minamikaze
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You're working, so you're getting fresh OA funds every month, presumably. That's part of your savings flow, and that part is earning 2.5%.
Yes, but neither my company nor I am contributing to CPF. I'm getting the CPF as cash from my company, as part of the agreement. So zero CPF contribution at the moment.
You can directly deposit funds into your OA: up to the $78K you've used so far, plus accrued interest. Use CPF Form HSD/VR if you'd like to make that deposit. If you have cash lying about earning less than 2.5% that you'd like to earmark for "mortgage defense," that'll work just fine, even better than fine.
The weird thing about this is that I think you can repeat this maneuver as many times as you want. (Somebody please check me on that.) That is, you can repay OA using Form HSD/VR with a check, eventually use those OA funds to pay down your mortgage faster (only when that makes financial sense), then use Form HSD/VR again to deposit funds (until the other mortgage interest rate rises), loop repeat. (Anybody see any problem with that?) The only "gotcha" I can think of is that this interest is earned only on whole calendar months. So you need some decent run at keeping OA funds in OA if you want to avoid too significant interest loss. This also means that deposits should be toward the end of the month (but not at the last moment since you want the deposit to be credited within the calendar month), and withdrawals should be at the beginning of the calendar month.
Now this is interesting. It may make sense for me to contribute that $78K to my CPF OA, then - and once the 1st home loan rate increases to more than 2.5%, then I can repay my mortgage from the CPF.
Yes.
Where's the insurance? And is the maintenance enough reserve toward periodic renovation?
You should also factor in some periodic vacancy loss since tenants come and go, and there isn't a 5 minute gap between them.
Hm, I believe home insurance is covered as part of the home loan package (don't recall being asked to pay it, ever). Anyway, I do not believe it is significant even if its separate - maybe a few hundred per year, tops.
But fair enough, sometimes there may be a gap between tenants, although we've been fortunate enough so far. Maybe we're looking at a conservative estimate of $4k net then...? We haven't owned the homes long enough to encounter any big ticket costs, so far.
Nope. SSBs are month to month. SSBs are subject to possible oversubscription, so it may take more than a month if you want to place substantial funds. And the current holding limit is $100K per person ($200K for you as a couple), although that's soon to double. But that's a very attainable and highly liquid rate, and it's a freakin' government bond -- ultra safe.
Ah, I see. So if I purchase $100K of SSBs, I will get 1.98% ($1980/12 = $165) from the very first month. Correct?
Not sure if it's worth 0.7% gain (vs 2.3% mortgage interest) for that "bit" of capital risk...?Bond funds don't. Although there is a bit of capital risk (since fund share prices will vary based on market interest rates), MBH should yield around 3%.
Back to ultra conservative approaches for a moment, a fixed deposit ladder can work quite well, with maturities staggered at 2 month or quarterly intervals, for example. SBI is currently offering 1.95% on 12 month fixed deposits, and that handily beats your 1.8% mortgage rate at the moment. Singapore government t-bills are running at roughly 2% right now, and they're auctioned quarterly so also easy to ladder. There's a t-bill auction this month, as a matter of fact.
There are some attractive "rewards" accounts from BOC, OCBC, DBS, and UOB (as examples) where if you do X, Y, and Z then you get higher bonus interest on the first $X. It's rather easy to get 2.08% on the first $50,000 in a DBS Multiplier Account, for example.
If you park $70,000 (or up to $150,000) in a Citibank MaxiGain Savings Account, then you'll start out at about 1.23% interest right now but within one year end up at about 2.43%. (The rate is partially one month SIBOR pegged, so it bounces around a little bit. But so does your mortgage, so this fits.) You're allowed to withdraw the interest every month, but if you withdraw the principal then the step-up interest is knocked down. Still, on balance, this should beat your 1.8% interest rate mortgage rather well.
Yeah, I've already maxed out the counters and limit on both mine and my wife's Maxigain accounts. It's hard for me to enjoy the other bank "rewards" accounts as I do not have salary crediting.
At this point, perhaps let me give a complete picture/summary to see if it helps anyone's assessment:
Home loan 1 outstanding: $530K, able to pay off half right now, without penalty. Lock-in ends Oct 2019. 2.3% interest.
Home loan 2 outstanding: $460K, lock-in ends Jan 2021. 1.8% interest.
Liquid cash available: US$210K, S$200K (in Maxigain accounts), 1Y FD (matures in about 7 months)
CPF OA: $50K roughly
Been contributing $7K per year to SA.
Yearly gross income - $320K (+/- $20K)
No CPF contribution from my side (but wife contributes CPF)
We are good savers, saving easily 65% of our gross income (expenses include daily expenses, mortgage payments, parent allowance, travel expenses, "fun" expenses etc), but yet leading what we feel is a very comfortable lifestyle.
My current mindset: Want to pay off home loans fast for "peace of mind", then we can afford to get more aggressive after that - may not retire yet as we love our jobs, but we can take more overseas trips per year.
Of course, if there is a way for us to *not* worry about that home loan hanging over our heads (in spite of rising interest rates), and yet accelerate our wealth building, that would be ideal.
Given the volatile world economic situation I'm being a little more prudent than usual (I've liquidated my stocks for now to take a breather and think - took minor losses recently but nothing too damaging). Thinking about how close we are to paying off the home loan if we were to focus our efforts there, I just wonder why not get it over with in a span of 1-2 years, then think about investing more aggressively after that.
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