As I said in my other blog posts today, the only safe way to be rich is to buy insurance early and take advantage of the compounding interests effect. Later on at about 12:45pm, an insurance agent will be coming to my house to collect the cheque for the group company insurance for 11 people and perhaps they might want to introduce life insurance policy to me. But I cannot be to hasty to part with my money just like that as it involves months and even years of payment before you can reap the profits. Another insurance agent from Public Bank with a joint venture with ING insurance company (a Dutch company) will be coming at 2:00pm and show me the projected income at various ages. Then only I can compare and make my decision.
Archive for the Category ◊ Finance ◊
In a short while, I am going upstairs to read the November issue of Personal Money Magazine that was bought from MPH in Gurney Plaza. I have read about 70% of the magazine already and the remaining 30% is yet to be read. The new December issue will be on sale soon at now is almost the end of November. So, after finishing blogging the necessary posts, I am going to read newspapers and the Personal Money magazine for some financial knowledge. This is one of the best investment ever as I can make better financial decisions concerning my savings, and Fixed Deposits plus EPF.
These few days, I have experimented with a few wordpress themes and the conversion rate for my earnings on the advertisements. I noticed that those themes with lots of links tend to confuse the visitors and they don’t bother to read the ads but jump in straight away to reading the post. I have more than 5 wordpress themes installed on my server and change them according to season like during Christmas or Chinese New Year. I have to keep experimenting with the themes for the best click through rate to maintain the various blogs. That’s the motivation to continue writing and blogging on a consistent basis.
I am a firm believer in purchasing healthcare insurance to protect my finances in case of hospitalization or surgery. The medical insurance company will foot the bill for your medical expenses. There are various discount medical insurance policies for you to check and compare prices to suit your budget. The younger you buy your medical insurance, the lower health premiums will be available for you. It depends on your age and whether you are a smoker or non-smoker.
Since non-smokers have lower health risks, therefore the medical insurance premiums will naturally be lower as well. As for myself, I am a beneficiary of a lump sum insurance payout because of my health condition from Great Eastern for my Singapore CPF account. It was a blessing in disguise that I took up the optional insurance premium and it was deducted a little from my CPF (Central Provident Fund) account. In Singapore, CPF is like EPF (Employees Provident Fund) in Malaysia where there is forced savings into your account from your salary deductions.
I would certainly encourage my friends to purchase at least an insurance policy to protect their finances from depleting too soon in case of the discovery of dreaded disease or critical illness. You can never foresee what is going to happen in the near future and it is better to be safe than sorry. Buying insurance is a win-win situation and you need to study the policy carefully to know what illness can be claimed and what cannot.
I am a firm believer in investing in insurance for financial protection in case of accidents or mishaps that are unforseen. When such an accident take place, then the insurance company will foot the hospital bill so that you don’t have to worry about payment. When you take up a Real life cover, you will be insured against critical and dreaded disease and accidents in the course of work. However, some insurance companies require you to pay first the medical bills where you can make claims from the company later on. For instance, my second sister went for her foot surgery in Island Hospital to sew up a torn tendon. She paid in full first using her credit card and her insurance company later on reimburse her the full amount of the hospitalization and surgery costs.
When my granny passed away in 2007, we have to pay for her funeral expenses since there is not such policy for funeral cover insurance in Malaysia yet. In other countries, the types of insurance are more comprehensive such as unemployment insurance! Imagine getting paid for unemployment due to many reasons. You can also find income insurance in Australia and other parts of the world like USA. Sometimes, I wish I am staying in such countries where the welfare and benefits of the citizens are very well taken care of.
There is still so much uncertainty in USA with 10% of jobless rate. Recession still has not really recovered and there might be a double dip. Hence, it is time to invest in gold bullion instead of foreign currencies that fluctuate like a swinging pendulum. In Malaysia, the effects in USA is not so much felt as economies are still doing rather well in China which offsets the consequences. In twenty years time, China might overtake USA as the world’s biggest economy with its huge population of over 1 billion. Hence, investing in gold is a smart financial move. As for me, I have invested 40gm of gold in Public Bank Gold Investment Account or simply known as GIA. So, do you invest in gold?
The ringgit’s strength and generally lower property valuations in the UK are drawing more Malaysian investors, both retail and institutional, to London and the latest to make the move is the Employees Provident Fund (EPF).
The pension fund has allocated a war chest of £1bil (RM4.88bil) to invest in properties in the UK and has appointed ING Real Estate Investment and Deutsche Bank’s property investment arm RREEF to manage the investment. They will each invest £500mil in European property markets, focusing on the UK.
In a statement on Monday, the EPF said the investments would be for long term with expected annual yields of 6% to 7%.
Property consultants lauded the fund’s move as being prudent and far-sighted as the diversification of its property investment portfolio would ensure a more balanced portfolio and spread the risks to more developed markets outside Malaysia.
Henry Butcher Malaysia president Lim Eng Chong said London was a very active international real estate market where income asset class was a major sector of the financial market. London is also the financial capital of Europe and it is the de-facto choice capital in the EU for foreign companies.
“It is a very opportune time to invest in the UK property market now. The ringgit is at record high against the pound sterling while the historic low interest rates in the UK (interbank rate is only 0.5%) make yields attractive,” Lim pointed out.
He said commercial properties with strong convenants for at least seven years offered potential for upsides upon market recovery and there were deals which were bankable to capitalise on the low interest rates now.
Malaysia Property Inc chief executive officer Kumar Tharmalingam, who was in London when contacted, said the EPF was a well-regarded pension fund internationally with a reputation for prudent investments.
“London is no more a rock-bottom country but you have to have a permanent presence here to take advantage of investment opportunities. Using the old-boy network in the city of London that the EPF is doing is the right strategy. It has appointed probably the best property advisers and managers in Europe and I believe they will guide the fund to the right quality investments,” he said in an e-mail response.
Kumar said as the EPF had to guarantee a dividend on all contributions, “it will be looking to buy completed assets which have been tenanted and have a structured and forecast return that is tangible.”
He said at the height of the downturn in early 2009, yields of London assets went up as high as 8% but they had since gone back to their normal base of 5%.
“But with the pound sterling and the euro at historical lows since the mid-90s, this may be a good time to buy well-positioned assets where there is an opportunity for rent values and currency appreciation in the medium term,” Kumar said.
It has attracted many institutional funds, including South Korea’s National Pension Fund which purchased a building in Canary Wharf and also took a stake in Gatwick Airport in February.
This blog has reasonably good traffic and if you like to advertise here, the prices are below:
Just a link – USD8 per month
125 x 125 button – USD10 per month
200 x 200 small square – USD12 per month
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Since I am also a web designer, I am able to design the static button/small square/square banner for you if you don’t have any for free if you intend to advertise here. To contact me, email Diana.Tan(AT)gmail.com for more information and I shall be happy to oblige you.
This blog is updated at least once a week on most Sundays. With submission to Innit, traffic will improve further. If you have any suggestions, feel free to email me and we can discuss further.
At the moment, I have about 2 life insurance policies from Prudential and from Maybank. There is a third one from Air Asia and they contacted me via my handphone to buy the life insurance policy from them at RM24 per month. This is automatically deducted from my Citibank credit card – so I don’t have to worry about forgetting to pay or late payment. I am paying less than RM300 for the 3 insurance policies and they are quite affordable.
It is better to get insured so that in case of permanent disability or accident, all the hospital and medical bills are paid by the insurance companies – thus protecting my finances from depleting too soon. You never know when you will get the critical illness like diabetes, stroke, heart attack, etc. When you are striken withh any of the illness, you can no longer work and there will be no income any more. This is where the insurance company will pay you a lump sum for your financial needs to cover your unemployment. Hence, I fully supply being insured for the whole of my life for a stress free living so that I don’t have to worry about medical expenses any more.
I have seen my friends getting a lump sum payment from her insurance company for disability that renders her unemployed for the rest of her life. So, this is a win-win situation where you get yourself insured and the company will take care of the rest should you be warded in the hospital, go for surgery or get any of the dreaded disease.
I have had some measure of success making money online and it was very good. I offer virtual assistance, write articles, design web sites, earn from paid blogging and various advertisements on my several blogs. I am also reading books on the stocks and how to make money from it. Though I have never traded any real time online stocks, it was nevertheless enlightening to know that 10% of traders are actually making money. For others, they may resort to playing casino games with the two new casinos being recently opened in Singapore. If you have lady luck, then by all means you can turn to casino games to make money. And I count my blessings each day to earn bit by bit from time to time at my home office.
Yesterday, my first ever Nuffnang cheque arrive in the letter box and I promptly banked it in my account at Public Bank. The amount was for RM50.82 and after deducting RM1 for the charges, it came to RM49.82. Nevertheless it is still money from blog advertisements. I am elated that though the amount is not that much compared to other bloggers, to me, something coming in is better than nothing at all. Just click on the image above to enlarge the picture for a clearer view! Thank you, Nuffnang! Your programme certainly rocks and that is why so many bloggers are turning to Nuffnang compared to Adverlets. This is proof that Nuffnang definitely pays its fellow bloggers
I am thinking of investing in shares but with a full time job, I just don’t have the time to keep track of the share market movements or check out blogs and news daily on events that might affect the prices. Professional stock investors analyse the volume spread, technical analysis, fundamental analysis, Elliot Wave, etc. To have a good peace of mind, I decided to buy government bonds and investing in gold by opening a Gold Investment Account (GIA) through Public Bank. I may earn less, but at least I don’t have the headache to keep track of the stock movements every moment of my life.
My wealthy uncle in Singapore also buy gold coins and give out to us during festive occasions like Chinese New Year. Now I have a small collection of gold jewellery and a gold coin – all collected since I was small. Gold is a good hedge against inflation which is about 4% per year. And for the last 10 years, the price of gold has been increasing steadily from only RM20 a gram in 1970s to over RM120 a gram now. So for those who have invested in gold, would have made a handsome profit now.
Yesterday, I bought a book entitled “Secrets of Millionaire Investors” by Adam Khoo and Conrad Alvin Lim at MPH. What is interesting about the book was that Conrad shared how he became bankrupt owing S$170,000 and turned around his fortune to make more than S$1.5 million by trading on the USA market. His desperation to get out of bankruptcy made him attend several seminars on trading and to read up as much as he could in 3 months before he started trading a minimum of USD$5,000 on the USA account. Adam on the other hand, makes a cool S$12k a month trading less than 10 times a month and is doing this on a part time basis. He runs more than 10 different businesses and is a self-made millionaire in Singapore at the young age of 26. I am in no hurry to start trading until I have enough knowledge gleaned from these trading gurus and checking out local news.
Malaysia’s top 40 richest are worth US$51 billion, up from US$36 billion a year ago, and higher than the previous record of US$46 billion registered in 2008. According to Forbes Asia in its Malaysia Rich List 2010 released today, their combined wealth has risen by 42 per cent, spurred by the country’s economic expansion.
The overall increase in wealth was also in line with the 32 per cent rise in the Kuala Lumpur Composite Index, and the Malaysian ringgit’s 11 per cent gain against the US dollar over the past 12 months, Forbes said. Topping the rich list again is Tan Sri Robert Kuok who has held the pole position since 2006 when Forbes Asia began ranking the 40 richest Malaysians.
Forbes said the biggest gainer in dollar terms this year, the 86-year-old tycoon’s net worth increased to US$12 billion, a gain of US$3 billion over last year. Top telecommunications tycoon Ananda Krishnan remains in second place with US$8.1 billion, an increase of US$1.1 billion from a year ago. His Maxis Communications, Malaysia’s largest mobile phone service provider, went public last year and raised US$3.4 billion in the country’s largest-ever IPO. Unchanged at third position is Tan Sri Lee Shin Cheng with US$4.6 billion, up from US$3.2 billion last year.
The 71-year-old heads IOI Group, one of the world’s leading operators of palm oil refineries. The company is reportedly investing US$300 million to expand. Forbes said the top three tycoons were not the only ones who saw gains in their wealth, 27 others on the list also registered growth in their net worths, particularly notable is technology tycoon Goh Peng Ooi, ranked No. 16, who enjoyed the biggest percentage jump. His fortune increased to US$425 million from US$112 million previously, a massive jump of 280 per cent.
Forbes said this year a minimum net worth of US$110 million was needed to qualify for the list, up from US$90 million last year. It said the number of billionaires had also increased, with now 10 tycoons with a ten-figure net worth, compared with nine a year ago. Newcomers making the rich list this year included brothers Datuk Shahril and Shahriman Shamsuddin who shared the No. 23rd spot with a net worth of US$270 million. They have equal stakes in Sapura Group, founded by their father. Shahril is chief executive of its affiliate SapuraCrest Petroleum, the listed oil and gas contractor that makes up the bulk of their fortune.
Another new face is self-made building contractor Datuk A. K. Nathan, 54, who is ranked No. 24 and worth US$250 million. His company, Eversendai, has been involved in some of the most high-profile buildings in the Middle East including Dubai’s Burj Khalifa, the world’s tallest building.
Forbes said three people were back on the list after having fallen off previously, and the most notable is Datuk Seri Nazir Razak, Malaysian Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Tun Razak’s brother and head of financial services firm CIMB. He is ranked No. 32nd with a net worth of US$145 million.
The top 10 richest and billionaires in Malaysia are:
1) Tan Sri Robert Kuok; US$12 billion
2) Tan Sri T. Ananda Krishnan; US$$8.1 billion
3) Tan Sri Lee Shin Cheng; US$4.6 billion
4) Puan Sri Lee Kim Hua; US$3.9 billion
5) Tan Sri Quek Leng Chan; US$3.85 billion
6) Tan Sri Teh Hong Piow; US$3.8 billion
7) Tan Sri Yeoh Tiong Lay; US$2.5 billion
Tan Sri Syed Mokhtar AlBukhary; US$1.7 billion
9) Tan Sri Vincent Tan; US$1.6 billion
10) Tan Sri Tiong Hiew King; US$1.2 billion

