Saturday, July 27, 2013

Nikko AM - Diversifying Your Investment Portfolio With ETFs

Part 2 of Nikko AM advertistment on Today newspaper. If you want to achieve the below easily, consider this :

POSB 
- Regular Savings Plan (RSP) @ 0% sales charge (until 31 Dec 2013)
- Minimum investment sum of $100 monthly
(not sure about the initial investment, $1000 if I'm not wrong)

Fund Name 
- Nikko AM Balanced Funds - MyHome Fund HomeGrowth
- 80% into the Nikko AM Singapore STI ETF; and
- 20% into the ABF Singapore Bond Index Fund.
- Management Fee 0.5% p.a. from Fund Factsheet

Extracted from POSB Website

How does RSP work?

- With a RSP you make fixed monthly investments, regardless of market conditions
You avoid the uncertainties of market timing, by not speculating on the “right” time to invest your capital as a lump sum
- By investing a regular sum each time, you have the benefit of “dollar cost averaging” through buying fewer investment units when prices rise but more units when prices fall
- Over time, your average unit cost is lower than the average market price of the security during the same period of time




Sunday, July 21, 2013

Nikko AM - ETFs and You

Just a short post on the Nikko Asset Management exchange traded fund (ETF) advertisement on Today newspaper earlier this week, in case you missed it. Perhaps you may find it helpful?


Saturday, July 13, 2013

8 ETFs That Are Classified As Excluded Investment Products


Instead of four ETFs, Investors can now trade a total of eight SGX ETFs without having to be pre-qualified.

All ETFs are included under the list of Specified Investment Products (SIP) unless otherwise stated. Investors who wish to trade SIPs are required to be pre-qualified by the brokers through the Customer Account Review or take the SGX Online Education Programme.

Excluded Investment Products (EIP)
  1. iShares Barclays Capital Asia Local 1-3 Year Currency Bond Index ETF
  2. iShares Barclays Capital Asia Local Currency Bond Index ETF
  3. iShares Barclays Capital USD Asia High Yield Bond Index ETF
  4. iShares J.P Morgan USD Asia Credit Bond Index ETF
  5. Nikko AM Singapore STI ETF
  6. ABF Singapore Bond Index Fund
  7. CIMB FTSE ASEAN 40 ETF
  8. CIMB S&P Ethical Asia Pacific Dividend ETF
Source : SGX.com | ETFs | Specified Investment Products

Thursday, July 11, 2013

OCBC Blue Chip Investment Plan (BCIP) vs Phillip Share Builders Plan (SBP)

Time for a simple comparison between OCBC and Phillip regular fixed-dollar amount investment plan. Been wanting to embark on index investing because it seemed so easy via OCBC or Phillip Capital?

Hold on for a second.

Let's assume a simple scenario of buying a single counter (STI ETF) monthly for $100, the minimum investment sum via OCBC Blue Chip Investment Plan (BCIP) and Phillip Share Builders Plan (SBP).

Fee & Charges
OCBC BCIP - 0.30% or S$5 per counter, whichever is higher
Phillip SBP - S$6.42 (inclusive of GST at 7%) for Total Investment amount <= $1000
Winner - OCBC (need to pay $5)

What if we're investing $1000 monthly instead?

Fee & Charges
OCBC BCIP - 0.30% or S$5 per counter, whichever is higher
Phillip SBP - S$6.42 (inclusive of GST at 7%) for Total Investment amount <= $1000
Winner - OCBC (need to pay $5)

Dividend Charges
Seems like both of them charges a 1% on net dividend.
For Phillip Capital, it is stated on their PDF file they charge 1% on net dividend.
For OCBC, one of my readers brought it to my attention, although I'm not sure where the source is. that they don't have dividend charges after he/she spoke to the bank officer.

Penalty Fee for Insufficient Funds
OCBC BCIP - No fee
Phillip SBP - $5.35 (Inclusive of GST) 

Based on my simple comparison, looks like OCBC is the better deal here in terms of net expense incurred. Of course, you can't compare this to Standard Chartered Online Trading Platform which charges a measly 0.2% only - that's only 20 cents per $100, or $2 per $1000. 

They don't sell in odd lots though, so you'll probably need to save up for a few months to make a purchase. As it stands now, if you save $100 each month, you can make a STI ETF purchase every 3 to 4 months.

For a small monthly investment sum of money, the fees are absolutely going to kill you. If you have the discipline, do it yourself via Standard Chartered.

I'll make it even worst for you, and show you just how bad a deal we're getting here in Singapore. Take a look a Betterment, a monthly investment plan based in the US.

Betterment
Monthly Deposit - $100/month minimum
Annual Fee - 0.35%
Looks ordinary. But wait, I have not revealed what the portfolio is.
Is it a single ETF? Nope.

When you deposit money with Betterment, it is seamlessly invested in a blend of two baskets - Treasury Bond Exchange Traded Funds (ETFs) and Stock Market ETFs. 

Stock Market Basket
25% VTI: Vanguard Total Stock Market
25% IVE: iShares S&P 500 Value Index
25% VEA: Vanguard Europe Pacific (EAFE)
10% VWO: Vanguard Emerging Markets
8% IWS: iShares Russell Midcap Value Index
7% IWN: iShares Russell 2000 Value Index

Treasury Bond Basket
50% TIP: iShares Barclays TIPS Bond Fund
50% SHY: iShares Barclays 1-3 Year Treasury Bond Fund

All these, for $100 a month, at 0.35% annual fee. 
Only.

Monday, July 1, 2013

OCBC Blue Chip Investment Plan (BCIP)


When I first heard about the OCBC Blue Chip Investment Plan, the first thing I did was to scroll down to the Fees & Charges section! Before you go down the same path as me, first you can check out what it is. It has a decent webpage and plenty of information.

Now, for the important part of OCBC Blue Chip Investment Plan :
Buying/Selling of shares - 0.30% or S$5 per counter, whichever is higher.

Touted as an "affordable and hassle-free way to invest in blue chip shares", I guessed they forgot to tell you the humongous percentage of your hard earned money that would go towards paying of fees.

If you are going to invest only $100 monthly, your fees would be 5.0%.
If you are going to invest only $200 monthly, your fees would be 2.5%.
Even if you invest $500 monthly, your fees would still be pretty hard to swallow at 1.0%.

To be fair, they have stated that the launch promotion that is luring you in is only temporary.
For a limited time only, you only have to pay a fee of 0.30% when you buy or sell through BCIP.

Assume that the limited time promotion is over, and the Nikko AM STI ETF is priced at $3 now. You invest $100 monthly through BCIP. In 3 months, you spend $300, and pay $15 in fees. ($5 monthly)

Now, assume that someone buys Nikko AM STI ETF differently through Standard Chartered. Save up $100 monthly for 3 months, and buy 1 lot of 100 units for $300. Fees? 60 cents at 0.2%. (of course, you'll still need to pay the SG Clearing Fee)

I guess I'll be sticking to Standard Chartered Bank for now. Let's just pray that the 0.2% fee remains unchanged, shall we?

Useful Tidbit for Today : 
A lot of people have asked whether STI ETF pays dividend, and the answer is YES!