Results 1 to 10 of 34
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September 27th, 2019 08:17 AM #1
Looking to diversify, we already have some in real estate, retail businesses, a 6.3% TD in a stable bank, also some corporate bonds in another.
What else is available locally now? Mutual funds are not doing so well, as is UITFs, do we wait for some good RTBs? T-Bills?
LTNCDs are great, but we can only acquire from the secondary market. What else is out there now?
Share nyo naman mga good investment vehicles nyo dyan mga masters and finance gurus.
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September 27th, 2019 08:26 AM #2
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September 27th, 2019 08:41 AM #3
I heard about that, haven't really checked it out yet but now is certainly a good time to do some research.
The only worry I have about GOCCs is how these unscrupulous politicians often use these fund institutions to embezzle the public's money.
Still, thanks very much for the suggestment Sir-kosero! Much appreciated.
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September 29th, 2019 03:56 PM #4
boss san bank yang 6.x % na TD?
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September 29th, 2019 04:24 PM #5
Bank of Makati boss, in line with their 63rd founding anniversary.
Dati na kaming may 5-year placement sa kanila, nag mature this year lang. Kaya nag place kami ulit, 1M.
Joint account kami ni misis, 500K each para covered parin ng PDIC.
Still better than a lot of other paper investments, and this has a good safety net just in case.
HTH.
Sana may mag share din ng investment portfolio nila. Wag madamot, bad yan!
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September 29th, 2019 06:47 PM #6
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September 29th, 2019 09:08 PM #7Its a saving program that is guaranteed by the government. Guaranteed in a sense that the face amount will never go down even if pagibig's investments go bankrupt. So if you put in 10k and pagibig have negative growth, you still get your 10k back. Its guaranteed by the governement so only way you lose money is if the government collapses, in which case everything in bank that is pesos loses value, even the money in your wallet.
Down side is your money is tied to pagibig for the next 5 years. But its returns is around 8% per annum so compounded in 5 years, malaki din. Very low risk with moderately high returns
Pwede ka din maghulog monthly. But the returns are not that big anymore
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September 30th, 2019 09:05 AM #8
Even at 7% per annum, your ₱100k nets you about ₱40k in 5 years. That's guaranteed.
Better than any bank at the moment.
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September 30th, 2019 09:10 AM #9
This is one disadvantage with the MP2 product. You cannot get periodic dividends, unlike TDs with monthly, Bonds with quarterly pay outs and other products.
With MP2, your money has to stay with them for the whole term before you get any funds back.
IMHO, most people are just more comfortable getting regular dividends.
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September 30th, 2019 09:40 AM #10
As expected, in response to Tesla’s entry into the Philippines market, Ford will be bringing in the...
Tesla Philippines