Sunday, 5 April 2015

Past Bear Attacks (Part 2)

Actually I have intended that this Part 2 follows Part 1 immediately.  But it was delayed due to the national mourning for the passing of our founding father Lee Kuan Yew.  I felt that it would be disrespectful if I talked about bear at that point in time.  

Now, to carry on from Part 1:

3. 2003 - SARS
The defeated bear of 2001 returned with vengeance just two years later and this time it was not only financial threatening, but also life threatening. This was the SARS bear, rumoured to be from China.

Market/Economy:
The economy was scary this time.  Orchard Road was a dead city.  Everyone stayed at home. Good only for family bonding.

At the office, everyone was issued a thermometer and the department managers were to report employee temperatures to HR on a daily basis.  All visitors had temperatures taken at the guardhouse before allowed to enter the company compound.

Lesson learnt:
No retrenchment this time, but pay increment was frozen.
This was also a turning point for me.  I realised that I cannot be "Moonlight tribe" (月光族) any more and started saving and also brought into some unit trusts.

4. 2008 - Lehman Brothers
This time the bear escaped from Uncle Sam's private zoo.  I was on an overseas project at that time.  About half year back, I had sold my UTs and have invested into some stocks.  Everyday I watched depressing news from CNN/CNA at the hotel cafe over breakfast.

Market/Economy:
When I returned to Singapore after the project, Uncle Sam's problem has escalated and became the Global Financial Crisis.  I was asked to submit names to the management.  Yes, that was another cost cutting exercise aka retrenchment.

After meeting with my team individually, first I had proposed for pay-cut for our whole group to save the jobs, but was rejected by management.  Then, I had submitted the names for the "soon-to-retire", which would mean "golden handshake" for them.  This was also rejected as management wanted those who are in the 40-50 bracket, which cost less in retrenchment payouts but also cost effective in the cost cutting exercise.  So, more or less the management picked who they wanted rather than me choosing.

However, less than half a year after the retrenchment exercise, our company got a big project and went on recruitment overdrive.  Can't imagine the quantities of application letters that were received.  Working at Jurong? No problem! Need to work three rotating shifts? No problem!  Peoples just wanted to grab whatever job they could.

Lesson Learnt:
It was indeed very sad that I had to see several of my colleagues left.  It was also very depressing to learn that some people could not afford to lose their job even near retirement age, as there is still the matter of housing loan to service.

This time I have my warchest. But I did not deploy all at one go and perhaps unfortunately, I just happened to catch the trough.  And I did not chase after the retreating bear.  So, in this round of bear hunt, I got the cub rather than the bear.

5. ??? - The Next Bear
Judging by the time frequencies of previous bear attacks, we are certainly overdued for the next bear.

Now, I have a warchest and I would like to think that I am more prepared this time.  However, now I also belong to the high risk group that the retrenchment axe might strike.

Although I have no more housing loan to worry about, but I have not reach the Kingdom of Financial Freedom yet.  

Therefore, how best to deploy the warchest will still need careful consideration... 

Wednesday, 1 April 2015

My Stock Portfolio @ end Mar 2015

No. Stock Name Shares Portfolio% Avg Cost$ Breakeven$ Market$
1
SGX
4,000
18.25
4.95
3.71
8.14
2
Starhub
6,000
14.63
3.36
2.85
4.35
3
SPH
5,000
11.74
3.99
3.25
4.19
4
SingTel
2,190
5.38
3.37
3.03
4.38
5
SATS
3,000
5.18
3.02
2.95
3.08
6
CapitaMall Trust
4,000
4.93
1.76
1.26
2.20
7
AIMS AMPI Reit
5,000
4.18
1.47
1.33
1.49
8
Suntec Reit
4,000
4.16
1.58
1.22
1.855
9
Keppel Corp
800
4.04
8.44
8.52
9.00
10
CapitaLand
2,000
4.01
3.91
3.61
3.58
11
Starhill Global
8,000
3.74
0.74
0.57
0.835
12
SPH Reit
5,800
3.38
1.01
1.00
1.04
13
CDL HTrust
3,000
2.95
1.66
1.00
1.755
14
Sembcorp Ind
1,000
2.37
4.06
4.12
4.22
15
Frasers CT
2,000
2.26
1.81
1.70
2.02
16
SIA Engg
1,000
2.25
4.86
4.68
4.01
17
HPH Trust
3,000
1.60
0.90
0.70
0.695
18
CitySpring
5,000
1.51
0.60
0.47
0.54
19
OCBC
200
1.19
10.39
10.60
10.57
20
Boustead
1,000
0.95
1.44
1.36
1.70
21
Frasers Com Tr
1,000
0.84
1.46
1.49
1.50
22
FE HTrust
1,000
0.45
0.93
0.83
0.80
Movement in my portfolio in Mar:-
Sold:- Nil
Bought:- Keppel Corp, SPH Reit.

Dividends collected in Mar: $273.94
2015 avg dividends/month: $423.18 [32.5% up at this stage cf. 2014]

Boring process of building up my passive income portfolio brick-by-brick (bit-by-bit).