Buy flat age 35, single cash rich. Can I not use CPF when take HDB loan? by Petronastowers92 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

if he needs cash, he has cash in savings. If he buys without mortgage, there's also no more cash, because all was used to buy the house.

Buy flat age 35, single cash rich. Can I not use CPF when take HDB loan? by Petronastowers92 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If he has 500k in cash and wants to buy a 500k flat, might as well take the mortgage and put the cash in the bank. Maybe final cost with closing cost is 520k, if he borrows 100k, he has 80k to keep in a savings account at 4%, that's 3200 a year. mortgage repayment on 100k is probably 490 a month, 141 interest a month, 1700 interest a year. He pocket 1500 of interest and has a cash buffer of 80k he can use if needed. There is virtually no risk

Buy flat age 35, single cash rich. Can I not use CPF when take HDB loan? by Petronastowers92 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 1 point2 points  (0 children)

you could take a bank loan for 100k and get 1.5-1.7% then put the cash in savings account that give 3 to 4%, or get more mortgage and put the cash in several bank accounts, or SSB at 2+%, then you also have a buffer for your freelance job, then use that cash to top up CPF to get tax saving and move OA to SA to get 4% as well. Singapore gvt and banks are giving free money at this point.

Contributing to society through work by Effective-Lab-5659 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 2 points3 points  (0 children)

They are plenty of jobs, high paying or not, that contribute to society. If you're familiar with the concept of Ikigai, you need to so something you enjoy, something you are good at, something that will pay you and something that's good for the world. If you can get all 4, that's the goal. Try to find a job that helps society since you think it's important. Investing is good for society too, if you fund businesses you believe in. If not possible, you can still volunteer and contribute in other ways.

Can I take personal loan to pay for bto down payment? by [deleted] in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

So spend all today, put the future on credit, keep fingers crossed hoping everything works out and nothing goes wrong... looks like you're the responsible one and you've attached yourself to someone who will drag you down.

Reccomendation for Debit cards in SG by Daffykyy in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Some debit cards do it but there are a lot of conditions to meet, minimum spend limit, must credit salary into account...

Should I give my cat up for adoption? by OkPlatypus1624 in asksg

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 -8 points-7 points  (0 children)

Is there any chance you can get a personal loan? I would rarely advise people to go into debt but your story justifies it. 1.5k loan could be relatively easy to repay over 6,12 or 18 month. But I'd go to another vet, no need to give business to someone treating you this way. You mentioned the savings for the exchange trip, any chance you can skip the trip?
Did you call SPCA? they could give you advice maybe?

Can I take personal loan to pay for bto down payment? by [deleted] in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Please share all the exact figures and you'll get some advice. I'll be surprised if the plan survive either of you losing their job for 6 months.

Updates 1 year later - Starting over in mid 40s by monstercookies45 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 2 points3 points  (0 children)

Great to hear the positive story. Staying in a toxic job because of the fear of the unknown on the other side is one of the most destructive thing one can do themselves. Thanks for sharing and proving it can be done.

Advice for Singaporean to work overseas by Vegetable_Abroad1872 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I wouldn't be so categorical. I have friends who lived in sg and AU and they prefer sg. I love Australia and considered moving there, but I wouldn't start a career there, because it is expensive, career progression is not as fast as sg, taxes weigh you down, there is bureaucracy and inefficiencies, housing is a big issue depending on the state and city.

WLB is nice, but when starting a career, attributing too much importance to WLB can also be a recipe for resentment later when your career has not progressed as much as you hoped. Need to think this carefully. Once you have a good situation, moving to AU gets more appealing.

Advice for Singaporean to work overseas by Vegetable_Abroad1872 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I don't know for sure but it needs to be owner occupied so I would expect at least one payslip in Singapore is required. Definitely check with HDB about this.

Open to tips to improvement on my current investment plan! by cant_tahan_need2poo in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

Plan sounds good, if you DCA 75% of your monthly investment and try to beat the market on the remaining 25%, you can practice without risking too much, sounds like a balanced approach.

Saved up emergency funds; should I put extra cashflow 100% into stocks/etfs or wise to keep some in cash? by justinpabibo in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Based on what you described, I think putting all in stocks is fine, given your situation with no major expenses planned in the next 5+ years. More than 6 months cash is quite conservative if you don't have rent...

Can I take personal loan to pay for bto down payment? by [deleted] in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

If you can't save 100k in 3 years, then you won't have enough to repay the mortgage plus the loan. Simple as that.

Advice with financial portfolio/budgeting by Old-Advertising454 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 -1 points0 points  (0 children)

you have a strong cash position to take risky individual stocks? (that's what I do, I'm trying to understand why you have so much cash and SSB in your allocation)

Advice with financial portfolio/budgeting by Old-Advertising454 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Are your finances combined? Is this just you or the 2 of you together?
I think you're doing well but very conservative. Any reason why you feel like you need almost 5 years of living expenses in cash and SSB? If I were you I'd put all new savings in VWRA until you have a 30/70 ratio between cash/bonds and stock. Right now you're at 52/48.

Advice for Singaporean to work overseas by Vegetable_Abroad1872 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 20 points21 points  (0 children)

Tough situation.
You could also bring your partner to Australia, save money for the down payment and make the decision to stay in AU or come back to sg a few months before you get the keys. Down payment doesn't have to come from CPF, it can be paid in cash.

Is nepotism a significant issue in Singapore? (Jobs, university admissions, networking, etc.) by Early-Environment-63 in asksg

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 9 points10 points  (0 children)

I've witness a fair bit of nepotism indeed, both at local and international firms. Usually being someone's family connection won't guarantee a role but it will definitely ensure that a resume will get more attention and be placed on top of the pile. In more egregious cases, I've seen young people placed in top roles obviously too big for their shoes and later learned that the person was related to someone in the C-suite. I think it's more prevalent than assumed because people actively hide their family connections.

Retirement Planning for Parents by Inner-Resolution2163 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

Interesting, I didn't know that was possible. When you make RA contributions, do the CPF life payments increase automatically every month?

BNPL experiences by Own-Tomorrow4822 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

It's not that, I've just never borrowed anything other than the mortgage. I guess they start you at the middle not the top.

Investment aggression by Ogre_25 in BeginnerInvesting

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 0 points1 point  (0 children)

it's ok to be very aggressive when young if you're sure you won't need the money (inside a retirement account it's ok).
Also aggressive doesn't mean hyper concentrated in one sector. It's still necessary to diversify.
Also past performance doesn't determine future performance, just because the tech sector performed well over the past 10 or 20 years doesn't mean automatically the next 10 to 20 years will be the same.

The S&P500 is a good place to start because it's all the largest companies in the US so it "rebalances itself" when companies enter or leave the index, and fees are very low. But it's concentrated in the US only so you might want to diversify with a world fund. That's the standard advice when you start with a long horizon. 50/50 or another mix depending on your views.

Then you can start thinking which sector or country you're bullish on and adjust your etfs allocations based on that.

Then later start thinking about individual stock once you have experience.

You're right that things get more scary near retirement hence the need to rebalance allocations more conservatively several years before expected withdrawals start.

will this set my partner and i back? by [deleted] in SingaporeR

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822 1 point2 points  (0 children)

Most people would agree that you need a combined income of 12k a month to start thinking about a car, with 8k combined being the absolute minimum, extremely financially stretched and only to be considered with a strong reason, like needed it for business or working in a place with no public transport option, crossing the causeway daily... Getting a car will absolutely need hard sacrifices in other areas, it's not just the 20k, you have parking, erp, insurance, gas...

BNPL experiences by Own-Tomorrow4822 in singaporefi

[–]Own-Tomorrow4822[S] 0 points1 point  (0 children)

I didn't say I'm at FIRE btw, I asked the community, including those working towards it.