Every S$100 Unconscious Monthly Spending Costs Singaporeans S$30,000 In the Long Run
Katie Gatti Tassin, the lady behind Money with Katie, recently wrote something helpful to contextualize our spending as a proportion of our goal to become …
Katie Gatti Tassin, the lady behind Money with Katie, recently wrote something helpful to contextualize our spending as a proportion of our goal to become …
A long discussion yesterday in my Singapore Financial Independence Telegram group caught my interest. A member (let’s call him A) was wondering whether we could …
I started noting down some key points to certain podcasts that helped me to grow as a person or a wealth builder. Since I am …
YouTuber Ali Abdaal started being known for making videos about productivity and got really big. Recently, he made a video about how to retire early, …
Most of your friends and family are generally less savvy about investments and financial products. They might have some investments, but after a while, they …
Some conservative investors may prefer a retirement income strategy that protects their capital. A popular way is to implement retirement income by investing in a …
By now, some of you might have read Channel News Asia’s piece on financial independence, retire early – how the FIRE movement goes beyond extreme …
There is this very disturbing TikTok video sharing some very questionable financial advice that caught my attention these couple of days: I described the video …
Many readers have read past articles where I mention the safe withdrawal rate or specific articles that talk about the 4% Rule or safe withdrawal …
How do you measure whether your relative or your colleague is wealthy? Do you based it on the flashy things that they have on them? What is a more fundamentally sound way to find out whether we have progressed well from debt dependent to financially secure, financially independent? The stages of wealth provide a good measure to see how far we have come.