T-bill yield dives to 2.5% as demand bounces
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What happened? The days of being able to enjoy a high yield for Singapore
T-bills appear to be over. The cut off yield for the 6-month Singapore
T-bill ...
9 hours ago
Even with a single household income with five mouths to feed; it is all about prudent family expenses budgeting and spending XX% of LAST YEAR's net bonus (after deducting income taxes) and adjusting for this year and next year economic outlooks and forecast.
ReplyDeleteDon't ever get caught by liquidity needs and get squeeze so tight that we have to cut losses to lock in negative return. That is terrible!
Sometimes I think that uncle is lucky for singaporean expansion of immigratory plans and capital expenditure in the early noughties.
ReplyDelete