Saturday, February 27, 2010

Living Simply

Came across this article of interest.  It builts on the knowledge of a simpler life.


Blessed day !
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Living Simply Part 3 (Ten Steps to Living Simply)

This three part series is lifted from thoughts in Richard Foster’s book Celebration of Discipline. (I would highly recommend it).
To wrap up this mini-series on living with a call to simplicity and contentment, I will give you Foster’s ten suggestions for living a simpler life. They are worth taking the time to think over and reflect on. Again, I would highly recommend his book to anyone interested at some practical ways to grow spiritually. It is a Christian classic.


1. “Buy things for their usefulness rather than their status.” Clothes are a perfect example. Do you really need more clothes, or are you simply trying to stay in style?

2. “Reject anything that is producing an addiction in you…simplicity is freedom, not slavery.” We instantly write this one off, but Foster goes on to include things like TV, magazines, etc.

3. “Develop a habit of giving things away…De-accumulate! Masses of tings that are not needed complicate life.” Worth taking a walk through the house and garage and take stock of how much stuff you have that you never use.

4. “Refuse to be propagandized by the custodians of modern gadgetry.” Keeping up with the latest and greatest forces you to pay premium prices for all purchases (and often incurs the headaches of companies working the “glitches” out of their products).

5. “Learn to enjoy things without owning them. Owning things is an obsession in our culture…Enjoy the beach without feeling you have to buy a piece of it.” It’s true what they say, the best things in life are free.

6. “Develop a deeper appreciation for the creation.” This one definitely connects to number 5.

7. “Look with a healthy skepticism at all ‘buy now, pay later’ schemes…certainly prudence, as well as simplicity, demands that we use extreme caution before incurring debt.” Well said.

8. “Obey Jesus’ instructions about plain, honest speech…Make honesty and integrity the distinquishing characteristics of your speech.” An interesting slant to call our words to simplicity.

9. “Reject anything that breeds the oppression of others.” Again, purity of heart and motive are called into question here.

10. “Shun anything that distracts you from seeking first the kingdom God.” Amen.

Other articles of interest :
Living Simply Part 2
Living Simply Part 1

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Sunday, February 21, 2010

Lessons from the Chinese New Year visit

This week we celebrated Chinese New Year and one of the key event is to visit our relatives.  Of the visits, we had the opportunity to meet both a rich relative and a 'former' rich relative.

The rich relative had a good landed property, nice continenal car and several other properties with good rental yield.  We had a good chat about cars, personal finance, generation of income.  This relative is humble and manages his money well.

The 'former' rich relative used to stay in a landed property, had a good car and holds several other business.  Unfortunately, we did have a opportunity to talk.

This visits caused my wife and me to discussed of money management and some of the key observation we made were :

1.  We should be good stewards of the money/gifts/talents entrusted to us.  We should strive to use them well to multiply.

2.  While it's good to have faith, we should also be wise in how we spend.  We may have them all now, it maybe taken away earlier than we wanted.  In any case, we won't be able to bring it along in death.


Blessed day and Happy Chinese New Year !

Related articles:

1. Managing money based on the oldest best selling manual
2. The Master and the steward

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Thursday, February 18, 2010

When to Replace your car.

Last weekend, our pastor talked about temptation and one of the temptations for me is to replace the car.  It's coming 5.5 years old and have covered 150 000 kms.  The kids are getting older, bigger and looking into getting a bigger car for touring as the current Accent is kind of a subcompact.  It does give good fuel economy (at 14 -15 km/l) and have been reliable so far considering it being Korean.  (Not that I am biased, this is my 2nd korean car but the typical mindset here is Japanese cars are more reliable.) 

In order to fight the temptation and say NO,  a list of reasons compiled so that we will be objective.  We will change a car when :

- Repair cost hits $1500 and more.  The dealer offered only $500 above the scrap value for the current Accent.
- When the car hit 7 years and 200 000 km.  High mileage may have higher repair/replacement cost.  Used to have a 16 year old bike and the maintenance is high. 
- Freed from car loan and saved the extra into a 'replacement car account' - done
- When a good condition replacement car that fits the requirement of FC, size for touring, manual gear box preferred and $2-4K above scrap value is found with no car loan.

Blessed day !



Related Topics:
1.  Freedom from car loan
2.  Fuel Consumption cost
3.  Why buy a Used car
4.  Is it possible to drive a free car in Singapore 
5.  When to replace your car (grs) 

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Wednesday, February 10, 2010

Keep it Simple

Interesting article on Sunday Times - Keep it Simple...

I like the article as it reminds of the principles and values that I am learning and applying since the start of this blog. 

Blessed day and Happy New Year !
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Keep it simple in the Golden Tiger Year


By Goh Eng Yeow



Past Tiger Years have marked milestones in my life and it is with anticipation - and some trepidation - that I await the arrival of the Golden Tiger Year next Sunday and what it might hold for me.

I started working in a Tiger Year - 1986 - just as Singapore was fighting off what was then its worst economic slowdown since it achieved independence 21 years before.

That calamitous experience shaped my working attitude for life. Jobs were scarce, and even graduates with good grades were competing for jobs which paid them less than $1,000 a month.

The uncertainties encapsulated for me early on the importance of setting aside some savings every month for the proverbial rainy day.

Around this time, I was introduced to the joys of investing, quite by chance, when I bought 1,000 Singapore Bus Services shares in order to qualify for the concessionary bus passes which the transport company had offered its shareholders.

I have kept the investment until now and it has multiplied due to stock splits and bonus issues over the years to 16,040 ComfortDelGro shares, as the company is now called, and 1,200 SBS Transit shares.

This part about Comfort reminds me of the ST Eng shares that I used to have and then sold it.  My father still have them and they also 'multipled'.

The next Tiger Year - 1998 - coincided with the Asian financial crisis which bankrupted businesses across Asia as they struggled to cope with the plummeting Thai baht and Indonesian rupiah.

Ordinary investors like myself found it agonising to watch our painfully accumulated nest eggs dwindle to a fraction of their original value as blue chips were lashed by the crisis hitting the region.

At that time, I had in my possession some shares in the now defunct Overseas Union Bank (OUB), which I had bought a decade earlier. As OUB's price plunged and the value of my investment fell by half, it badly shook my belief about buying blue chips to keep as long-term investments.

Fortunately, there was a happy twist to the story. Investors who kept faith with OUB during those dark days were compensated handsomely when United Overseas Bank (UOB) bought the bank for $10 billion three years later.

As I await the arrival of yet another Tiger Year, I find myself taking stock of the hits and misses in my investment portfolio, as the market succumbs to fresh turmoil due to fears that some European countries may default on their debts.

'Buy and hold' has always been my approach and it has worked well despite the three major financial upheavals in the past 15 years - the Asian banking crisis in 1998, the dot.com bust in 2000 and the United States sub-prime crisis in 2007.

Squirrelling away money into high-dividend-paying counters such as Hong Leong Finance and Cerebos Pacific has reaped huge rewards. For a few investments, I have more than recouped my initial capital outlay from the accumulated dividend payouts over the years.

As a conservative investor, I find that it pays to stick to a few simple objectives like realistic investment expectations and a reasonable timeframe to give the investment time to work out.


Buy 'quality' stocks


If you buy quality companies, you would not be tempted to sell when the market suddenly dips and the airwaves are filled with tales of gloom and doom - like during the recent global financial crisis.

Take our well-run local banks. It was business as usual for them in the past two years, even as banks elsewhere were under pressure from the global credit crunch.

And rather than collect their dividends in cash, shareholders of OCBC stood solidly behind the bank and gave it a big vote of confidence by taking up the payout in shares instead since being given the option last year.

It turns on its head the argument that cash is king during troubled times



Trust the explosive power of compounding


Investors have often been sold the idea of how compounding the returns on their investments could help them to build their wealth faster. Set aside $3,000 a month and earn a 10 per cent return a year and it will grow to $1 million in 40 years.

In practice, this idea is sometimes difficult to implement, but there are ways to go about doing it in the stock market.

For decades, banking giant HSBC Holdings has offered investors the option to collect dividends in shares, rather than cash - and many of them have ridden on the coat-tails of the bank to riches, doing so as it expands its global reach.

A few firms have upped the ante and refined HSBC's winning formula. In its past two dividend payouts, OCBC gave shareholders the choice to convert the dividends into shares at a 10 per cent discount from the market price.



Set aside at least 10 per cent of income as savings


Being frugal is the cornerstone to wealth-building. The rationale is simple: nothing saved equals nothing invested equals nothing for retirement.

One trait among successful businessmen is their thriftiness - with many of them living well below their means.

Some will argue, however, that there are few incentives to save, with banks paying a paltry 0.125 per cent interest on savings.

But keeping money in the bank is not necessarily the only option for savers. You can park your cash in the form of preference stocks issued by UOB and OCBC, which work like bonds and offer a dividend payout of about 5 per cent.

In a nutshell, I will keep my investment strategy simple, pick up bargains for the long term and enjoy doing what I love: Grabbing a beer - a Tiger - as I reunite with old friends in the coming Chinese New Year week.

Remember there are far more important things in life - loved ones, family, hobbies, movies, sports. Gong xi fa cai.

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Related articles:

1.  Compound Interest
2.  Managing money based on the oldest best selling manual
3.  The Master and the steward
4.  Diversification and statistics

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Saturday, February 6, 2010

Is Retirement Biblical?

Came across an interesting article 'Is Retirement Biblical?'

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Should Christians pursue retirement as one of their major goals - or in doing so, are they pursuing something that is in complete contrast to what God has purposed for them?


I think this is a good question to ask, and one that I’ve often wrestled with.

As Americans, we generally want to work for 30 to 40 years, retire with a nice nest egg and spend the rest of our time doing things we really want to do, when we want to do them.

Retirement has become the quintessential American Dream.

But is this something that a Christian should pursue – and does the Bible have anything to say about it?

Retirement in the Bible

After a quick search for the word “retire” in a few different versions of the Bible – I noticed there weren’t many references to view.

Of those that were listed, all but one had to do with either retiring to bed (going to sleep) or retiring from battle (retreating or pulling back).

Numbers 8:23-26 was a passage that mentions retirement in terms of withdrawing from labor. Here’s the passage:

23 And the Lord spoke to Moses, saying, 24 “This applies to the Levites: from twenty-five years old and upward they shall come to do duty in the service of the tent of meeting. 25 And from the age of fifty years they shall withdraw from the duty of the service and serve no more. 26 They minister to their brothers in the tent of meeting by keeping guard, but they shall do no service. Thus shall you do to the Levites in assigning their duties.”


One of the responsibilities of the Levites was to transport and guard the tabernacle.

So basically what’s going on here is that the Levites who were over age 50 were able to “retire” from carrying the tabernacle, but still served in guarding it.

As far as I know there is no other mention of retirement in the Bible – but does that mean we should throw out the notion of retirement just because it’s not in there?


Rest in the Bible

God’s word has a lot to say about the idea of rest.

On the seventh day of creation, God rested from all His labor. God instituted a day of rest in the 10 commandments, and we see Jesus resting and withdrawing from His work often to get refreshed.

But is this rest the same as retirement? It doesn’t seem like it. The Bible typically refers to rest as a temporary rest to get re-energized to go back to work.

So once again, the Bible seems pretty silent on the issue of retirement. I got to thinking about what a conversation about retirement would sound like between the Apostle Paul and Peter. Maybe something like this:

Paul: “I’ve been making tents for the last 30 years – my back is just killin’ me – I gotta get out of this business.”

Peter: “Your back is killing you? Try pulling a giant net of fish into a boat every day! My dad had me helping him since I was 12 years old – 50 years of catching fish has caught up to me for sure.”

Paul: “Yeah, I wouldn’t mind taking my pension early and getting a nice little place on the Mediterranean.”

Peter: “I hear ya, Jerusalem for the summer and Greece for the winter would be the life!”

There’s no evidence a conversation like that ever took place. In fact, I would be willing to guess that retirement to a guy like the Apostle Paul was something that never crossed his mind.

He never wanted to be a burden to people so as to create any barriers to sharing the gospel.

Read the rest here......


Blessed day !

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Monday, February 1, 2010

Thoughts for the Year

The greatest handicap : Fear
The best day : Today
Easiest thing to do : Find a fault
Most useless asset : Pride
The greatest mistake : Giving up
Most disagreeable person : The complainer
Worst bankruptcy : Loss of enthusiasm
Greatest need : Common sense
Meanest feeling : Regret at another's success
Best gift : Forgiveness
The greatest moment : Death
Greatest knowledge : God
The greatest thing in the world : Love

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