Wednesday 10 August 2016

NEW Singapore Stocks Charting Tool

I have always used ChartNexus as my go to charting application. It is fairly simple to use and hey, it's free after all so not much complains here.




Recently, a new charting tool for Singapore stocks has been brought to my attention and I am here to share it with you today.

The website is by InvestingNote and you can click here to view the charts. It is based on TradingView’s charting software and it has an array of technical indicators that you can apply for your own strategy. TradingView’s original software does not contain SGX stocks but InvestingNote has managed to solve that problem.

It is completely free; you can even make an account to save the charts as well as view other trade ideas that others might have. Currently, you can only view the daily, weekly and monthly chart. Intraday charts are still unavailable.

Feel free to share if you have other charting tools that you’d like to share.

Cheers.

Thursday 4 August 2016

Why You Should Start Saving Now

Nowadays, the youths don't see the importance of saving early. And I guess, it's hard to see it because society moves so fast. It's hard to take a step back and do something to reap the long-term benefits.

I am going to try to help you understand how saving early can have a pretty big impact on your financial health down the road with a simple example.

Imagine that there are 3 person, Mary, John and Tom. I know, I have no creativity, but bear with me.

They are all 25 years old. They all save $1000 a year and they all currently have $10,000 in their bank account. Let's assume that the interest earned from their respective banks are the same at 0.50%

Mary spends all her annual savings buying her favourite bags. Givenchy, Balenciaga, you name it, she buys it. (Okay, I know $1000 can't really get you those bags but assume she gets it on carousell or something.) She only realises that she better start saving after year 20 years, when she's 45 years old.

John is the kind of guy that doesn't spend on much now, he wants to save up for a big purchase in the future. Perhaps a nice watch, a down payment for a car or a great holiday getaway. He saves every year till he is 45 and starts spending all of them.

Tom on the other hand is a no nonsense guy, he saves every year without fail. He plans to retire comfortably and knows the importance of compounding. The goal is to be like Tom.

I have done up a simple excel spread sheet to help you visualise the effect of these 3 different saving pattern.

You can see that at the end of 40 years, Mary has the lowest amount of money. Even though she saves the same amount of money as John. The only difference is that she spends first then saves later, while john saves first then spends later.

Due to this tiny difference, John has about 7% more savings than Mary.

Tom's saving pattern is basically the combination of Mary's and John's. He saves for the first 20 and the next 20 years combined.

Tom has a whopping 70% more savings than Mary and 59% more than John.

And this is only at 0.5% interest rate. When the interest rates start going up, the difference between the savings amount will be amplified.


You can see a chart below to better help you see how their savings move with time.










I have attached the excel spreadsheet for you to experiment with it.

You can download the excel spreadsheet here

Feel free to change the:
  • Initial Capital
  • Interest Rates
  • Individual Amount Saved
  • Their names if you don't like them

Till next time,

Cheers.