Wednesday, March 12, 2014

Good advice from AK71

ASSI is a blog I follow faithfully. The owner is a unselfish, genuine, knowledgable guy who
shared his opinion on Insurance, Investing (mainly), etc Below is an extract from his blog
which I think should shared out more...

Graduating soon? Take steps towards financial security.
Wednesday, March 12, 2014
Received an email from a reader who is about to graduate and join the workforce:

Hi AK,
I am C and this is actually my first time writing to a blogger.
I've recently found your blog and you've been such an inspiration to me and my "future
financial life".

Would like to sincerely thank you for setting up this blog to benefit us youngsters in
Singapore. :)

I am about to graduate soon in a couple of months and I'm just wondering if you can provide
some advice to me...

Upon graduation and receiving my first pay check, would you recommend me to first set up my
emergency fund or invest in FDs or buy insurance or voluntarily top up my CPF or invest in
a SRS account or a combination of some?
There just seem to be many things I should do but I'm not sure which one I should focus on to
get my priority right. Thank you for your kind advice, AK.

Warmest regards
C

My reply:

Hi C,
I am not allowed to give advice but I am happy to share with you what I would do if I were in your shoes. :)

1. Buy a term policy. Very important if we have parents or other dependents to care for. 
    How much should the coverage be? It is up to you but I feel that $500K is probably 
    more than adequate for most.

2. Buy a good H&S policy. Personally, I have NTUC Incomeshield with Assist Rider. 
    We don't want to be sunk by hospital bills. How much you would spend here depends 
    on whether you are comfortable with Class C, B or A wards or if you want to stay in private  
    hospitals.


3. Buy a Critical Illness policy. We need this money to help pay for long term treatments if 
    we should be diagnosed with one of these illnesses and not die. I am covered for $300K 
    but, for a start, I think $100K should be comfortable.

4. Set up an emergency fund. Slowly build this up so that it is enough to cover at least 
    12 months of regular expenses (including insurance expenses). My preference is for 
    24 months. In case we lose our jobs or are unable to work for some reason, this is the 
    fund we would draw upon.

Once we have done all these, we can start thinking about investing for a second stream of income.
Of course, if we can pay less taxes, we should. In planning for retirement, you want to consider topping up your CPF-SA to a maximum of $7K a year. Of course, you could also start an SRS account.

The tools are out there to help us achieve financial security. You will do quite well if you make good use of them. :)

Best wishes,
AK

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