Thursday, December 30, 2021

Happy New Year!

Photo by Sang Huynh on Unsplash

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


I hope you are enjoying the festivals and holidays.

Photo by Carson Arias on Unsplash

Even if you are the chosen few to solider on, I hope the work is more relaxing than usual!

Photo by noah eleazar on Unsplash

I would like to take this opportunity to wish you and your family a fantastic festival season and an awesome break!



Tuesday, December 28, 2021

Monthly Net-Worth Update — Dec 2021

Photo by Visual Stories || Micheile on Unsplash

Dear Readers,

We are officially ending 2021. 

And this will be the last update for 2021.

Our net-worth increased, but investment hit a new low. As a result, our net-worth increased less than 2020 during most of which I was not even working.

Ok. I have now witnessed the power of Capital from my own experience…

Below is the usual summary.

Net-Worth increase from last month: 42K SGD, 0.94KG Gold

The increase was due to “non-routine” income:

  • My salary from last month + some encashment
  • My wife’s bonus
  • My freelancer pay

Luckily, the income was sufficient to off-set the drop in my portfolio, to at least end the year with a “positive” note.

The avg monthly increment of Net-Worth for 2021 is 13.6k SGD.

This is not only far from my 40/40 goal, but also lower than 2020, thanks to the huge loss of my portfolio. 

Photo by Mathieu Stern on Unsplash

Investment: -9.31% annualized return, incl. dividend

My portfolio hit a new low this month in the absolute value. And the annualized return rate was almost reaching the lowest point as well…

The loss pretty much eliminated my income from hard work for this whole year.

So be careful with stocks.

 

Happy holidays! And till next time!

Sunday, December 26, 2021

My Market Transactions — Wk52 2021

Photo by Micheile Henderson on Unsplash

 

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


Happy Holidays!


Nothing for the past week. Enjoy the break!


Till next time!

Thursday, December 23, 2021

Merry Christmas!

Photo by Lee Jeffs on Unsplash

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!

 

Christmas is a little more than one day away.

I am sure you are geared up for the festival and break!

I would like to wish you and your family Merry Christmas!

Also a quick update from me. Read on only if you are interested.

Christmas is expected to be short for me, so is New Year as well as Chinese New Year.

My current commitment stretches beyond Chinese New Year till Mid/Late Feb 2022.

The work is going to be heavy, challenging and time-sensitive.

Good thing is that I am working in a good team and they cut me some slack because I am new. 

So it is stressful, but manageable.

I will try to switch off when it is family time and festival time. The sky wont fall anyway.

But the stress would stay in the background nevertheless.

This is the trade-off, stress and time for growth and future.

I longed for the opportunities and complained upon being rejected to them.

So I will make the best out of this one. 

And I have to say this blog is a helpful place for me to drag myself out of work and have some private time to reflect, recollect and recover.

Thank you very much for staying with me. Otherwise, I might have stopped long ago.

Thank you and again Merry Christmas!



Tuesday, December 21, 2021

Wrong Commitment Costs

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Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!

 

I got myself into a wrong commitment and I am not happy.

It is wrong because

  1. The whole thing was not right and I did not make that clear.
  2. My intention was not pure
  3. The other party was not helping me to help her
  4. I was not helping enough by giving feedback
  5. My other commitment was unexpected
Photo by Susan Q Yin on Unsplash

1.The whole thing was not right and I did not make that clear

A friend asked for the favor to build an automation model in excel using VBA.

She asked me because I had done it before. That was my star project more than 10 years back.

I spent so much time building that model to make it robust and widely applicable.

What she asked was really just the basic features that could easily be taken care of.

The problem was I no longer had that model. I did not take it with me when I left the company…

So save your work always guys.

So I had to build a new one to help her.

Another problem was that once the automation model was built and shared, people would always ask for new features and VBA is not a particularly robust tool.

This would be a problem for her if she does not know enough about the coding and the model.

I felt it was probably a wrong idea when she asked.

But I did not really get this out to her. 

2.My intention was not pure

We were quite close as colleagues and she did help me before.

I wanted to return the favor and maybe secretly wanted her gratitude as well.

Photo by Toa Heftiba on Unsplash

3.The other party was not helping me to help her

Hands down, I do not want her in my team.

She just asked and waited, without showing any initiative.

She did not really want to acknowledge that she needed help even though she asked for it.

So when I asked for her raw file so that I could build the model that she could straightaway use, she refused and insisted to adjust the model herself.

She did not get back to me until last minute after I sent her the model. Sometimes, it took her months to get back to me. And when she came back with problems, I pretty much forgot about the code and had to spend time reading through again.

When we got on virtual discussions, she came unprepared and most time was spent on things she should have prepared beforehand. I had to constantly remind her to focus on the problems too.

She did not spend the time to populate the input table. So I could only test with a sample. New problems and requirements kept coming out when she added more sample in.

….

I did not mind helping her. But the whole process could have been so much more efficient.

4.I was not helping enough by giving feedback

I noticed her behavior above and was annoyed by it.

But I did not give her the feedback. 

She was not going to build a new career and achieve some new heights or anything like that. She just needed to get by.

But I do think I could have helped her more by e.g. pushing her to respond earlier and checking her preparation…

Photo by AJ Jean on Unsplash

5.My other commitment was unexpected

She asked in Aug and I was working 1–2 hour a day. I thought we could fix everything in a week. So no big deal. 

It has been 4 months…

With the extra commitment and recent changes, I have been working 14 hours a day since Oct.

Now her behavior just seems more annoying…

And it has not ended. 

She has problems all the time because she changes code but cannot even do the most basic debugging…

Photo by AbsolutVision on Unsplash

In the end

A few leanings from this wrong commitment:

  1. Always save our good work
  2. Avoid helping people who do not show commitment and initiatives to help us help them
  3. Put a stop as early as possible if things do not go well. The more we invest, the harder for us to pull out.
  4. Honest feedback is a hard thing to do but sometimes, there is no way around it
  5. Value our time
  6. Do not over-promise as we do not know where our time could be requested tomorrow
  7. Try to stay pure in intentions. That usually shows us the best course of action.

 

Till next time!

Sunday, December 19, 2021

My Market Transactions — Wk51 2021

Photo by Micheile Henderson on Unsplash

 

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


No transactions for the past week.

 

Still observing my portfolio dropping even further without any actions.



Till next time!



Thursday, December 16, 2021

VR starting to make sense

Photo by Scott Webb on Unsplash

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


It has been about a month since I received the VR headset.

I was playing it daily until the battery ran out for the first few days.

While the experience was largely positive, things like clarity and motion sickness did bother me.

After a few days, I found myself having to make a conscious effort to put it on.

And that made me almost return it.

But I did not, because I procrastinated.

And I started to get busy.

I did not touch the headset for like a week.

And then when I put it on again, the immersion pleasantly surprised me for the 2nd time.

And I started to feel lucky that I had not returned it.

So I started to get really casual about it, playing one or two times a week, depending on my schedule and what I want to do.

Photo by James Yarema on Unsplash

And every single time, I loved the emersion, despite all the problems, like clarity, moisture after like half an hour, etc.

And the little moments that jumped in now and then were particularly satisfying.

For example, I was struggling with different ways of holding the gun (controller) for better aiming and suddenly I got into a position I felt comfortable and familiar with.

And then it came to me that that was exactly how I held a real rifle in the live-fire range in Canada. 

At that time, I was struggling with different awkward positions trying to look through the iron sight and line up the target.

A veteran saw that and came to me, telling me to put the rifle stock against my shoulder and move my head forward along the stock until I could see through the sight, instead of trying to bend my neck sideways like an idiot to press my cheek against the gun.

That worked and I had a good time.

That moment was particularly satisfying for me, not only because it brought back fond memories, but also because this VR thing was so much closer to how things really worked.

I would have never got that experience no matter how much I play flat-screen shooters.

Furthermore, I am also exploring new things, like videos and social interactions.

They are all largely fun and the experiences are remarkable.

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

I am happy that I did not return the headset and I think I have found a proper way to use it.

Play when I feel like playing it and focus on the immersion and ignore the problems, and meanwhile, wait for the next-gen headsets.

 

Till next time!

Tuesday, December 14, 2021

Life is a choice entirely. Well almost!

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Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here! 


It just occurred to me that life is almost entirely our choice.

No matter how good one’s life is, there is always something to complain about. No one would think their lives are perfect, at least most of the time anyway.

On the other end, no matter how bad one’s life is, there is always something to be grateful for.

Therefore, it is almost entirely our choice how we go about life.

There are people who have everything but never feel enough.

There are also people who have so little but feel so grateful and happy about what is going on around them.

It hard to say the former has a better life than the latter.

Photo by Brian Yurasits on Unsplash

How about me?

I find myself having a range within which I am constantly moving.

I do complain, especially on the financial side of things.

The opportunities I have missed are worth multiples of our total net-worth which we have worked so hard and saved so hard to accumulate and they are enough to put us well in financial freedom already.

At the same time, I do feel grateful.

While I lost precious opportunities, that is nothing like “terminal sentence” where I am denied to all subsequent opportunities. I am denied to some for sure, but luckily not all.

As a matter of fact, new opportunities never stop coming to me. For some, I would be denied to them; for some, I would let them go; for some, I would try my best to grab them. At the end of the day, maybe I am lucky to grab one or two.

That is something to be grateful for.

And people who trust me never stop helping me. And in the process, I get to know more great people and I would be working hard to earn their trust and prove my value to them.

Again, this is something to be grateful for.

Photo by Gabrielle Henderson on Unsplash

Therefore, I am constantly moving along the line on a day by day basis.

Luckily, in my opinion, the range is manageable as it never goes to the extreme.

But I do notice that things generally work out better if I am on the “Gratitude” side.

The other thing I try to do is not let the emotions affect my actions.

No matter where I am in the range, I try to maintain clear priorities and act on them.

This, however, does consume self-discipline and will power.

Therefore, all in all, it is beneficial to me to be on the “Gratitude” side.

However, I do not forcefully put myself on any side. I have learned to leave buffer in my life, including room for wastage of self-discipline and will power.

Photo by Aaron Burden on Unsplash

In the end

No matter what lives we are leading now, there are always things to be grateful for and things to complain about.

It is almost entirely our choice how to go about life.

For most, that moves within a manageable range.

Things may generally work out better if we are on the “Gratitude” side.

However, do allow ourselves to come to the “Dark side” from time to time and even stay there for a bit. It is ok as long as we are not lost in it.

Most importantly, do not lose sight of our priorities. 


Till next time!

Sunday, December 12, 2021

My Market Transactions (Yean, got~) — Wk50 2021

Photo by Micheile Henderson on Unsplash

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


I made some transactions in the past week. Below is the summary.


Capital injection: ~34KSGD

1. ES3

This is investment using SRS account for tax relief purpose. 
 
Embarrassing to say that my SRS investment is still in the negative since I started using it 4 years back.

ES3 is all I buy with this account. And because I entered at the peak of ES3, the overall gain is still negative.

But I wont be touch the money inside any time soon. So just let it be.

Still got time...haha

2. Tencent

Somehow I still have some cash inside my account and I am lazy to convert them back to SGD. 
 
So I just purchased it. The overall valuation of Tencent has been low for the past few months anyway.
 
So again, give it time and let it be.
Photo by M. B. M. on Unsplash

Capital outflow: None

I am literally ignoring my portfolio.

So not looking, not moving, and not feeling...haha

Happy investing!


Till next time!

Thursday, December 9, 2021

Relationship building takes time and heart

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Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here.


I have been meeting a lot of people lately, virtually and face-to-face.

From the interactions, two things become really clear:

  1. Everyone is where they are for a reason
  2. Everyone is unique in pretty much every aspect

That infers two findings:

  1. There is opportunity to learn from everyone
  2. There is no one-fits-all approach in relationship building

That further infers two conclusions:

  1. Relationship building is important 
  2. Relationship building takes time and heart
Photo by Maxim Ilyahov on Unsplash

In some cases, a follow-up email takes half an hour or longer to write, because a summary of that specific interaction is needed and some certain aspects needs to be highlighted and we need to decide which ones.

In some cases, a chat could use up all the spare time we have.

In some cases, emotional benefits needs to be provided, at the cost of acceptable quality loss

… …

It is easy to argue that none of this is necessary and we could better use the time and energy on work.

This could be very true and this could also be the biggest misunderstanding.

What use is work if it cannot solve the problem or it solves the wrong problem.

It is also easy to just skip doing this when under pressure and time constraints.

I need to make sure I do it constantly.

Photo by Erwan Hesry on Unsplash

However, at the same time, there is no need to overdo it.

There is no need to proof read an email 20 times even if it is to the big boss.

There is no need to always worry that the summary is not good enough and it will show our incompetency.

There is no need to always be formal. Maybe a quick WhatsApp message would just do the job.

The other party is people too.

The key is that we keep doing it.

Only after we get comfortable with doing it, we start to worry about how to do it better.

To us all!

 

Till next time!

Tuesday, December 7, 2021

Milestone — real possibility to hit 40/40 goal next year

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Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


An opportunity knocked and I took the risk.

So far, what I have seen is great beyond my expectation.

Challenges will come. I have been warned.

But I should have this month to prepare as much as possible.

I am going to really try and make it this time.

I am grateful for the opportunity.

With this opportunity, there is real possibility that I will hit my 40/40 goal next year, 5 years earlier than my original plan.

But I need to prove I deserve it first. I need to make it.

This will be the absolute focus from now, in a sustainable way.

So promises are made and stages are set.

To all my readers,

Thank you for staying with me until now! 

I really hope you will be there when I announce the achievement of the 40/40 goal, hopefully end of 2022 or beginning of 2023.

Thank you!

 

Till next time!

 

Sunday, December 5, 2021

My Market Transactions - Wk49 2021

 

Photo by Dennis Groom on Unsplash

Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


We are in Dec! Last calendar month in 2021! How time flies!


Here is another update on the weekly transactions,


Still NIL.

 

My portfolio got some recovery last month. And with the new variant, it tanked again to 170K paper loss...

 

Not sure what to do or think about it...


If it continues to drop, maybe some buying opportunities will emerge for the counters I am looking at.


So life goes on!


Till next time!

Thursday, December 2, 2021

It is Dec! Take care of your tax relief before it is too late. A dollar saved is a dollar earned!

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Dear Readers,

Thank you for coming here!


It is Dec. Have you secured your income tax relief for 2021?

If not, below are 3 things you should consider right now, because they “expire” after the last working day of the year and you will lose your chance to save on taxes.

First of all, let’s distinguish tax relief and tax rebate.

Tax relief means a portion of your income is not subject to tax.

  • For example, your annual income is 200KSGD and you can claim a tax relief of 40K. Now your taxable income is 160KSGD. According to the income tax rate 2019, you should pay 7,950 (For first 120K) + 6,000 (for additional 40K) = 13,950SGD in income tax.
  • Tax relief typically applies every year and we need to be mindful about the timing to enjoy some of them, such as various Top-up schemes
  • There is an overall tax relief cap of 80KSGD per year. I doubt I will ever hit that cap.
Photo by Visual Stories || Micheile on Unsplash

Tax rebate means a portion of your income tax is off-set and does not need to be paid by you.

  • For example, your income tax is 13,950SGD and you enjoy a tax rebate of 5000SGD. The actual income tax you need to pay is 13,950–5000 = 8,950SGD.
  • Tax rebate is typically one-time. Once you use it up, it is gone. And before you use it up, it will stay in your (or your partner’s) account and be automatically carried forward to next year. While it is advisable to use it up as soon as possible as the balance does not generate any interest, the risk of losing them is very low, unless you do not know about it at all or complete forget about it.
  • The tax rebate that applies to most of Singaporeans is Parenthood Tax Rebate (PTR), which is intended to support parents with children. It is 5K for 1st child, 10K for 2nd child and 20K for each child for 3rd and subsequent children. It is pretty generous as our government really loves babies and you and your partner can split it anyway you want.
Photo by Towfiqu barbhuiya on Unsplash

In this post, we will focus on the 3 types of tax relief that typically applies to employees with regular pay-check, which I guess is most of us. 

You need to complete them by year end to enjoy the relief.

So let’s begin. While you need to determine your priorities based on your own situation, below sequence is what I follow and suggest.

Photo by Visual Stories || Micheile on Unsplash

1.Voluntary Contributions (Cash) to Medisave Account (VC-MA)

  • If you have not reached your Basic Health Sum (BHS) and you have not reached the annual CPF contribution cap (37,740SGD), you can top up your MA using cash and enjoy the tax relief
  • According to IRAS website, the amount of tax relief given is the lowest of the following:
  • Voluntary cash contribution directed specifically to Medisave Account
  • Annual CPF contribution cap for the year, less Mandatory Contribution (MC)
  • Prevailing Basic Healthcare Sum(BHS)^, less the balance in Medisave Account before the voluntary cash contribution.
  • The process is fairly straightforward. Just follow the CPF instructions. If you give CPF a call, they will also walk you through it step-by-step
  • Remember to use PAYNOW option to enjoy the almost immediate transfer. Wire or check is likely to miss the deadline, which is tomorrow.
  • Best time for doing this for me is late Jan every year to enjoy the max interest or when some Medisave money is used if you have reached BHS. 
  • This requires you to have a reasonably good forecast of your annual CPF contribution though. But there is no need to worry too much. Excess contribution will be returned to you by CPF after a while (not sure how long) with no interest.
Photo by Visual Stories || Micheile on Unsplash

2.Top up (cash) your CPF Special account (SA, below age 55) or Retirement account (RA, age 55 and above)

  • You can top up your or your relatives’ SA or RA all the way to the Full Retirement Sum (FRS)
  • The tax relief would be the lower of your cash top-up amount and 7KSGD
  • You can also top up your relatives’ SA (Parents, ground parents, spouse or siblings) if they meet the requirements (basically low income) to enjoy additional tax relief, up to 7KSGD as well
  • Again, follow the CPF instructions and use PAYNOW
  • Best time for doing this for me is late Jan every year to enjoy the max interest
Photo by Andre Taissin on Unsplash

3.Top up (cash) Supplementary Retirement Scheme (SRS) account

  • You can open a SRS account with DBS, OCBC or UOB. Sometimes, they even provide cash benefits if you open an account with them. Do check and grab the “free” dollars.
  • The benefit of this account is that your contributions is tax free, up to 15,300SGD per year. You can invest the money. When you withdraw the fund upon or after retirement, only 50% of the withdraws are taxable
  • The potential down-side is that if you withdraw before retirement, 5% of penalty will be imposed. Therefore, it is advisable to open your SRS account now, to lock in the retirement age after which you can withdraw the fund from your SRS account without the penalty.
  • Once you open an account, the top-up is like any other bank transfer. However, it does take a few days for the account to be opened.
  • Best time for doing this for me is when my bulk of dividend has come in. This way, I can invest the dividend together with the new contribution to save fees. The fee to invest this account is not the best.


If you have done all 3, super! If you have not, please consider based on your actual situation. A dollar saved is a dollar earned.


Till next time!