| Investment Makeover |
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| Written by Wilfred Ling | ||||||
| Thursday, 12 June 2008 | ||||||
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The following is an illustration on a case for a fee-based investment plan service I did for a real client. Many details have been modified and omitted to protect the identity of the client. Mrs Elizabeth Koh Tay Tay (not her real name) is a professional who has various investment and cash deposits. Her asset is worth $1.9 million excluding properties. She engaged me to review her existing investment portfolio and asked me to make various recommendations. After I have gathered the relevant facts, the following were the outcome of my analysis:
The following were my recommendations:
Note: This required major overhaul and it could be costly. However, it will be a balance been continuing holding these assets and pay for the high on-going cost/risk or to quickly restructure to a proper asset allocation plan. For protection of future creditors, I recommended an irrevocable trust with her children as beneficiaries. The client appoints herself as Trustee so that she can manage the underlying assets for the benefits of the beneficiaries although she has no more vested interest in the assets. In this way, her future creditors cannot attack this trust. Since this is an irrevocable trust, naturally she cannot place all her assets under this trust. She placed $800,000 into the irrevocable trust. Since the assets of this trust are needed by the beneficiaries at the moment’s notice, it implied that the time horizon is unknown. The trust is setup under Singapore’s law. For safety, I recommended just cash deposits and plain vanilla foreign currencies. I also ensure that the cash deposits are insured 90% under an offshore regulations. It has to be offshore because Singapore’s own cash deposit is insured up to the first S$20,000 only. For the remaining investment assets, I recommended that 40% be invested in fixed income, 30% in equities and 30% in cash or cash equivalent. For fixed income assets, I recommended various index (passive) funds which invested in inflation protected treasuries. For equities, I recommended various globally diversified index (passive) funds which invested in developing and emerging markets. I also ensure that there will be exposure both in large and small caps. For the cash, I recommended AUD, NZD and Chinese Renminbi. Why AUD, it is because of its existing high interest. Due to its reaching 5 year high, only a small amount is allocated to AUD. For NZD, it is because of its high interest rate and the fact that it has corrected significantly for the past few months. As for Renminbi, there is some consensus that the Chinese currencies is undervalued and is on its appreciation path. The new portfolio is (i) Simple (ii) passive style using index funds (iii) highly liquid because I choose index funds with good liquidity (iv) the cash deposits are protected 90% instead of S$20,000. Together with the smaller amount earmarked to be protected against future creditors, she can sleep well knowing that her assets are well taken care off. The fee that I charged her was $8,000 consisting of 40 hours of work in fact finding, research, report and discussion with her and various 3rd parties. The most important of all - she is under no obligation to execute the plan with us. Instead, she is free to source from other firms to execute the plan.
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