Monday 24 December 2018

(Post 70/week 53)Zero dollar project updates:carousell,Bitcoin Faucets,Short Link,Online survey and Adsense update

Updates for last week week of zero dollar project
1.Carousell
2.Bitcoin faucets
3.Short link
4.Online survey
5.Adsense update

1.Carousell

My carousell:carousell.com/eric996

Been doing some heavy marketing everywhere, gumtree, facebook, you name it...

Will be writing a post about some of my tip for carousell soon...

Total earnings for carousell from last update:$6 + $1=$7


2.Bitcoin faucets


Current coinpot holding


Bitcoin core: 6217 Satoshi
Bitcoin cash: 12188 bch
Dogecoin: 64.18 doge
Litecoin:  0.00218175 ltc
Dashcoin: 0.00072989 dash



3.Short link

Last x week







Currently







Total earning for short link last update:$3.8361-$2.9437=$0.89

For more information on how's I use both short link on my blog and YouTube, read here

4.Online survey

Current online survey on my list...(Bold mean that these survey websites have been verified for payout)

4.1 Toluna
4.2.surveyon
4.3 YouGov
4.4 mobrog
4.5 ipanelonline
4.6 viewfruit
4.7 mysurvey
4.8 millleu(App on google play store)



Survey that payout surveyon,mobrog,toluna

The total payout from last project update:$2.00+$20.00+$6.25+$2.00=$30.25





5.Adsense


Last week earning for Adsense:$5.85

Total earnings for last week zero dollar project:$7 + $30.25+ +$0.89+$5.85 =$43.99

That's all for the updates this week for my zero dollar project! stay tuned to my investment project updates for this week!

Saturday 22 December 2018

(Post 69/week 52)Investment project update part 2:Posb invest saver DEC 2018 summary

Posb invest saver update(Dec 2018)

My POSB invest saver update for the month of May, read here

My POSB invest saver update for the month of June, read here
My POSB invest saver update for the month of July, read here
My POSB invest saver update for the month of Aug, read here
My POSB invest saver update for the month of Sept, read here
My POSB invest saver update for the month of Oct, read here
My POSB invest saver update for the month of Nov, read here


Regular saving plan updates for ABF Singapore Bond Index Fund(A35)


Breakdown of my regular saving plan(A35) this month(Dec 2018)
Total amount(regular saving plan)A35:$100
Price per share:$1.149300
Gross sales charge:0.5%
Net sales charge amount:0.5% of 100=$0.50
Net amount invested: Total amount-net sales charge amount=$100-$0.50=$99.50
Units issued: Net amount invested/price per share=$99.50/$1.149300=86 units



Summary: As of 23 Nov, the share price of A35 was at 1.157, has went up from last month, but still quite at the middle with its maximum at 1.25(2011) and its lowest 1.00(2008). Will be watching it for any further movement, once below 1.100 will make a bulk purchase.No change in sentiment from last month.The increase is probably due to the STI ETF(ES3) dropping these few day(when stock drop,bond increase)





Regular saving plan updates for Nikko AM Singapore STI ETF(G3B)

Breakdown of my regular saving plan(G3B) for this month(DEC 2018)
Total amount(regular saving plan)A35:$100
Price per share:$3.235700
Gross sales charge:0.82%
Net sales charge amount:0.82% of $100=$0.82
Net amount invested: Total amount-Net sales charge amount=$100-$0.82=99.18
Units issued: Net amount invested/price per share=$99.18/$3.235700=30 units





Summary: As of 23 DEC 2018, the share price of G3B is at 3.18 and ES3 is at 3.10. Both ES3 and G3B has been on a downtrend, will ES3 drop below 3.00?. I think there is still a possibility.  Will continue to be watching it along with A35.Great time to purchase in bulk!










(Current regular saving plan portfolio)

(When you trade long term through dollar cost averaging, no need to worry about the red:D)

Don't forget to DYODD(Do your own due diligence!)

Thursday 20 December 2018

(Post 68/week 52)Learning investing/trading together part 10:Shiny things thread summary from hardwarezone

I know I have written about the summary just last week, but just this week I found a good summary of the shiny thread compilation and I think the summary does a very good job in keeping investment simple, hence I am adding this post so that I can refer to it easily and here I am promoting it, do give it a read from the original thread in hardware zone here

(Shiny things have also written a book btw, I hope I can publish a book someday too, haha)

Tip 1: Long-Only Investing for Retail Investors
  • Invest in Stock & Bond ETFs.
  • For Singapore Stock & Bond ETFs, that's ES3 & A35.
  •  Use [ 110 - your age ] for the Stocks: Bond ETF ratio.
  • Remember to rebalance once every year. (i seldom rebalance though)
  • Buy & Sell to bring your stocks & bonds to that [ 110 - your age ] ratio.
  • Consider exposure in other markets, e.g.. S&P500, China Large-Cap ETFs, etc., for diversification & growth
  •  If an ETF shuts down, its assets get handed back to the shareholders.
  •  A 100%-equities portfolio is also a bad idea.
  •  STI's more tightly linked with economies like China and Malaysia and Indonesia than it is with the US and EU.
  • In the long run, an investor's return is measured as earnings per share growth + dividends + changes in valuation(PE ratio).
 Tip 2. Lump-Sum Investing / Dollar-Cost-Average?
  •  Consider dumping it all at once / in 3 portions.
  •  To minimize buying high, split into 03 parts.
  • Invest 1 part each month, until you are fully invested.
  • That way, if the stock goes up, at least, you bought some.
  • If the stock goes down, you have the cash to buy more at discounted prices.
  • Avoid making many trading transactions per month, as that amounts to a high trading fee.
  • In my case, I use posb invest saver for the dollar cost average, while when I am trading I am will use the lump sum method
Tip 3. Why is investing in Gold silly?
  • Gold is an unproductive asset, it does not provide dividends yield.
  •  It relies solely on capital gains.
  • Physical Gold storage requires security expenditure & Paper Gold account requires a monthly expenditure.
  • Investing in Gold = Shorting Interest Rates.
    Gold / Cash / Long Bonds are direct/indirect bets that interest rates are going down. (interest rates set by FED )
  • Over the long term, Stocks provide better returns than Bonds & Gold.
  • 2-5% of your portfolio in Gold is acceptable.
Tip 4: Investment Horizon
  • If you need the money within 2 years or so, it should be in cash.
  • If you need the money within 5 years, it should be in cash/bonds.
  • If you don't need the money within 5 years, it can go into stocks, or ( even better ) the 110-minus-your-age stock/bonds mix.
Tip 5: About ETF Types.
  • Invest in ETFs that actually holds the stocks/bonds that they claim, so that in events of distress, say, Great Financial Crisis, etc., the ETF would not vanish into thin air.
  • there are many types of ETFs...Leveraged ETFs, Inverse ETFs ( Short ETFs ), Futures-Based ETFs... all have their own problems.
  • Stick to Vanguard & iShares. Ignore everything else. Because they are ETFs that really hold the stocks that they target to be vested in.
Tip 6: Suggested Portfolio Mix.
  • 110 minus your age in stocks; the rest in bonds; and 50-50 split between local and global stocks"
  • Allocation to Singapore equities (including your ETFs, stocks, and REITs).
  • Allocation to international equities (including DM and EM).
  • Allocation to Singapore bonds.
  • You can keep a 5% fun-money account around for that sort of punting.
Tip 7: When to rebalance your ETF?
  • Doing it at the end of December is a bit silly because that's when liquidity is at it's absolute worst.
  • "Markets are seasonal" sounds like witchcraft, but there does appear to be a bit of seasonality in the US markets.
  • The old "Sell in May & Go Away" doesn't have much validity, but re-balancing in November, after the end of the May-October seasonal weak pretty, is a pretty good idea if you want to have a slightly better chance of capturing the turning points in the markets.
  •  If you are re-balancing once a year, I would pick November.
  • If you are doing it twice a year, May & November ( 6 months apart ) is a good idea.
  • Rebalancing is done periodically regardless of economic situations and market conditions
 Tip 8: Which broker to use?
  • for SG stocks, use Stanchart 
  • All other local brokers(e.g DBS Vickers)They are expensive  & charge imaginary fees, i.e. custodian fees(Refer to my previous post a few weeks ago for DBS Vickers fee)
  • for US & other markets, use Interactive Brokers (IB).
  • for US only, with Sg office, use TD Ameritrade (TD).
  •  Interactive Brokers is the absolute best.
Tip 9. BOOBY TRAP / made-in-USA IED.
  • Using IB or TD, it is subjected to 30% US estate tax for accounts > US$65k.
  • Buy a Term Insurance of 30% X [ US Portfolio Value - US$65k ], so that in the event you die... the term insurance offsets the 30% estate tax.
  • If you are a Singaporean, consider taking up Aviva SAF term life, to defray the 30% US estate tax
Will continue at the next post!

Sunday 16 December 2018

(Post 67/week 51)TipforThought:ShinyThings thread tip 1

In April as I was learning the ropes on stock investing(i am still learning btw), I came across the shiny thing thread on the hardware zone forum. There are certainly many interesting tips which are spread out over the long-running thread, I saved quite a few of them as I found them to be very insightful. Here are some of them

1)

Question 1: May I have some suggestion on how to start my investments? e.g invest in ETFs, bonds? and which platform should I do the investment? e.g through SGX directly, or through banks like POSB invest saver, DBS Vickers, OCBC blue-chip investment?

Answer 1: Start by investing into a mix of ETFs: local stocks(ES3, the STI ETF); local bonds(A35, the ABF Singapore Bond ETF);  and global stocks (IWDA, which tracks the MSCI World index).You can do this through POSB Invest-Saver(for the Singapore ETFs) and stanchart(for the global ETF). Every other broker is worse, either they are more expensive, or they rip you off with unnecessary fees or both
One thing that's worth mentioning though, you'll always need to go through a bank or broker. The SGX is just an exchange, so it's where people come to trade, the bank or broker I where you place your trades, and then they go off to the exchange and fill those orders for you.


Key takeaways 1: Use POSB Invest saver for the Singapore ETFs, and standard chartered for the global ETF, due to other brokers fees(I am using DBS Vickers though).In my defence, it is because my broker gives me a lot of useful reports and tips, hahaha, but I am starting to transit into using standard chartered due to the cheaper fee incurred when trading

2)



Tip 2:The principle of buy and hold and rebalance still applies no matter where you live.
If you live in Singapore, you buy a mix of the STI ETF and the ABF bond fund, and rebalance once a year.

Don't fall into the trap that since US stock have so well the last few years, you want to hop on that train, sell all my STI and get me into the S&P!. That's is the exact opposite of what you want to do. Completely aside from all the currency risk,you're taking on, you want to SELL the things that have outperformed, not buy them.

Key takeaway 2:Relance once a year but selling the stock that are outperforming.Don't follow the trend too much and eager to hop onto the train quickly(yes, bitcoin I am looking at you)
3)


Question 3: Which countries market would I be looking for?And which broker would be good for this?

Answer 3: The ETF can be listed anywhere, but generally what you are going to want is a nice, boring, simple global equity ETF. Around here, VWRD(listed on the London stock exchange) is the preferred pick

It's worth looking at the UK's ETF listings because those typically have better tax treatment than US ETF(less of your dividends get withheld)

Key takeaway: Choose VWRD as the global equity ETF as it has a better tax treatment than US ETF

4)


Question 4:Are vanguard ETFs the only one worth looking at? And which of them would be suitable?

Answer 4:Stick to vanguard and I Shares. Ignore everything else,

Key takeaway 4:Vanguard or  I Shares only for global ETF.

Thursday 13 December 2018

(Post 66/week 51)Investment project updates(Peer to peer lending):Moolahsense(My tenth campaign)

Moolahsense(My tenth campaign with Moolahsense)

Note*the company name will not be revealed just like the previous post as my money are still inside moolahsense, haha(this is not a sponsored post by the way)

Issuer summary
Date of listing:Mar 2018
Amount:S$100,000.00
Tenor: 12 months
Note type: Equal installment

Quoting from the moolahsense website
  • Equal installment:A promissory note by which an installment of the principal subscription amoung and/or interest accrued and due up to the date of payment shall be payable on such dates as set out in a repayment schedule specified in the promissory note, and on the maturity date, the principal subscription amount would have been paid in full
Repayment frequency: Monthly
  • Repayment frequency: Will be paid monthly
Target interest rate:17%P.A

Quoting from Moolahsense website
  • Target interest rate: The maximum rate the issuer is willing to provide the interest on the principal subscription amount which the issuer wished to obtain, as notified in writing by the issue to Moolahsese
Purpose: Working capital

Quote from valuepenguin:https://www.valuepenguin.sg/what-is-working-capital
  • Working capital: It is a concept to describe a business ability to cover its short-term operating costs
  • E.g For this campaign, I have funded $100 into it
  • As the target interest rate is 17%, this means that at the end of the tenor, which is 12 month I will expect to receive $117
  • 100%=$100
  • 17%(Interest for 12 month/1 years)=$17.00
  • 117%(The Principal + the interest)=$100+ $17.00=$117.00
  • Since the tenor is 12 months, each month I will receive $9.75(inclusive of interest) in payment/equal installment
  • 1month=$117/12=$9.75
Summary company profile

  • The issuer is a company incorporated in Singapore in 2010.
  • The Issuer is in the building and construction industry and has around 40 employees. 
  • The Issuer specializes in scaffolding works.
  • The Issuer is registered with the Building and Construction Authority as a Registered Contractor for Formwork (i.e. scaffolding) and for Air-Conditioning, Refrigeration & Ventilation Works
  • The Issuer is a member of the Association of Process Industry, a trade association for businesses in the petroleum, petrochemical and pharmaceutical sectors, as well as engineering companies which provide facility maintenance and construction services for those sectors
Detail of purpose

  • The Issuer seeks working capital for the performance of various scaffolding works contracts which have been awarded to the Issuer.
Financial statement

Will only reveal a part of the financial statement due to confidentiality. As I have mentioned a few weeks ago in my post, that I only mainly use this three ratio: current ratio, quick ratio and debt to equity ratio to decide in investing in a campaign, hence I will be showing its ratio below


The ratio is as follow(left side of the column is for the year 2017/right side of the column is for the year 2016)








Year 2017/Year 2016
(Current ratio 2017:2.28),(Current ratio 2016:1.8)

  • A simple ratio of current asset divide by current liabilities
  • Current liabilities are debt that needs to clear in the short term(in a year)
  • If a company has a current ratio less then 1.0, do not invest in it
  • If a company has a current ratio more then 2.0, May consider investing in it
  • The higher the current ratio, the better
  • For the current ratio of 2016:1.8, it is lower than the recommended range(>2.0)
  • For the current ratio of 2017:2.28, it is higher than the recommended range(>2.0)
(Quick ratio 2016:1.3),(Quick ratio 2015:1.09)


  • The quick ratio is almost similar to current ratio except that it is assumed that the company does not sell its inventories(e.g Toyota inventory is its car) or stock, it is still able to fulfill its debt
  • If the company has a quick ratio of 0.75 and below, do not invest in it
  • If the company has a quick ratio of 1.25 and above, May consider investing in it
  • The higher the quick ratio the better
  • For the quick ratio of 2016:1.09, it is lower than the recommended range(>1.25)
  • For the quick ratio of 2017:1.3, it is higher than the recommended range(>1.25)

  • (Total liabilities/equity 2016:0.79),(Total liabilities/equity 2015:1.19)


  • The debt ratio is calculated by total liabilities divided by the equity
  • If the company has a debt ratio of 1.5 and above, do not invest in it
  • The company should essentially have a debt ratio of 1.0, if the debt ratio is below 0.75, do consider investing in it
  • The lower the debt to equity ratio the better
  • For the Total liabilities/equity of 2016:1.19 it is out of the recommended range(<0.75)
  • For the Total liabilities/equity of 2017:0.79, it is out of the recommended range(<0.75)

    Why did I invest in this loan?
    • The current ratio and quick ratio of 2016 along with total liabilities/equity is out of the recommended range,however the current ratio,quick ratio and total liabilities/equity has improve from 2016 to 2017,hence i believe it will continue to improve in 2018.Hence,i have decided to invest
    • As the moment of writing, this loan is still ongoing and there is no late payment so far
    Repayment schedule?



    link on how too read the effective interest rate for moolahsense:http://letscrowdsmarter.com/understanding-interest-rates/

    Monthly interest rate:interest/start balance=$1.42/$100=1.42%(Percentage conversion must *100)
    Effective interest rate:1.42%*12=17.04%(almost the same as the target interest rate at 17%(see top of the post))

    From the above picture, you can see that the Net repayment is at $9.03 instead of the $9.75 that I have mentioned above at the working capital, hence I will do a calculation here again

    1-month repayment:$9.03
    6-month repayment:$9.03*12=$108.36

    $100(the amount I put in this campaign=100%
    $100=(100/100)*108.36=108.36%
    108.96%-100%=8.36%

    The target interest rate as you can see in my above post is at around 17%P.A, after taking into account of the tenor rate being 12 months compared to 8.36% its almost 10% difference(i shall call this net interest rate instead)in this campaign. To conclude, this means that if you invest in a (17%P. A) high-interest rate campaign in moolahsense, you will get only about 8-9%

    Stay tuned to my next week post:moolahsense(my eleventh campaign)!

    Monday 10 December 2018

    (Post 65/week 51)Zero dollar project updates:carousell,Bitcoin Faucets,Short Link,Online survey and Adsense update

    Updates for last week week of zero dollar project
    1.Carousell
    2.Bitcoin faucets
    3.Short link
    4.Online survey
    5.Adsense update

    1.Carousell

    My carousell:carousell.com/eric996

    Been doing some heavy marketing everywhere, gumtree, facebook, you name it...

    Total earnings for carousell last week:$3.50 + $1=$4.50


    2.Bitcoin faucets


    Current coinpot holding


    Bitcoin core: 5896 Satoshi
    Bitcoin cash: 10646 bch
    Dogecoin: 62.45 doge
    Litecoin:  0.00207161 ltc
    Dashcoin: 0.00063188 dash



    3.Short link

    Last x week






    Currently






    Total earning for short link last x week:$0.30

    For more information on how's I use both short link on my blog and YouTube, read here

    4.Online survey

    Current online survey on my list...(Bold mean that these survey websites have been verified for payout)

    4.1 Toluna
    4.2.surveyon
    4.3 YouGov
    4.4 mobrog
    4.5 ipanelonline
    4.6 viewfruit
    4.7 mysurvey
    4.8 millleu(App on google play store)



    Survey that payout last week(only for nov):surveyon

    The total payout for last week survey:$2.00



    5.Adsense


    Last week earning for Adsense:$4.73

    Total earnings for last week zero dollar project:$4.50 + $0.30+ +$2.00 + $4.73 =$11.53

    That's all for the updates this week for my zero dollar project! stay tuned to my investment project updates for this week!

    Friday 7 December 2018

    (Post 64/week 50)Learning investing/trading together part 9:How to purchase a stock part 2?(DBS vickers)

    For more information on the various term, please refer to this link

    Continue from part 8: How to purchase a stock? (you can read all about it here)

    16)Change the account-cash upfront

    17)Change the buy action to buy or sell


    Some key term to note...

    Settlement mode
    • Cash or Cash upfront
    • Choose cash upfront if you are using cash upfront account
    Settlement currency

    • The money that you would like to purchase the stock with, for purchasing of US stock(USD) and for purchasing of Singapore stock(SGD)
    Stock name

    • Name of the stock itself,in my case it is the STI ETF
    Stock Code

    • Stock code as the name implies, SPDR STI ETF(ES3)
    Order type
    • The below chart does a good job of explaining the various order type
    • Market order-Buy or sell at the current Ask price(Order get filled immediately)
    • Limit order-Buy or sell at a specific price(Order filled depend on the price you key in, will explain later in the post)
    • There is no stop order for DBS Vickers(correct me if I am wrong)

    Order duration
    • A Good for Day order is a limit order good for that business day only. If the order is not filled by the end of the trading day, the order will expire. 
    • This is the order we are going for, for simplicity sake. 
    18)Key in the quantity of stock that you would like to buy

    SGX(lot size)=100 shares

    19)Key in the price that you would like to bid

    The price that I would like to bid:$3.095


    You may ask why $3.095?

    Remember the place order from the last post? (Black circle)

    • The bid price is $3.095(Note: this may not get your order to fulfill instantly and your order will be added to the queue)
    • This is like trying to bargain with a shop seller at a market to buy an item(e.g fish) which the price tag stated as selling for $4, but you want to buy it cheaper at $3.50



    Can you bid lower than $ 3.095?

    • Yes, you can put the bid price at $3.094 or $3.00(Note: this may not get your order to fulfill instantly and your order will be added to the queue)
    • This is also like trying to bargain with a shop seller at a market to buy an item(e.g fish) which is stated as selling for $4, but you want to buy it cheaper at $3.50



    Can you bid higher than $3.095?

    • Yes, you can put the bid price at $3.100(Note: this will get your order fill instantly because you are purchasing the stock at the selling price(Ask))
    • This is just like buying an item (e.g fish) at a stated price from the shop seller at the market without any question asked, you hand over your money and off you go
    What does it mean by having my order added to the queue?
    • Since there is no seller willing to sell(ask) at the price you want(bid), your order is added to a queue
    • A queue is like a database where they store everybody offer whose order is not filled, the order is more likely to fill quickly if you key in the price nearer to their Ask price(selling price)-
    • E.g you key in 3.099 as your price and the Ask price is 3.100(below in the picture



    20)Click the confirm order button to place your order(Black circle)


    A few more key term to note...

    Total contract value



    • The total contract value would be $3.095(the price that I have key in) * 100(quantity) =$309.50
    Commision
    • I mentioned before in my post a few ago about the DBS Vickers commission
    • Currently, the brokerage fee for DBS cash upfront account is 0.18%, min SGD10
    Clearing fee

    • Also mentioned before in this post
    • Total Contract Value(100%)=$309.50
    • Clearing fee(0.0325%)=$0.10
    SGX trading fee

    • Total Contract Value(100%)=$309.50
    • SGX trading fee(0.0075%)=$0.02
    GST
    • The irony even though, I am doing it DIY...
    • GST is 7% of Comission + Clearing fee + SGX trading fee 
    • GST=7%(the magic number)
    • Commission + Clearing fee + SGX trading fee =100%
    • $10.00 + $0.10+ $0.02=100%
    • 100%=$10.81
    • GST=$0.71
    Total Comission and fees

    • Commission + Clearing fee + SGX trading fee + GST=Total Comission and fees
    • $10.00 + $0.10 + $0.02 + $0.71= $10.83
    • Total Comission and fee = $10.83
    Indicative total proceed

    • Total Contract value +  Commission + Clearing fee + SGX trading fee + GST=Indicative total proceed
    • $309.50 + $10.00 + $0.10 + $0.02 + $0.71= $320.33
    • Indicative total proceed=$320.33

    I will not proceed with the next step as it means that I have purchased a stock. Hope you all learn something from my post, do watch out for my next post:)