by subtracting your total monthly payments to creditors (D) from your discretionary income (C).

If this figure is a negative number, you are not ready for Step 6 - setting goals. Consult a personal financial counsellor and work on getting this figure into the positive numbers.

Step 6
It is now time to establish short- and long-term goals. Make a list of these goals, using these examples to help you get started.

Long-Term - Real Estate Purchases, Future Education, Retirement
Short-Term - Home Improvements, New Car, Travel
Other Desired Investments - Stocks, Bonds, CDs, Mutual Funds

Once you have made a list, determine how much you need to save monthly by dividing the amount of money required to meet each goal by the number of months that you have available to save for it.

Source

Horoscope - Introduction to Zodiac


What is your Zodiac Sign?



Background & Characteristics
· Aries, the Ram challenging, impulsive
· Taurus, the Bull conservative, concrete
· Gemini, the Twins communicative, playful
· Cancer, the Crab caring, sensitive
· Leo, the Lion dominant, proud
· Virgo, the Virgin careful, minute
· Libra, the Scales negotiating, ethical
· Scorpio, the Scorpion hidden, passionate
· Sagittarius, the Archer impatient, independent
· Capricorn, the Goat ambitious, decisive
· Aquarius, the Water Bearer profound, original
· Pisces, the Fishes searching, submissive

Motto
· Aries, the Ram "I am."
· Taurus, the Bull "I have."
· Gemini, the Twins "I think."
· Cancer, the Crab "I feel."
· Leo, the Lion "I want."
· Virgo, the Virgin "I scrutinize."
· Libra, the Scales "I balance."
· Scorpio, the Scorpion "I wish."
· Sagittarius, the Archer "I see."
· Capricorn, the Goat "I use."
· Aquarius, the Water Bearer "I know."
· Pisces, the Fishes "I believe."

Zodiac signs are to a large extent dependent on their element and quality. Every sign belongs to one of the four Greek elements, which represent four aspects of life:
1. Fire activity
2. Earth materialism
3. Air thought
4. Water emotions


With the twelve signs and four elements, there are three signs belonging to each element. There are also three different basic qualities that signs have:
1. Cardinal leading
2. Fixed static
3. Mutable following


So, each sign has its own combination of element and quality:




Source:
http://www.horoscoper.net/astrology/zodiac.htm

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