maybe choose the more conservative portfolios, or wait till there is a correction.Keen to start.. 0.4% commission but require 10k min and the market is at/near peak does come with slightly more risk than DCA a small sum into portfolio every month..
maybe choose the more conservative portfolios, or wait till there is a correction.
Keen to start.. 0.4% commission but require 10k min and the market is at/near peak does come with slightly more risk than DCA a small sum into portfolio every month..
Why not just move OA to SA for risk free 4%?
If you need OA funds as OA for housing -- if you don't have enough accumulated wealth elsewhere to make a down payment, in particular -- then you most probably shouldn't be investing those funds in volatile assets either. A 2.5%/year yield on "3 year money" (for example) is a very reasonable yield.SA cannot touch.. dunno when nid to BTO..
Wow someone posted a very detailed post on endowus onboarding
https://az-ra-el.blogspot.com/2019/11/investing-my-cpf-oa-with-endowus.html

The order of things should be like this:
1. Do your budgeting and ascertain:
a) whats your housing cash outflow projection
b) level of CPF OA inflow from salary and bonuses
2. Check out what is in your current CPF OA balance
3. based on 1 and 2, decide on whether to invest your CPF money into SA or through CPFIS.
Now that Endowus is available, I feel like I have a viable diversified equity investment option using CPF OA. I am not interested in the 4% returns purely because the returns are
a) NOT GUARANTEED
b) long term wise, lower than equity returns, even net of fees
c) my money is going to be locked up 25 years or more anyway.
And its not that I will withdraw CPF OA funds to cash immediately lump sum at 55. The option to convert it to cash and holding it at a slightly more attractive rate (2.5% for now) is valuable. We have a very very long run way with CPF OA investing and for me there is a very strong inclination to maximise returns WITH PROPER BUDGETING.
I am those that take out OA to invest, 4% PA is very unattractive to me since I can afford to invest for decades ahead. Endowus is quite interesting for me since it can give me lower fees than 0% sale charges platforms.
Let me know if you need a referral link![]()
If you need OA funds as OA for housing -- if you don't have enough accumulated wealth elsewhere to make a down payment, in particular -- then you most probably shouldn't be investing those funds in volatile assets either. A 2.5%/year yield on "3 year money" (for example) is a very reasonable yield.
In my view the CPF Investment Scheme (OA) is really only merited after your Special Account has hit the Full Retirement Sum (and OA to SA transfer opportunities are exhausted), after you've done whatever you've done with a housing down payment if you need OA dollars as OA, and while you have OA dollars piling up with a sufficiently long time horizon until drawdown (retirement). Then, OK, go ahead and explore the CPF Investment Scheme.
i would think CPF is more like fixed deposit. Bonds can fluctuate.Actually wouldnt the CPF OA 2.5% be part of the more conservative portfolio?
Something I asked myself when I set up my CPF investment through endowus - is it better to have them manage the bonds part, or I sort of self-allocate that portion by allocating a certain amount of my CPF investable amount on a 100% equity portfolio and the remaining in CPF OA.
That might the other way around it!