I started serious Investing Journey in Jan 2000 to create wealth through long-term investing and short-term trading; but as from April 2013 my Journey in Investing has changed to create Retirement Income for Life till 85 years old in 2041 for two persons over market cycles of Bull and Bear.

Since 2017 after retiring from full-time job as employee; I am moving towards Investing Nirvana - Freehold Investment Income for Life investing strategy where 100% of investment income from portfolio investment is cashed out to support household expenses i.e. not a single cent of re-investing!

It is 57% (2017 to Aug 2022) to the Land of Investing Nirvana - Freehold Income for Life!


Click to email CW8888 or Email ID : jacobng1@gmail.com



Welcome to Ministry of Wealth!

This blog is authored by an old multi-bagger blue chips stock picker uncle from HDB heartland!

"The market is not your mother. It consists of tough men and women who look for ways to take money away from you instead of pouring milk into your mouth." - Dr. Alexander Elder

"For the things we have to learn before we can do them, we learn by doing them." - Aristotle

It is here where I share with you how I did it! FREE Education in stock market wisdom.

Think Investing as Tug of War - Read more? Click and scroll down



Important Notice and Attention: If you are looking for such ideas; here is the wrong blog to visit.

Value Investing
Dividend/Income Investing
Technical Analysis and Charting
Stock Tips

Showing posts with label Education - Life - Money. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Education - Life - Money. Show all posts

Monday, 31 July 2017

Monthly Expenses Update For Jul 2017

To save more is to avoid travelling.

To spend more is to travel a bit more.



Sunday, 18 December 2016

No More Year End Bonus!!!


The truth is here! All good things will finally end!

No more year end bonus for Uncle8888. 

A new life journey without earned income, yearly bonus and income tax has finally begin its new year on 1 Jan 2017.

Read? Your year-end bonus is here!


But for me it is a different question - What to do with my last year bonus?

After experiencing my first pay-cut and zero bonus during 1997/1998 Asian financial crisis, and thereafter I have decided upon on this strategy - keeping the full current year-end bonus as reserve and spending last year bonus till the next bonus. In this way, I may not under-spend my money and to avoid spending away future money and I will be in better position to face the next  pay-cut and zero bonus scenarios if it happens.

Firstly, part of last year-end bonus is reserved to pay income tax. LOL!


Sunday, 27 September 2015

Our money cannot vanish!!!


Our money cannot vanish!

It is either we spend them willingly on ourselves and our beloved or one day, when strangers become close friends to help us to spend our money without us feeling any pain!

Beyond certain age when we can still count our money; we should stop to be frugal?

What do you think?

Another case ....




Saturday, 1 August 2015

The Fact: Married With Kids. Family Expenses Will Be Much Higher. Don't Tell Me You Rather Let Strangers One Day Become Close Friends And Spend Your Money For You???


The upside being married with children; after they became financial independent; we begin to feel richer when we look at our recent family expenses!

Wah! Now got meaningful saving hor!


 









The Moral Of Story ....

Our financial burden and stress for being married with children is NOT forever till our death. It is limited to some 20+ year of financial suffering. 

Not that gloomy after all.  When it is over; we feel that time has passed by so quickly and wonder how come we can manage to get over it.






Thursday, 26 February 2015

No Kids? Better to be nice to your nephews or nieces!!!


 Another case that was exposed by their nieces!

Read? Cleaner, 70, conned into handing over salary for 15 years


No Kids? 

Better to be nice to your nephews or nieces!!!


One day, many of us will become dementia. How can we stop those evil eyes on our money?

Get it?


Sunday, 16 November 2014

Working Part Time During School Days???



Uncle8888 started working part-time as stall helper at wet market stall selling eggs when he was in Primary 6 and continued to take up various part-time or odd tasks when became available till JC (Now we call it). 

During his school holidays, he worked at "full time" hours at whatever part-time or odd  tasks that came along.


He worked for needs!

Do you think he enjoyed every bits of these part time works?


All of his three children also worked "PAST-time" during their O and A Level school holidays but not for money. They were quite happy and proud of their school holidays jobs.


See the difference!




Friday, 21 January 2011

Latent Functions of Work

By Adrian Furnham

Professor of Psychology

Read? Keynes on the Rational Savers

After saving so much money and  having so much money and can't even finish spending it, why do some people still want to work?

Work is a source of activity


It keeps people occupied, interested and active

Work structures time

It gives daily life reference points; regularities

Work gives an opportunity for social interaction

It gives one a friendship and social support network

Work provides a source of identity

It gives people a sense of your status in society and values

Work provides a source of creativity and mastery

It provides the feeling that one has achieved something worthwhile and useful

Work gives a sense of purpose

It makes people feel needed and stops alienation

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Createwealth8888:
 
Now you may understand why you may need to work. Ha Ha!
 
After retiring, it doesn't mean stop working. One still need to find some works to do but only this time pay is not primary concern.
 

Thursday, 20 January 2011

Keynes on the Rational Savers

Read? The Psychology of Money

After knowing the psychology of money, it might be interesting to know the next topic - the psychology of rational savers by Keynes. (John Maynard Keynes, 1st Baron Keynes, CB was a British economist whose ideas have profoundly affected the theory and practice of modern macroeconomics)

Precaution

To build up a reserve against unforeseen contingencies.


Foresight

To provide for an anticipated future relation between the income and needs of the individual or his family different from that which exists in the present (old age, education).

Calculation

To enjoy interest and appreciation – because larger real consumption in the future is preferable to a present smaller consumption.

Improvement

To enjoy a gradually increasing expenditure, since most people look forward to a gradually improving standard of living.

Independence

To enjoy a sense of independence and power to do things, though without a clear idea of definite intention of specific action.

Enterprise

To secure a capital mass to carry out speculative or business enterprise.

Pride

To bequeath a fortune to others.

Avarice

To satisfy pure miserliness. (Createwealth8888: This one is really bad and such person does exist in real world)

Wednesday, 19 January 2011

The Psychology of Money

By Adrian Furnham

Professor of Psychology

1. Money as Security

The Compulsive Saver

For them saving is its own reward. They tax themselves and no amount of money saved is sufficient to provide enough security.

The Self-denier

Self-deniers tend to be savers but enjoy the self-sacrificial nature of self- imposed poverty. They may spend money on others, to emphasize their martyrdom. Psychoanalysts point out that their behaviour is often a disguise for envy, hostility and resentment towards those who are better off.

The Fanatical Collector

Obsessed collectors accumulate all sorts of things, some without much intrinsic value. They turn to material possessions rather than humans as potential sources of affection and security.

The Compulsive Bargain Hunter

Money is fanatically retained until the situation is “ideal” and then joyfully given over. The thrill is in out-smarting others – both those selling and those paying the full price.

2. Money as Power

The Manipulator

These people use money to exploit others’ vanity and greed. Manipulating others makes this type feel less helpless and frustrated. Their greatest long-time loss is integrity.

The Empire builder

They have (or appear to have) an overriding sense of independence and self-reliance. Repressing or denying their own dependency needs, they may try to make others dependent on them. Many inevitably become isolated and alienated, particularly in their declining years.

The Godfather

They have more money to bribe and control so as to feel dominant. They often hide an anger and a great over-sensitivity to being humiliated – hence the importance of public respect. But because they buy loyalty and devotion they tend to attract the weak and insecure. They destroy initiative and independence in others and are left surrounded by second-rate sycophants.

3. Money as Love

The Love Buyer


Many attempt to buy love and respect: those who visit prostitutes; those who feel unloved not unlovable and avoid feelings of rejection and worthlessness by pleasing others with their generosity.

The Love Seller

They promise affection, devotion and endearment for inflating others’ ego. They can feign all sorts of responses and are quite naturally attracted to love buyers.

The Love Stealer

The kleptomaniac is not an indiscriminate thief but one who seeks out objects of symbolic value to them. They are hungry for love but don’t feel they deserve it.

4. Money as Freedom

The Freedom Buyers

Money buys escape from orders, commands, even suggestions that appear to restrict autonomy and limit independence. They want independence not love : in fact, they repress and hence have a strong fear of dependency urges.

The Freedom Fighters

They reject money and materialism as the cause of enslavement of many. Frequently political radicals, drop-outs or technocrats, they are often passive-aggressive and attempt to resolve internal conflicts and confused values. Camaraderie and companionship are the main rewards for joining the anti- money forces.

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Createwealth8888:


I am more towards Money as Freedom - The Freedom Buyer and hope that soon I will have enough money to buy enough freedom and free myself from the Rat Race.



Monday, 12 July 2010

How Much Money Do You Need to Be Satisfied?

By Laura Rowley

Two new research papers argue that money can buy life satisfaction, but not happy feelings -- and that earnings beyond $75,000 a year don't buy a lot more happiness.


First, a Gallup survey of 136,000 people in 132 nations found higher income is strongly correlated with how people evaluate their lives, but only moderately with day-to-day positive feelings. The study appears in the July issue of the Journal of Personality and Social Psychology.

"Does money make people happy? We must say it increases the likelihood that they will be satisfied a lot," says study co-author and psychologist Ed Diener of the University of Illinois, Urbana-Champaign, in a statement. "In our study of richest people, there were a few very unhappy people."

Researchers crafted several ways to measure different types of well-being: First, they asked respondents to do big-picture assessment of their lives, ranking themselves on an imaginary ladder from zero to 10 (with 10 representing "the best possible life for you" and zero the worst possible life). They found that life satisfaction rises significantly with household income.

"Life satisfaction is a judgment about life -- one sits back and reflects," Diener explains. "People spend most of their time making and spending money, and it is one of the big long-range goals for most people, and so it affects life satisfaction." That link between money and satisfaction was consistent across different nations, age groups, economic classes, gender and both rural and urban dwellers.

The survey also measured happiness in another way: Respondents were asked about their experiences of the previous day: Did they have a lot of positive feelings (enjoyment and smiling/laughing) or negative feelings (anger, sadness, worry and depression)? Were they treated with respect? Did they have the opportunity to do what they do best, learn something new and choose how their time was spent?

Using the Ladder

These attributes -- what Diener calls "social capital and mastery" -- had a more significant impact on day-to-day positive feelings than income. "Social capital means having others one can count on, being respected, and so forth -- and this predicts positive feelings," Diener explains.

"Mastery means learning new things and using one's abilities -- again, this predicted positive feelings. Whereas life satisfaction reflects whether people are obtaining their values and goals in a long-term and big-picture sense, positive feelings seem to arise from momentary things that are prewired, since feeling good about the support of others and about using skills are both necessary for humans to thrive and survive."

In separate study, Nobel laureate Daniel Kahneman and Angus Deaton of Princeton University analyzed more than 450,000 responses to the Gallup-Healthways Well-Being Index, a daily survey of 1,000 U.S. residents from 2008 to 2009. This survey also used the "ladder" scale and asked questions about emotional experiences in the prior day.

The authors found that while hedonic well-being -- or happy feelings -- rises with income, it plateaus around $75,000 -- although life satisfaction ratings continue to improve. Moreover, lower income exacerbated the emotional pain associated with poor health, divorce and being alone.

"More money does not necessarily buy more happiness, but less money is associated with emotional pain," the authors write. "Perhaps $75,000 is a threshold beyond which further increases of income no longer improve people's ability to do what matters most to their emotional well-being: spending time with people they like, avoiding pain and disease and enjoying leisure. It is also likely that when income rises beyond this value the increased ability to purchase positive experiences is balanced, on average, by some negative effects.

"Our data ... do not imply that people will not be happy with a raise from $100,000 to $150,000, or that they will be indifferent to an equivalent drop of income," they continue. "Changes of income in the high range certainly have emotional consequences. What the data suggest is that above a certain level of stable income, people's emotional well-being is constrained by other factors in their temperament and their life circumstances."

Both studies raise an important question: What is it about income that makes people satisfied with their lives? Is it the stack of cash in the bank; the means to afford basic needs and luxuries; psychological intangibles that tend to come with money, such as status; or the ability to achieve important long-term values and goals -- such as funding a child's college education?

"I wonder if the 'strong' association between income and satisfaction is really a surrogate for something else, such as having a successful career, or having travel or experiential opportunities that you don't otherwise have," argues Kennon Sheldon, psychologist at the University of Missouri, Columbia. Researchers in the global study did examine some of those issues by asking households a range of other questions, including whether there were times in the past year when they did not have enough money for food or for shelter; whether they felt satisfied with their standard of living; and whether they had a television, computer and access to Internet.

Not surprisingly, the one-quarter of respondents who said basic needs were not met reported lower life satisfaction. But researchers were surprised to find that the satisfaction with standard of living and the overall evaluation of life were more highly correlated in wealthy than in economically underdeveloped nations.

This undermines the notion that money is most important when it helps meet basic needs -- and suggests that the connection between higher income and life evaluation rests on the ability to fulfill material aspirations.

Relatively Speaking

Part of the reason may be that people in developed consumer economies have been socialized to value both material achievements and competition, and so they feel satisfied if they have more than the Joneses.

The "ladder" scale invites relative comparisons, says Carol Graham, senior fellow at the Brookings Institution and author of the new book "Happiness Around the World: The Paradox of Happy Peasants and Miserable Millionaires."

"More framed questions -- such as the best possible life ladder -- put the whole thing in relative terms, and then it is not a surprise that people think more in income terms and their relative position," she explains. "More open-ended questions, like 'generally speaking how happy are you with your life' or even an even more pure measure of effect, such as 'how frequently did you smile yesterday' elicit other emotions/conceptions of happiness and correlate much less closely with income. The ladder question relates more to how people think about what they want to achieve in their life, the latter questions about how people feel about their lives, relationships and so on."

Graham tested these questions against each other in a survey of people in Afghanistan. "I found that people in Afghanistan were happier than the world average and smiled as often as Latin Americans did, but Afghans scored much lower than the world average when asked the framed best possible life question," she notes. "They know where they stand in relative terms, in other words, despite being naturally cheerful."
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Createwealth8888:

Earn $75K a year and then learn to overcome jealousy and live your own life; probably this is the secret to satifaction and happiness.

Learning to Overcome Jealousy and Live Your Own Life
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