Updates Archives – Ringgit Freedom https://ringgitfreedom.com/category/updates/ step-by-step towards financial freedom in Malaysia Sun, 30 Mar 2025 17:48:33 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.6.2 https://ringgitfreedom.com/wp-content/uploads/hotlink-ok/ringgitfreedom-logo-120x120.png Updates Archives – Ringgit Freedom https://ringgitfreedom.com/category/updates/ 32 32 Ringgit Freedom’s March 2025 Updates https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-march-2025-updates/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-march-2025-updates/#respond Sun, 30 Mar 2025 15:44:41 +0000 https://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=6190 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

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I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

Feels like yesterday that I just wrote my 2024 Year In Review and it's already March 😛 Quite frankly, Q1 2025 was still pretty hectic for me, at least until beginning of March, primarily due to a huge project at work which I'm overseeing.

Nevertheless, I never forgot to took some time off for myself and managed to catch the limited screening of IU Concert: The Winning during the limited screening period worldwide. In a way, it's for me to relive my regrets for not splurging last year when I given the chance to.

Other than that, it was pretty much just work, and/or festive celebrations with feasts here and there. Oh, and not to forget the constant juggle between getting some rest vs. doing Korean Class Homework/Past Year Test Papers vs. leisure gaming time for myself. Ugh, priorities!

P/S To my Muslim readers out there reading this, Selamat Hari Raya Aidilfitri, Maaf Zahir dan Batin.

Now, going back to our usual monthly update for my finances and portfolios.


My Financials

One quick caveat before we start our financials update - I've decided to simplify stuff a little especially when it comes to expenses & savings rate. In the past, I've always had to run two set of numbers - one 'standard' savings rate and another 'normalised' savings rate throughout year of 2023 & 2024.

The primary reason for this was due to the additional expenditures I've incurred as one-off investment to migrate overseas (immigration related expenses) and acceleration of my mortgage paydown plan (additional principal contributed to paydown mortgage principal faster).

However, since these were ultimately investment towards myself (one way or another) I've decided to take the same blanket treatment - just like how I've always excluded investment-related spendings outside of my Expenses / Savings Rate calculation.

Going forward, just like other investments, I'll be excluding immigration related expenses and additional principal paid to my mortgage from both Expenses & Savings Rate.

Expenses

Jan - Mar 2025 Expenses At A Glance

With the additional principal payments removed from the Expenses chart, it's pretty clear that a significant portion of my income goes towards my Family's spending (Allowance, Treats, Insurances, etc.) and of course not to forget the mandatory mortgage payments mandated by bank.

Aside from these two, my other expenditures remains relatively stable (and minuscule) considering my income.

Savings Rate

Savings Rate as of March 2025 (Normalized)

I always enjoyed Quarter 1 of the year - not just for the festive seasons, but also the extra payday from various sources - Tax Refunds, EPF Dividends, or Performance Bonuses from last year. These spikes in income have helped me in last couple of years to accelerate my goals. Of course it goes without saying that majority of these "savings" are promptly invested - whether in forms of additional principal contributions to my mortgage loan or simply funding my Freedom Portfolio.

Savings Target as of March 2025 (Normalized)
Savings Trend as of March 2025 (Normalized)

With these bonuses, we managed to start our Quarter 1 strong with year-to-date Savings Rate of 77%. As long as I keep up my habits for the next 9 months, even if simply by mimicking my last year's savings rate trending, we should be able to hit our target just fine.

Emergency Jar

No changes to the Emergency Jar this quarter.

Savings Jar as of March 2025 (Normalized)

My "Freedom" Investments

Performance

Freedom Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of March 2025
Freedom Portfolio Year-to-Date Performance as of March 2025

Last 3 months have been crazy ever since Trump took office - with never ending roller coasters' ride for stock market. On one hand, almost everything from SP500 to Gold to Bitcoin was creating new highs, then tumble, rise again and then tumble for a few rounds. Looking at the unrealized gain at this stage - it really really is taking a toll on me to NOT TAKE PROFIT AND CONTINUE HOLDING. Managed to buy some dips during the short Crypto Crash as well (basically undoing my "short" last year 😂)

Freedom Portfolio Year-over-Year Performance Snapshots as of March 2025

Knowing that market cycles are cyclical and what goes up will come down (and vice versa), it's so tempting to just take some profits during the all time high so that I can scoop lows when it crashes again. But this definitely is against my investment philosophies, so am doing what I can through sheer willpower to try... not to touch my portfolio 😅😵‍💫

Allocation

Freedom Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of March 2025
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of March 2025
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of March 2025

Snapshot as of 30 March 2025

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 0.26%
ROI: 0.37%
Profit/Loss: RM 1,244.67

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: 13.77%
ROI: 24.98%
Profit/Loss: RM 127,371.70
True Cost: RM 464,762.81
Total Value: RM 629,623.52
Entrance Value: RM 462,448.33
Portfolio Value: RM 591,392.06
Nett Dividend (2025): RM 1,209.07

Active Portfolio as of March 2025

Net Worth Updates

Net Worth Tracker as of March 2025

March's spike in Net Worth value always scare me - with various factors contributing to it from EPF's dividend announcement (hence recognition of values), to company's performance bonuses, and of course our not-so-beloved tax refunds. On top of it, we also have new market highs (despite the ongoing crashes) of my unrealised portfolio gains shooting up my net worth by almost 200K.


If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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2024 in Review: The Gap Year https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/2024-in-review-the-gap-year/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/2024-in-review-the-gap-year/#respond Sat, 08 Mar 2025 15:56:26 +0000 https://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=6120 2024 was a whirlwind—chaotic at work, and plenty of self-reflection. A year of challenges, growth, and what’s next?

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I've been wanting to have some quality time with myself to reflect what happened in 2024, but I didn't really had the chance to do so.

Things got very hectic (read: chaotic) at workplace with a large scale project with at least 50 project members involved cross-functionally & across the globe. As much as I wanted to empower my team and other departments, unfortunately there are still significant dependencies on me (and my knowledge) hence unconsciously my attention shifted back to my works/careers (and of course not forgetting to take breaks in between to recharge). In the end, it was tiring, but still rewarding to see the accomplishments after almost 9 months of hell.

At initial glance, it felt to me that time just flew by, just like that, another year has passed, and nothing much was achieved. Now that I finally get some time to have peace/quiet moments, here I am - writing my (belated) reflection for 2024. And this year, I'm going to try out a new tool that my coach had shared with me when I had the opportunity to work with one to help me to accelerate growth in both personal and career space.

The "Wheel of Life" was to help provide better clarity on where I am at today, and determine what I would like to focus on next. When doing the exercise, it was very clear to me where I had excelled in (and also areas requiring "some" work on). What's tough for me was the middle-tier ones as I was hesitating the most, before choosing a "safe" mid-ground answer. There's plenty of free template online so I just found this one pretty simple to use (and also had generous free license), so feel free to use any templates that you see fit. How it works is that I'll be doing a self-rating from 1 to 5 in each category, with ONE (1) being really unsatisfied and FIVE (5) indicating that I'm over the moon.

My 2024's Wheel of Life

Through this exercise I was able to recalibrate my thoughts into respective areas and take a more holistic view when assessing my 2024. In no particular order,

  • Career & Financials: These two areas continues to be my area of strength, consistently over the last 5 year (or decade I should say?) that unlocked many possibilities previously unattainable for our household. Despite the career burn-out two/three years ago, I've found ways to navigate past those and happy that things at work no longer affect me as much as before. Shits are still happening, but I've found ways to acquire my own peace.
  • Personal Growth: This is definitely one of the coping mechanism to acquire my peace amidst chaotic environment. For me, learning Korean throughout 2024 was the solution. It gave me something to look forward to, beyond just working for $ in life. Still no where close from having conversations in Korean, but happy that I'm able to watch Korean shows without subtitles and understand at least half the context. It'll get bettern, someday... that's how I learnt Cantonese back as a kid 😛
  • Recreation: A bit too high over the moon I must say 😛 But can't complain as it is my only way to "let out", especially with my extremely strong introversion. It's fine as long as it works, I guess?
  • Love (Family) & Friends: Not my strong suit for sure as I shy away from reaching out to people. Even until today, my "social connection" relies mainly on others reaching out to me first, which I know is not good. Definitely something that I need to consciously work on. Love wise - it's mainly family for now, to push myself to spend more (quality) time with my mom whilst she's still healthy.
  • Health: Definitely not in the best shape with my current lifestyle. Was contemplating between "2" and "3" but decided that "2" would be too harsh, considering that I did put in conscious effort in avoiding sugar and unhealthy food. Though I still can't completely eliminate junk food. God damned cravings...
  • Spirituality: An area that I've slightly improved the last two years, but still need a lot to work on. Especially with regards to my purpose of living and identifying my "Ikigai".

Now with the broad overview assessment out of the way, let's take a deeper dive on our finances before regrouping on the broad topic of goals setting & achievements!



My Financials

Expenses

From a quick glance, my overall expenses in 2024 actually reduced slightly by -5% in comparison to last year's spending, totalling at 188k MYR throughout 2024. Just as last year, the bulk of the spending went into paying down my mortgage as part of my decision since 2023 to accelerate my debt settlements.

Yearly Expenses Summary as of December 2024
Yearly Expenses Summary as of December 2024 (Normalized)

To enable comparison between years, I've created a normalized chart where one-off capital "expenditures" such as Additional Mortgage Payment or Migration Fees were removed. From there, the same trend of -5% reduction in spending were observed, which is a good sign.

Ideally the expenses can go down even further, if the time calls for it. But at this stage, as with my motto - I want to maintain a healthy balance between maximising savings vs. enjoying life.

If I double-click deeper into the ~188K MYR expenditures last year, we can spot a very similar trend vs. 2023 where some of top spenders were:


Home: Mortgage Payments ~RM17.8k + Additional Principal Repayments ~RM73.2k

Definitely makes up the largest of my expenditures so far. On the plus side, the additional ~73K I've put in this year helped to accelerate my equity building plan to safeguard my potential futures in case if my migration plan puts a huge dent on my finances.

If I keep at this pace, I'll probably be able to be debt-free in another 3-4 years time, that's assuming I haven't migrated yet to Australia by then. Speaking of migration, this was also another reason why I was able to put in much more (% wise) into my Mortgage than last year - since I did not incur any migration-related expenses in 2024.

For clarity, only the default mortgage payments of (~RM17.8k) are included in the normalized version of the yearly expenses.


Family: Family Allowances, Emergencies, and Insurances ~RM27.0k

Nothing much to delve deeper here - mainly to cover the cost of living, including insurances, for my family members. Not to mention also the occasional mini-emergencies here and there such as dental visits and hospital visits for my mom. Being the eldest in our family, my money was never truly mine, but family's. I wish my sister understood my burden sooner, but all good now that she has finally realized it after a decade later.


Luxury: Holiday Travels with Family ~RM11.8k

Since 2023, I've made a promise to at least travel once per year, capping the spends around RM10-12k per annum for travelling. Last year, I've brought my family to Taiwan. Frankly, the hardest part was actually convincing my mom to give Taiwan a try - she is so stubborn, just like me (or should I say I am stubborn headed just like her...).

I brought her to Hong Kong a couple years back and since then, she have been reminiscing the moments there and wanted to go back. But as we spent quite a couple of weeks there in Hong Kong already - there isn't much left to see. Plus hearing experiences from my ex-colleagues or friends whom are still there in Hong Kong - it's different now. Which was why I wanted to show her other parts of the world whilst she can still travel - and Taiwan was selected (for cultural similarities and budget reasons).

The best part? I'm having a bit of dejavu moment now since returning from our trip. Now she's always reminiscing moments in Taiwan and wants to go back there again - and meanwhile, I'm trying to convince her to explore a different country with me, be it Japan or Korea... saga to be continued. 😂


Giving: Family Gifts/Treats ~RM7.8k

The amount I spent last year on gifts/treats mainly for my family (and occasionally friends) have almost doubled in comparison to year 2023, resulting in this new category taking over the top 5 expenditures spot. Good thing is, hopefully it's just one-off as half of this amount were spent on the iPhone 15 that I bought for my mom paid in full.


Luxury: Gadgets, iPad and Computer Parts ~RM6.1k

Significant improvement vs. year of 2023 - whilst still (very) impulsive, I managed to exercise a little bit more self-control here and spent only half the amount I've spent in 2023. Plenty of rooms for improvement for sure - but the experiment of setting a sinking category to "fund" my impulsive gadget purchase definitely helped to mitigate some impacts (though amount is still insufficient).


0% Debts

Outstanding 0% Credit Card Installments as of December 2024

Paid of all my outstanding 0% Credit Card Instalments plan for my mom's hairdryer bought last year. And thankfully since then I managed to NOT utilise this facility for my purchases. Hopefully the trend continues in 2025 💪🏻


Savings Rate

Just like last year, I had to prepare two different savings rate chart to help with my own analysis and exclude the additional principal repayments on my mortgage as those are building up my long term equity - exactly the same concept where I excludes all activities related to investment from my expenses tracking.

The first set of chart focuses on general savings rate (which includes additional principal repayment as expenditures) whereas the second set of chart focuses on normalized savings rate (excluding additional principal repayments).

Savings Trend as of December 2024
Savings Target as of December 2024

From a quick glance, 2024's savings rate are definitely much more consistent even from the first chart alone. But if we dive deeper into the second chart, the savings rate has definitely improved tremendously due to the "forced savings" that I have mandated throughout the year - in the forms of additional principal repayment.

Savings Trend as of December 2024 (Normalized)
Savings Target as of December 2024 (Normalized)

As with the last few years - September is usually where things get a little bit out of control where I would spend more than usual - typically for my holidays / travels / shopping spree during my birthday month. Nevertheless, the normalized savings rate in 2024 definitely have exceeded even my own expectations all thanks to my aggressive mortgage repayment strategy - something I can continue to ride on during 2025.


Emergency Jar

Pretty much the status quo here since my Ringgit Freedom’s June 2021 Updates: Mid-Year Checkpoint when I decided to expand my emergency jar from 6 months' expenses worth to 12 months' expenses worth. Nothing much to write here - spent a few bits here and there (mom's dental) but very quickly replenished it soon after (usually within the next month).

Savings Jar as of December 2024

My "Freedom" Investments

Let's first start with reviewing the performances of our Freedom Portfolio.

Funding

Thankfully, I broke the downward funding trend that started since 2021. Whilst still being very careful / conserved throughout 2024, I managed to invest / inject more funds than the year before and one of the main reason has got to do with the automated Recurring Investment facility offered by Interactive Broker. Note that the amount here fluctuates according to currency value hence the actual fund injected may vary.

Yearly Freedom Portfolio Funding as of December 2024 (excluding EPF)

Performance

It's starting to feel dejavu by now. Not surprisingly, 2024 was a very good year, with strong performance on most of my holdings raising my unrealized IRR to above 10%. When market performs this well, it really makes me wonder... "is this really sustainable? when's the next crash?" which was also the primary factor that I refused to invest any more than my regular DCA, pumping the rest into my real estate holdings (a.k.a my home!). From numbers perspective, that may not be the best way to deploy cash considering the historical returns of S&P500 being much greater than any mortgage interest savings could potentially yield me.

Freedom Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of December 2024
Freedom Portfolio Year-to-Date Performance as of December 2024

A new chart added just recently! I've always wanted to track my overall year-to-year snapshot so that it helps me to assess my portfolio performance vs. market funds out there. Not gonna lie - mine looks terrible, until 2024 where suddenly there's a huge spike of unrealized gain. Just America doing it's thing I guess...

Freedom Portfolio Year-over-Year Performance Snapshots as of December 2024

As for the realized losses, since mid-2024 I have started trimming my portfolio holdings and as a result, some of those old funds/ETFs/stocks have been "sold" at a loss but most are consolidated into equivalent siblings (e.g. BABA/9988 Stocks, 3067 China Tech ETF consolidated into 3040 China ETF).

In 2024, I have closed 13 positions bringing down the active list from 30 line items to 17 line items. It's still a work-in-progress but I plan to eventually consolidate them into just a couple holdings, primarily in ETF's with a few stronghold dividend stocks. Last I counted there's still at least 3-5 funds/ETFs/stocks to be deleted or consolidated... an exercise to be continued in 2025 & 2026.


Allocation

With the heated situation in the market, my cash pile continued to grow. I definitely hated holding cash (equivalents) but going all-in on anything at this juncture just simply does not make any sense. For now, these cash (equivalents) are just sitting in my fully-flexi mortgage account, reducing the amount of interest payable to bank. I think bank really hates me - last year alone, I've paid 50% less interest fees than the two years prior.

Freedom Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of December 2024

The good news though - I've finally crossed the 500K Asset Under Management mark for my very own self-managed Freedom Porfolio 🥳

There's no other better way than this to celebrate my portfolio's 10 year anniversary. Though, majority of these gain are all from 2024 itself (unrealized) due to the strong market momentum.

Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of December 2024
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of December 2024

The regional allocation chart above probably speaks better in one slide than my long paragraphs can. The strong growth in US market have significantly threw my proportions out of whack, at least for my freedom portfolio 😅. Good thing is that I still have the "total" portfolio (including EPF/i-Invest) to play around with balancing.


My "Total" Investments

I have decided to continue my last year's trend and include EPF in my yearly review - something that I only do once a year.

Though, it won't be as granular since many of the things are happening behind the scene, directly with EPF where there's zero influence from me (except for i-Invest which I only utilize to rebalance my overall portfolio when it goes out of whack).

Funding

What I'm most happy about, looking at this chart, is the sizable growth of the pink bar. Never once I would have thought that I will be managing a sizable portion of investments, almost on par with what I have in EPF today. Maybe one day, if I don't mess up too badly, that the pink bar will outgrow the blue. Maybe, just maybe.

Yearly Total Portfolio Growth as of December 2024 (including EPF)

Performance

Another milestone worth celebrating - my total portfolio size now exceeds 1mio, with EPF still holding the "majority stake" at 55% 😛. Note that for below chart, it has not included the latest dividend which was recently announced a couple days back as the snapshot was taken during 31 December 2024 itself.

If you're curious, with the 2024 dividend factored in, it'll probably boost the value by another RM25-35K and EPF's Portfolio IRR should go from approx. 4% to 5% IRR.

Total Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of December 2024
Yearly Total Portfolio Growth as of December 2023 (including EPF)

Allocation

Unlike the Freedom Portfolio's Allocation that you have seen earlier, when considering EPF (and my own i-Invest) allocations, it kinda brought back the balances I've been maintaining so far between US-China-Malaysia & Others at 30:30:30:10 respectively (for equities). Though my main goal have always been keeping the balance between US and China.

Total Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of December 2024
Total Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of December 2024

Net Worth Updates

2024 definitely is the year with significant milestones achieved. Those following my journey may recall that I've posted an update in Jun/Jul announcing that for the first time ever - I have finally achieved the "Millionaire" net worth status. In real life, it didn't change anything for me with life going on as usual - just like any other day.

Based on the extracts on last day of 2024, my net worth currently sits at ~RM1,138K (excluding the 2024 EPF dividend) which is way above my original target of achieving 1M by 2024 (before revising it to an additional year cause kiasu) .

Reflecting back, I've doubted myself when I decided to start this challenge sometime in 2019 or 2020, when I first started ringgitfreedom.com. Thinking to myself back then - 1 million in 3-4 years? Siao ah? But somehow with a bit of luck and persistence, miracle happened. For myself, it was the career growth in last 2-3 years that skyrocketed my income.

There are definitely many ways to achieve this. Some co-founded their start-up businesses into successful ventures. Some started their own content production studio. As for me, knowing myself and my level of motivation - climbing the career ladder seems to work best for me despite the stress and all kind of shit that I receive at work. I really am thankful to my company, without which I doubt I will enjoy the financial security that I have today. Though unlike the past, whilst not at the stage of throwing my performance away, I am definitely less aggressive than before in terms of the pursuit of career growth. I guess I had found the right balance that works for me.

The journey's definitely not done yet - for now, I'm not going to revise the target or set another big ambitious target numbers to chase for considering my own uncertainties in the next 1-3 years (migration). We'll cross that bridge when it comes, but for now the focus remains the same - building my equity and pay down my debts ASAP whilst I still have financial security / financial certainty in my hands to take the pressure away when I migrate overseas.

Net Worth Tracker as of December 2024

Just in case for those who are reading my year review for the first time - for my net worth calculation, I exclude the primary residence that I’m currently staying in, in the essence that it generates all the expenses/liabilities associated with home-ownership with no ability to generate income. Even if I choose to sell it, there'll be heavy costs associated with it when time is not on my side so I took an aggressive $0 value assumption for such primary residence.

This concept was popularised by Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad. However, I know that some of you, especially finance enthusiasts and/or accountants would prefer to stick with the standard accounting principles so there's also an additional dotted line for that which accounts for my home value based on past transaction values with a haircut of ~10% for miscellaneous fees associated with sales of a home.


2024 Goals Revisited

Now, with all hat said, how do I fare in terms of Goals vs. Achievements? In 2024, I've inherited two goals from 2023, and created a new Goal #3 to keep myself in check. As a quick recap:

Goal #1: Achieve at least 55% Annualised Savings Rate (Normalised)

I need to continue something been continuously doing the last couple of years - to achieve at least 55% Annualised Savings Rate (Normalised). The normalised savings rate is calculated by excluding additional principal contributed to mortgage loan and also one-off migration related fees and allows for consistency in comparison vs. past 5 years.

This allows me to ride on the savings momentum whilst not over-depriving myself to focus only on saving but forget to enjoy life.

Goal #2: Plan Another True Holiday

I'm looking forward to plan for another true holiday, perhaps bringing my mom to Hong Kong (still trying to persuade her otherwise, there really isn't much to see in Hong Kong and she's been there twice already…) or somewhere else?

Goal #3: Carefully Craft a Move-Out Plan with Backups

I need to craft a move-out (from MY to AU) plan with more granularities by further refining my current high-level timelines. I'll need to start researching on nitty gritty so that I won't have to scramble at the last minute to decide where to stay, where to work, submit resumes everywhere hoping to nail a new job in a foreign land, etc.

Read more: 2023 in Review: Slowing Down Actually Took Me Further

Now, the question is - did I achieve all 3 goals? In short, not really.

Continuing the celebration trends last couple of years, I want to celebrate what we have achieved throughout 2024 in no particular order 🥳

  1. Hitting a record-high 64% normalized savings rate, exceeding even my own expectations (Goal #1 Achieved)
  2. Successfully convinced my mom to visit Taiwan and brought our family for a 2 weeks trip (Goal #2 Achieved)
  3. Continued negotiation with my Employer on my intended plan to move to Australia - whilst waiting for prolonged Australian Immigration's verdict on my Visa. Let's see if I can score a WIN-WIN - migrate whilst retaining my strong career growth trajectory. (Goal #3 still W.I.P)
  4. Actually snagged tickets for IU's concert in Malaysia. Not one, but four tickets so my friends could go with me.
  5. Signing up for Korean class on a whim - 2 months before attending IU's concert. Wanted to learn Korean so I can sing-along and also understand when IU is talking on stage. Obviously it didn't work on concert day, but since then it's been almost a year of Korean classes... I'm surprised even at myself. But the amount of homeworks, ugh!!!
  6. Attending IU's concert in Malaysia, and seeing her live performance! It's like reactivating my decade old fans-in-me. I've stopped following her after graduating from university but I guess all it took was a single Spark to reignite my love for her XD
  7. During my holidays trip in Taiwan, flew back to Malaysia JUST IN TIME - exactly 12 hours before Typhoon hits (last flight out). And the best part, it was booked MONTHS in advance. I definitely don't have crystal ball but imagine the goosebumps I've got on that day...
  8. Survived driving in Taiwan with Right-Handed Traffic roaad systems (on a left-handed driver seat). Took me a couple of days to re-sync back to Malaysia's driving pattern upon my return...
  9. Taking off my Braces. LIKE FINALLY! But only to be met with Retainers... UGH!!!
  10. Witnessing the growth of my batchmates at (ex-)work growing - one setting up business and another migrated out of Malaysia. So proud and happy for them, and I SWEAR I'M NEXT!!!
  11. ringgitfreedom.com entering is coming closer to its 5 year soon (in couple of months). Though a little less active than I'd like due to hectic schedules at work 🙁

And maybe just to pen down some of my regrets - if any - to serve as my own reminder for the future me:

  1. Not going YOLO and just buy IU's Korea ENCORE: THE WINNING concert when I was given the opportunity to. Like GOD literally gave it to me, with ONE seat released a couple of days before the concert (after F5/refreshing the site for so many days), and I had to hesitate & pause.. WHYYYYYYYYY
  2. Tried to time the market with my BTC holdings trimming half of the holdings sometime last year, as well as closing my XRP position to "consolidate" / "reduce" number of holdings. I guess time and time again, time in market > timing the market. But it's really hard to go against emotions, despite the best intention/efforts that I may have.

Overall, 2024 wasn't that shabby. I achieved most goals that I've set (easy goals heh) and missed the mark on some - partially due to underestimation of the time taken for visa approvals (it's been 15 months and sill counting...).

Could I do more? Definitely. But I'm happy enough where I am at. I got to see my long-time idol for the first time, after a long hiatus from stanning after university graduation. I also somehow started my journey in learning Korean, something that I've tried multiple times in the past and failed. Third time's always the charm, huh? Fun fact, I created two websites prior to ringgitfreedom.com and both of them died within 1-3 months, just like my previous two initiatives to learn Korean.


Plans for 2025

With all those said, what is the 2025 outlook for me, and whare are my plans? Like last year, if it's ain't broken don't fix it - so I'm going to shamelessly inherit, but improvise, on my last year's goals:


Goal #1: Achieve at least 65% Annualised Savings Rate (Normalized)

Considering the continuous growth of income and somewhat successful in keeping my lifestyle inflation in check - I've decided to set a target that better aligns with what I can realistically achieve based on last year's achievement. We was merely one percent short (at 64%) during 2024, so I think setting a target of 65% is realistic enough and provides a little stretch - as long as I can contain my lifestyle inflation.


Goal #2: Pass my Korean Language TOPIK 1 Exam and earn my holiday trip to Korea

Lo and behold, after several rounds of convincing by my teacher, I've decided to just sign up for the TOPIK I exam anyway. He said it won't be too hard and I hope he's right about it. The real challenge is squeezing my motivation and a bit of time to do all these past year exam papers so I've decided to put a carrot in front of me: earning my holiday trip to Korea.

It's been at least 8 years, I think, since my last visit to Korea. Definitely wants to go back there and mainly to visit cities outside of Seoul (still thinking of Busan, Jeju, or somewhere else less "touristy").

So yeah, let's get this exam sorted first then I'll start planning the holidays!


Goal #3: Carefully Craft a Move-Out Plan with Backups

This is a direct copy-paste from last year. Basically, I sill need to craft a move-out (from MY to AU) plan with more granularities by further refining my current high-level timelines. It gets tricky with the continuous delays from Australian Immigration in terms of visa grants timeline. From 12 months to 13 to 14 to 15 and now, based on latest estimates, it'll take at least 20 months for approvals.

Regardless, it's still good if I can start researching on some of those nitty-gritty so that I won't have to scramble at the last minute to decide where to stay, where to work, submit resumes everywhere hoping to nail a new job in a foreign land, etc.


2025's Wheel of Life

So, with all that basic goals set, what does my 2025's focus look like in terms of the Circle of Life? Just two focus areas: Health and Spirituality.

My 2025's Wheel of Life (Planned)

And with this, introducing a new Goal #4 for myself in 2025:


Goal #4: Building a Stronger Resilient "Me"

Perhaps this should have been the #1 goal - but anyways. I have a long journey ahead of me, especially considering the tough route that I decided to pick for myself. In all truthfulness, I could have chosen to just settle down in Malaysia - perhaps by working for another 2-5 years max, I can retire super comfortably here, no longer needing to WORK FOR MONEY but do whatever I deem passionate about.

Choosing to immigrate at this age poses a challenge, as I have give up some of the head-start that I had built so hard for in the last decade - in all aspects of life, financial, social connections, etc. in a completely foreign country that may not fully recognize my talents.

To drive changes with this level of insanity - I need a STRONG ME. Both mentally and physically. I won't set big goals here like walking 10-20K steps per day because I know big numbers will just scare me away (like many times before). But I pledge to eat healthier, walk more whenever possible, and give myself some time to do soul-searching meditations rather than burying myself fully at work, lessons, homework's, gaming, and all other stuff that numbs my brain.


Final Thoughts

Remember back in those college / university years, when we have finally done with the exams and are given a long semester break whilst waiting for the next semester to start? 2024 definitely feels that way for me. It felt that I have accomplished nothing, but also accomplished plenty at the same time given how fast the time feels.

Ever since I made up my mind to pursue my Australia migration journey in 2023/24, countless number of scenarios have played in my mind - some good ones, but more often than not the bad ones are replayed countless times. Deep inside, I know that some of these are irrational fears especially at time of change (I guess my career did help me even on my personal growth after all - as all these feels so dejavu when it comes to change management of human behaviour with new things)

But still - the biggest question I still have from last year was that how will my future look like? Will everything that I've spent decade working on go down the drain (given high living cost etc.) or will my portfolio & financial numbers continue to thrive? Only time will tell.

One thing's for sure though - with the delay in visa processing by Australian Immigration Department, it also opened up potential opportunities in my negotiation with my existing employer (since they also have presence there in Australia). At this stage, I'm just keeping an open mind, whatever the outcome would be. Even in the worst case scenario, all I have to do is to stick to my original plan and start applying for jobs in Australia once I've received (fingers crossed) the visa grant - since all companies, at this stage, are screening out all applicants without valid working rights in Australia.

The Wheel of Life is also an interesting concept that I've started to like, now that I've tested it myself. 2 (or 3?) years ago when I first decided that my life pursuit should be beyond just a singular pillar (Financial), I've expanded to "Personal Growth" and "Family/Friends" but with this Wheel of Life - it also forces me to think from additional angles previously not considered for. Let's see how it goes in 2025, and if all well, it should become a baseline that I will utilize going forward in assessing priorities for my life.

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

Cheers,
Gracie

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Ringgit Freedom’s September 2024 Updates https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-september-2024-updates/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-september-2024-updates/#comments Fri, 04 Oct 2024 14:38:03 +0000 https://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=6077 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

The post Ringgit Freedom’s September 2024 Updates appeared first on Ringgit Freedom.

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I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

Quarter 3 in 2024 have been kind to me. I've started to create more pockets of time to spend some quality moments with my mom, amidst my chaotic working schedule.

Not just with family, I've also been spending quite some time (and money) in aspects of self-love and self-care. Went for a personal colour analysis session to better understand suitable colour (and fashion style) for myself and this gave me a good reason to start some spring cleaning exercise on my wardrobe.

Doing all these as a start so that I can learn to better appreciate both my natural beauty - and most importantly my flaws. Approaching it step by step seems like a good way to start, considering that I've never really "cared" too much about my skin or fashion. Gotta start taking care of my skin before it's too late!

And not to forget, finally, my braces are off too! Now I've gotta learn how to smile... confidently. Something that I've never done in my current lifetime.

On the not-so-bright side though - I had a chance to snatch some last minute ticket for IU HEREH ENCORE Concert @ Seoul as some people gave up / refunded their seats 72 hours before the concert. I was literally at the check-out page and was inputting my card details!

And what took it away? My own hesitation. I wasn't really sure if I could commit to such a last minute trip, and was also worried about the flight & accomodation price due to the short notice. In that span of the moment of checking flight ticket prices, the transaction got timed out and I lost my chance altogether :'). On one hand, it's a semi-good news where I avoided a financial disaster for September (you'll see why in a bit...) but on the other hand, the sad reality struck me as I instantly felt the regret of "not trying" than regret of "doing".

Made it to the checkout screen 72 hours before concert cause someone refunded their ticket...
Only to lose the seat to my own hesitation. Error message basically says "Invalid sales, please try again".

Guess this will be my mantra going forward - better regret for trying than to regret for giving up. Heck, I've even applied & secured K-ETA approval and was prepared to fly on a short notice... why the hesitation 🙁

Now, going back to our usual monthly update for my finances and portfolios.


My Financials

Expenses

Jul - Sep 2024 Expenses At A Glance

I've decided to change the format a little. Rather than should Year-to-Date figures which is quite difficult to make comparisons to in later part of the years, I'll just do quarterly expenses review and only show the Year to Date in the final yearly review.

Just as the first two quarters of 2024, half of my expenses were actually put into my mortgage - both principal and interest included. If I can keep this up, it shouldn't take more than 5 years for me to write off my mortgage loan. May not be the best thing to do from financial numbers perspective, but I'm doing it anyway. The thoughts of being debt-free to me is priceless, no matter what the math says. Just treating it as a premium to be paid for peace of mind.

Aside from this, I've spent quite some figures (up to 20% of total expenses) on purchases for either myself or my family. For one, I've finally pressed the 'BUY' button and managed to get my mom an iPhone 15 - her first iPhone ever. This is also probably 3rd "new" phone she ever owned - with the first two "new" phone being sub-RM500 phones. Whilst she doesn't say it and kept nagging me on how I've wasted money on her, I can see her smile deep inside. That is definitely a worthwhile experience for me especially since she liked taking photos. Bought it right before iPhone 16 too - not the best, but god a pretty good deal at RM3100 for 256GB iPhone 15.

From another front - just as the last couple of years, September is usually my "spending" month where I splurge on self-care as I've mentioned in the opening of this post. Definitely should start tightening my spendings and bring it back in control - otherwise I'll be missing this year's saving rate target for sure...

Savings Rate

Savings Rate as of September 2024

Yup. As explained earlier - September definitely is not looking good. As a matter of fact, the last couple of months weren't looking good as well. Quarter 4 will be the deciding moment on whether if I'll miss my savings goal target for this year

Savings Trend as of September 2024
Savings Target as of September 2024

Emergency Jar

Nothing much to be said for the Emergency Jar - still there for the day that I wish will never come.

Savings Jar as of September 2024

My "Freedom" Investments

Performance

Freedom Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of September 2024
Freedom Portfolio Year-to-Date Performance as of September 2024

Activities

Right before the end of September, China decided to do something which helped them to finally rally their stock markets, helping me to boost my portfolio value. At least my China ETFs are no longer in the red, which is a good sight after a depressing 3 years.

On the other hand, since I do have quite some subtiantial holdings denominated in foreign currencies like USD, SGD, and AUD - the recent strengthening of Ringgit (which is a good thing) definitely hit my portfolio hard. On paper, I'm losing at least 8% - 12% alone between the start of Q3 until today just from currency alone. But it's all on paper anyway so I don't really care. In any case, I am overweighted on MYR for sure, considering my EPF alone already exceeds the size of my self-managed Freedom Portfolio.

Good thing is that the US stock market index continues to rise so that kinda offset the "losses" too - but honestly not sure for how long. Everything feels overvalued nowadays.

Allocation

Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of September 2024
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of September 2024

Snapshot as of 30 September 2024

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 0.44%
ROI: 0.67%
Profit/Loss: RM 1,971.97

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: 12.49%
ROI: 20.26%
Profit/Loss: RM 82,282.73
True Cost: RM 366,513.82
Total Value: RM 487,698.67
Entrance Value: RM 386,803.42
Portfolio Value: RM 472,470.22
Nett Dividend (2024): RM 3,230.64

Active Portfolio as of September 2024

Oh - I've also just created this new chart and decided to add it to my blog as well - basically to show the Realized Gains/(Losses) and Dividends that I've received so far, in comparison to the paper gain/(losses) which are still unrealized to date.

Year-over-Year Freedom Portfolio Performance as of September 2024 (excluding EPF)

Net Worth Updates

My net worth continues to climb this quarter - primarily attributed to the soaring stock market both in the US and China.

Net Worth Tracker as of September 2024

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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Ringgit Freedom’s June 2024 Updates https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-june-2024-updates/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-june-2024-updates/#respond Sat, 06 Jul 2024 14:23:46 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5856 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

The post Ringgit Freedom’s June 2024 Updates appeared first on Ringgit Freedom.

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I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

Although I wish things would slow down a little to give myself a breather in my work life, reality will often go against what we want. Work has been pretty chaotic the last whole quarter and I've been living it on a day-by-day basis, firefighting as I crawl through the day. This is taking a huge toll on my mental well-being again.

To make things worse, most of the friends that we've grown to become, as we joined the company together a decade ago, have left/resigned one by one to pursue alternative pathways. Can't wait to get out of it myself, too. Unfortunately, my way out of it is still far away as I await the Australian Government to (hopefully and eventually) grant me my permanent residency visa. Maybe I should really consider taking a sabbatical leave. In the end, what's the use of money if the price for it is healthy? Did anyone go through similar pathways?

On the personal front, I have IU to thank as she was one of the few reasons that held me together in one piece over the last few crazy months. Her concert shows were amazing and she is one of the few strong vocalists in today's generation. Had a great time at her concert, and will go again in the future should the opportunity arise. The best outcome isn't only the concert itself, though. She's so impactful, that seeing her trying to learn a few sentences of different languages in her World Tour Concerts to be able to make her fans happy across the world finally motivated me to push forward with my plans to improve my literacy in Korean, hoping that one day I'll be able to sing her songs in Hangul.

I've indicated a few times my interest in the Korean Language and tried at least 2 times on two separate occasions (the most recent being July 2021 as seen in my Instagram Story previously) but on all occasions, the motivation failed to last. This time around, I took classes and without realizing it, it's already been almost 3-4 months since I first started. Progression is shocking indeed when we give ourselves some space to look back.

Attending IU's Concert in Malaysia on 8 June 2024
An Instagram Story that I posted back in July 2021 indicating my interest to learn Korean

Now, going back to our usual monthly update for my finances and portfolios.


My Financials

Expenses

January - Jun 2024 Expenses At A Glance

Compared with the same period last year, my overall spending had increased by 1.14x. But when looking closer, most of the increase was due to the aggressive mortgage repayment strategy that I have started doing since last December. My leisure spending (non-essentials) was reduced by almost half vs. the same period last year. So far it's still pretty manageable and no alarms have been set off, yet.

Also for those of you who are sharp-eyed, yes, the expenses chart looked slightly different this time around as I've moved to a new budgeting app. Will write more about it in a separate post considering the dramatic shift that I've done, after being a loyal user of the previous app for more than a decade.

Savings Rate

Savings Rate as of June 2024
Savings Trend as of June 2024
Savings Target as of June 2024

Based on the current spending patterns, should be still on track to achieve the savings rate of 55% by year-end. Though the aggressive mortgage repayment plan has dragged down my savings rate, on the plus side I'll eventually accelerate my mortgage settlement and incur a lower interest rate in the long run.

Emergency Jar

Savings Jar as of June 2024

No updates for the Jar - I've spent close to RM2.2k for various expenses incurred due to family emergencies - from medical to dental to car repairs. The jar gave me ample buffer to handle these surprises as they come, and it's worth every penny.


My "Freedom" Investments

Performance

Freedom Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of June 2024
Freedom Portfolio Year-to-Date Performance as of June 2024

Activities

Following my last quarter's update, I've finally pushed the buttons to start consolidating my portfolio to a few-fund portfolio, mainly driven by VWRA (World Stock Index Fund), 3040.HK (China Stock Index Fund), and IGLN (Gold Index Fund). The consolidation will be staggered throughout the next few years but over time, the goal is to reduce individual stock holdings except for some of those dividend stocks considering that there are no harm in having some (albeit minimal) cashflows from dividend receipt.

The US market is still soaring to new highs on a month-to-month basis, so that has helped to make my portfolio look green. Definitely thankful for that, considering that some of the consolidation mentioned above means that I'm locking in some of my losses (or transferring from single-stock to equivalent region index fund).

Allocation

Freedom Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of June 2024

My pile of cash-equivalents grew pretty big in recent months and I do not intend for it to go anywhere above 35% in my portfolio strategy. The struggle for me is mainly that in a high-interest rate environment and with global markets at an all-time high, it's mentally harder than I've imagined to practice what I always preach - time in the market rather than timing the market.

I'm still in the market though, with my quarterly transfers from MYR to USD for my scheduled recurring investment in VWRA. But no plans to dump all my cash / cash-equivalents into stock, yet.

Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of June 2024
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of June 2024

Snapshot as of 30 June 2024

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 0.12%
ROI: 0.17%
Profit/Loss: RM552.01

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: 8.92%
ROI: 11.87%
Profit/Loss: RM52,385.13
True Cost: RM391,172.55
Total Value: RM492,385.81
Entrance Value: RM423,756.44
Portfolio Value: RM473,230.34

Nett Dividend (2024): RM1,700.09

Active Portfolio as of June 2024

Net Worth Updates

Net Worth Tracker as of June 2024

This quarter marks the official celebration of my finally-acquired "millionaire" status. It was amazing how the whole US market and Cryptocurrency craze had managed to shoot up my net-worth value faster than my initial forecast. Ironically, in my updates last year I decided to shift the goalpost by 1 year, to achieving 1 million net worth by 2025 due to concerns of not achieving it this year, due to the lagging progress.

I'm going to celebrate this milestone, considering how far I've come since overcoming my life-changing depression in 2016/7 to who & what I am today. 🥳


If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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Ringgit Freedom’s March 2024 Updates https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-march-2024-updates/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-march-2024-updates/#comments Sun, 14 Apr 2024 14:58:43 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5765 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

The post Ringgit Freedom’s March 2024 Updates appeared first on Ringgit Freedom.

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I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

I promise today's update will just be a short one - just wanted to give everyone a quick update since my last post in December 2023.

Life's been treating me good so far - that I managed to snag some IU concert tickets for myself & friends to finally attend her upcoming 2024 IU H.E.R. WORLD TOUR CONCERT IN KUALA LUMPUR. Expensive, yes. Probably one of the few artists/singers whom I'm willing to splurge on concert tickets ❤️

As committed last year to my 2024 Goals, I've also finally made plans and booked my hotel & flights for my upcoming holidays in Taiwan. Things were happy & well until the recent news hit on Hualien's Worst Earthquake in 25 years (that's where I was planning to go). Fingers crossed for the victims, and hopefully, the casualties are minimized.

Now, going back to our usual monthly update for my finances and portfolios.


My Financials

Expenses

January - March 2024 Expenses At A Glance

I've spent 1.66x more compared to the same period last year - but this is primarily driven by the aggressive repayment plan that I've started since last year on my Home Mortgage Loan - as I'm trying to de-risk as much as possible considering my upcoming migration plans. Better to leave with minimal debt so that I have a fall-back plan back home. I'll probably detail more on this topic when if I finally decide to write about my migration plans.

Additionally, the commitment to the holiday plans required me to book some of the costs in advance (i.e. flights & hotel bookings) - which also contributed to the increase in my expenditures. As for the rest.

There were a few other spending within my budget limits - but mostly rounded off by the two biggest expenditures above so I won't be going through them.

Savings Rate

Savings Rate as of March 2024
Savings Trend as of March 2024
Savings Target as of March 2024

2024 is probably the year that I will be setting a new trend of savings rate for myself. Considering that more than half of my budget was allocated towards aggressive mortgage payments, my savings rate is impacted since I actualised the mortgage payments in my budget file ahead of payment schedules.

Emergency Jar

Savings Jar as of March 2024

Nothing changed here - I'm still holding onto my 12-month emergency jar for the worst-case scenario (or opportunities) that may arise. Considering the ever-depreciating MYR currency, I'm definitely considering moving it from my MYR Home-Flexi account (approx. 4.5%/annum) to overseas FD with stronger currency (Maybe SGD?).


My "Freedom" Investments

Performance

Freedom Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of March 2024
Freedom Portfolio Year-to-Date Performance as of March 2024

I'm definitely happy with the ongoing upward trends both in the world of Cryptocurrency and US stocks. After approximately 3 years of depressing returns, I finally get to see some upticks in my overall portfolio. How long will this last? I don't know. Will just keep riding the investment wave.

One sad thing that had happened to my portfolio tho - two of my individual stock picks had either went through the process of delisting or privatisation, forcing me to sell my stocks and effectively locking in the losses in my portfolio permanently.

Lessons learnt: I am not suitable to pick individual stocks, value investing or not.

Allocation

Freedom Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of March 2024
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of March 2024
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of March 2024

Snapshot as of 31 Mar 2024

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 1.83%
ROI: 2.62%
Profit/Loss: RM5,012.29

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: 4.87%
ROI: 7.25%
Profit/Loss: RM32,906.36
True Cost: RM420,145.23
Total Value: RM512,575.98
Entrance Value: RM401,376.05
Portfolio Value: RM440,655.68

Nett Dividend (2024): RM653.62

Active Portfolio as of March 2024

Net Worth Updates

Net Worth Tracker as of March 2024

With all that said - my net worth jumped quite significantly this quarter thanks to the surge in Portfolio Value, the release of KWSP Dividend 2023, as well as my windfall gains in March 2024. So far, I am still on track towards my goal of achieving 1 Million Net Worth by 2025. 🤞🏻


If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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2023 in Review: Slowing Down Actually Took Me Further https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/2023-in-review-slowing-down-actually-took-me-further/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/2023-in-review-slowing-down-actually-took-me-further/#respond Fri, 05 Jan 2024 09:17:05 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5672 I decided to take a step back and slow down in the year of 2023. Who would've known that slowing down actually took me much further in life?

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Taking the lessons learnt during the year 2022, I've decided to approach this year at a more sustainable pace so that I don't get burnt out again. And who've known that slowing down in life, actually took me further?

It may sound cringe at first (trust me, I felt the same way too at first) - but slowing down DID take me further. How so, you may ask?

  • Firstly, slowing down has given me enough "me time" to introspect and ask myself what I want to prioritize in life.
  • Secondly, slowing down has allowed me to "say no" to things that do not align with my priorities - rather than jumping from one thing to another based on what others want of me.

Being the career-focused woman that I am, can you imagine that I rejected a lateral promotion/movement, for the first time in my life?

This career opportunity would've allowed me to expand my career horizontally with bigger responsibilities had I accepted it in the first place, allowing me to further expand my growth, at the price of my mental energy. The usual me would've jumped at any growth opportunities with zero hesitation - after all, career growth equals potential better pay/experience, which would've benefitted me in the long run for sure.

However, taking the first few months of the year to introspect, I've known what I wanted in life, at least directionally. Whilst potential career growth is nice, it doesn't fit into the bigger picture of what I want to piece out of my life. The puzzle simply doesn't fit and goals do not align.

Don't get me wrong though, amidst the economic instabilities in recent years, I'm very thankful that my company still plays a huge part in building up my career, investing significantly in my personal growth, as well as rewarding me financially. It's just that rather than walking a path decided by others, I've decided to create my own path.

Am I still in the same company that I was working with over the last decade? Yes. But I've come to accept the fact that I may have to eventually give up all the glories and titles, as well as financial incentives, to create my pathways going forward. I'll probably delve deeper into this topic in the future when things are more or less cast in stone. Still too early to say anything for now as I didn't want to count the chickens before they hatch 🙂

Mental health-wise, in case it's not obvious enough already - I am feeling better, so much better compared to 2022 and 2021 with better clarity of mind. All I want is just to slow down my pace in life, be there in the present and do whatever I feel like doing (or not doing) without being guilt-tripped. And take small steps, day by day, towards the end-game that I want to achieve beyond just the numbers.

After all, Slow and Steady wins the race, eh? I guess life is truly a marathon and not a sprint...



My Financials

Expenses

I was actually in shock when I did my financial closing this year.

I know I wanted to cut myself some slack and give myself some window to breathe and live life as it is, instead of living life in numbers. But I wasn't ready to see an increase of WHOPPING 110% IN TOTAL ANNUAL EXPENSES!!! With more than double my total spending last year.

I mean, take a look at this. Who wouldn't be shocked simply by glancing at the summary below? Pretty sure I nearly had a heart attack...

Yearly Expenses Summary as of December 2023

Being the Detective Pikachu that I am - I decided to delve deeper into the numbers.

To my relief, I found out that whilst there has been an increase in my overall expenditures, it is still within a much more reasonable and expected range, considering my relaxed spending requirements (following Ramit Sethi's "Living a Rich Life" bible) plus a few vacation trips that I took throughout 2023.

Much of the increase in my overall expenditures is caused by either (1) paying down my mortgage quicker, or; (2) one-off expenditures related to migration overseas (and still barely scratching the surface so far). Both of these are utilizing the buffers in my budget which I've built over the last 2 years in their respective categories.

It's a long topic by itself - but long story short, the surge of expenditures in these two categories is related to the decision I've made personally to migrate overseas in the near/mid-term. I'll have a post dedicated to the whole story of migrating overseas when the time is right.

But as far as analyzing my expenditures this year, when I normalize my spending and exclude these two expenditures, the figures are much more reasonable and less scary in my opinion.

Yearly Expenses Summary as of December 2023 (Normalized)

Anyway, after normalizing the expenditures, it's rather easy (and obvious) to tell where the huge spike came from. I mean, I can better stomach an increase of 26% in overall expenditures as compared to 110%, especially knowing for a fact that 11% out of the 26% increase comes from travelling alone with the rest scattered throughout other categories.

If I double-click my overall expenditures (of ~200K MYR) in 2023, just to give a full picture:


Home: Additional Mortgage Principal Repayments ~RM59.9k

This is the biggest block of my expenditure this year - sucking up most (not all, thankfully) of my budget buffers built up over the last two years. As I plan to migrate overseas in the near/mid-term, I decided to derisk my overall financial portfolio and try to pay down as much as possible on my only debt obligations before I plunge into the unknown-unknowns.

After all, no one knows if things will go south when I decide to migrate overseas and lose my solid career back home in Malaysia (as well as financial rewards), hence the driving factor for me to make this decision to pay up the mortgage sooner rather than later.

These additional mortgage principal repayments are on top of what I'm already paying on a month-to-month basis, which is a separate ~RM21.9k by itself, made up of mandatory principal + interest repayments. The whole point is to pay my mortgage sooner than the original 35-year mortgage plan.

For clarity, these figures (~RM59.9k) are excluded from the normalized version of the yearly expenses.


Migration: All sorts of fees related to pre-requisites of Visa Application ~RM20.7k

Migration is a loooooooooooooong game, more than what I anticipated initially. Again, more details on this topic in the future when the time is right.

But long story short, to be allowed to migrate to Australia I'll first need a Visa - be it an Employer-sponsored Working Visa or Independent Skilled Regional Working Visa or Independent Skilled Permanent Residency Visa.

Before I can even qualify to express my interest in these Visas, I need to sit through a bunch of assessments/tests to prep my profile and pray for my profile to get selected. Of course, these expenditures do include consultation with Migration Lawyers.

For clarity, these figures (~RM20.7k) are excluded from the normalized version of the yearly expenses.


Luxury: Paying down my iPhone, Upgrades for PC, and a Quest 2 VR headset ~RM12.5k

I bought an iPhone 14 Pro last year and decided on a whim to put it on my 0% Installment Plan - but this year, when consolidating/closing down my unused credit cards, I had to pay it down in full (~5k) resulting in actualizing the costs this year, rather than the initial plan of paying it down over 3 years.

I've also spent quite a bit on upgrading my PC with a few parts purchased (~3.5k), and spending on the not-too-new Meta Quest 2 thinking I'd be using it to exercise daily (~3k). It worked for about two months but when I stopped exercising for a few weeks due to health issues, I couldn't restart my habits since then >.<. To add salt to the wound, Meta announced their Quest 3 series a few months after I bought mine.

This gadget category is a long-lasting problem that I need to crack - as it stands right now, the spending is still too impulsive driven with no proper plans for it. Next year onwards, I'm going to try out a "savings goals plan" (in my YNAB budget) for buying gadgets, rather than not having any plans at all to control my impulsive gadget-buying behaviours.


Luxury: Holiday Travels ~RM11.1k

I had crafted a goal end of last year, to visit at least one overseas country and enjoy my holiday break this year. Something that I've never done since 2019 before COVID-19 shut down international borders.

The result? I ended up spending almost 3 weeks in Australia to meet up with my best friend there and disconnect myself from the world... the reality. Gosh, I never knew taking a long (proper) break to recharge was so good. Now I wonder what I've been doing the last couple of years to burn off my leave just like that.

The bill could've been much higher, if not for the accommodation provided by my friend.


Luxury: Varietal spending on digital game or game credit/token purchases ~RM2.7k

At least the numbers went down this year eh? It is still my sole copium method to get through my days, by enjoying/immersing myself in games. At least I don't smoke, so I guess it's kinda justified to spend on games heh. For smokers, that's equivalent to approximately one pack every two days 😛


0% Debts

As mentioned earlier - I paid off my iPhone's 0% plan in full but towards year-end, added another small 0% purchase of a Dyson Hairdryer (~RM1.2k) as my mom's hairdryer needed a replacement.

Outstanding 0% Credit Card Installments as of December 2023

Again - same as last year, I took the shortcut way out to make my impulsive purchase (at least I tell myself it's for my mom, so it's worth it, to feel less guilty about it) via 0% plans rather than making a plan for it. Pun intended.


Savings Rate

This year was a bit tricky to analyze due to the surge in expenditures due to the additional principal repayments for my mortgage and also one-off costs related to migration. As covered in the Expenses section above, I'll have to share two versions of the savings rate.

If we look at the first set of charts, it is pretty scary as I've only managed to save approximately ~27% of my annual net income, with an out-of-bound dip in December where I spent double my net income that month.

Savings Trend as of December 2023
Savings Target as of December 2023

However, if we delve deeper and exclude the additional mortgage repayments / migration-related expenses; the savings rate is rather healthy - right on track against the target of a 55% Savings Rate which I've set out for 2023 previously.

Savings Trend as of December 2023 (Normalized)
Savings Target as of December 2023 (Normalized)

One thing's for sure though, my actual monies are "kinda gone" since I've already allocated it to pay down my mortgage (but I can withdraw anytime if needed leveraging the zero-penalty fully flexi facility) and actual expenditures on visa-related matters, so I'll be using the actualized 27% savings rate as my baseline for 2023.

I won't punish myself for "not hitting the target", though. Since the monies are spent on things that I want, aligning with "My Rich Life" goals, and are planned for. These monies were saved from 2021-2022 exactly for these purposes, anyway.

I'll let you be the judge here - should my savings rate be 27% or 56% for 2023? Let me know in the comments below!


Emergency Jar

Pretty much the status quo here since my Ringgit Freedom’s June 2021 Updates: Mid-Year Checkpoint when I decided to expand my emergency jar from 6 months' expenses worth to 12 months' expenses worth.

Savings Jar as of December 2023

My "Freedom" Investments

Unlike the past year's review, I'll be reviewing both my "Freedom" portfolio followed by my "Total" portfolio which is inclusive of EPF-managed funds.

Funding

This year continued the downward trend since 2021, with slightly under ~RM50K contribution as of the end of 2023. The main factors are related to migration as well - with most of my free cash flow aggressively channelled to the additional principal repayments on my mortgage, there simply isn't enough excess cash flow to invest aggressively.

The lack of discipline and being forgetful doesn't help either (since I no longer have an auto debit facility) - without an automated mechanism put back in place I ended up noticing that I'll attempt to "time the market", going against my advice to others to focus on time in the market rather than trying to time the market.

Well, I've with the introduction of Recurring Investments by Interactive Broker, hopefully, I can at least regain my consistency when it comes to investing throughout 2024.

Yearly Freedom Portfolio Funding as of December 2023 (excluding EPF)

Performance

Truth be told, I'm not that happy with my portfolio performance this year. I can feel some of the burnt based off decisions I've committed to, approximately two years ago. Maybe I would've done better off just having a single-stock portfolio (VWRA) and left it stacked since then.

My portfolio barely maintained a breakeven with the gains on the US sides counterbalanced by losses stacked up on my China holdings and some of the questionable individual stock picks I've done in the past.

Lessons learnt tho - I'm NOT the type for picking individual stocks, except for some of those blue-chip dividend stocks. Am I doubtful of my decisions made? Yes. But I also know that it's all only a paper loss and the tide may (or may never) turn so I'll choose to stick my gun for now. Let's see how long my resolve can last me.

Freedom Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of December 2023
Freedom Portfolio Year-to-Date Performance as of December 2023

Allocation

If you haven't noticed already, yes, my cash pile actually grew and almost doubled its size compared to 2022 December.

Reason for cash accumulation? I'm still waiting for an opportunity to jump back into (yes I know I shouldn't time the market) and on the other hand, I was trimming the number of holdings I had in my portfolio (one at a time) but hasn't really bought-back into the market yet. On the plus side, these cash are held in currencies other than MYR, so there's a bit of the hedging effect there too, so not all is lost.

My individual stock holdings are shrinking in size - sadly, not due to consolidation of portfolio but rather wiped-out values of some of my stock - such as the ongoing BABA (9988.HK) saga, the wipeout of value stocks (on paper previously), etc. The losses are painful, and I've yet to cut them off yet. But I've learnt very well that I'm NOT SUITABLE for stock-picking, except for dividend stocks which I'm pretty proud of my selections so far.

Freedom Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of December 2023

My freedom portfolio is almost 9 years old 🥳 and can you imagine that I'm only getting 1.5% return (IRR) out of it!?!? On a more serious note, if factoring only my realized portion of my portfolio, it'd sit at ~5.5% IRR which is not too bad, comparable to EPF but with much more effort required. It's the unrealized portion of my active portfolio (heavily influenced by the China downturn) that drags down my performance.

Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of December 2023
Freedom Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of December 2023

On the longer-term view, I still hope that I won't be too far off in terms of correctness. Like why would I wish myself to be wrong and lose money!? In any case, I still refuse to go all-in US-only so VWRA and ONLY VWRA with ~60% US and 40% Rest of World is my answer going forward.


My "Total" Investments

This is probably my first time having a dedicated section by itself, to allow for a holistic view of my true total portfolio after factoring in the monstrous EPF holdings. In the initial years I didn't want to include these in my review as the numbers are heavily mismatched between my Freedom Portfolio vs. EPF Portfolio but now that the numbers are much closer, I think it's the best time to introduce it.

Of course, EPF being EPF, there isn't much to talk about really - especially since we have not even received our 2023 dividends yet.

Funding

Rather than the controllable "funding" amount, I guess showing the overall growth would make more sense here. After all, EPF contributions are mandatory for all salary makers anyway. Here you can still see that funds in my EPF still outweigh whatever I hold & invest personally outside of the EPF ecosystems.

Yearly Total Portfolio Growth as of December 2023 (including EPF)

Performance

Similar to the Freedom Portfolio performance history earlier, except with EPF bits overlayed on top of it. Still not accurate tho, as we're still missing the dividend rate announcement from EPF Malaysia. Chart will be re-adjusted later in March/April once the final rates are announced - as I usually backdate the recognition in my portfolio resulting in a "Heartbeat" spike every year for EPF's performance.

Total Portfolio Launch-to-Date Performance as of December 2023
Total Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of December 2023

Allocation

In the holistic view of my portfolio allocation, the rather-low allocation in the US definitely caught my attention. Will definitely need to get the ratios back up to maintain balance between the two (China:US).

Total Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of December 2023
Total Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of December 2023

Net Worth Updates

Amidst a chaotic year of 2023 with some precursors to life-changing decisions in the coming short to mid-term, I'm still very proud of what I have achieved - of course eternally grateful to my Company for building me up and investing in myself - both learning and financially. My current net worth sits at approximately ~RM720K.

Just in case for those who are reading my year review for the first time - for my net worth calculation, I typically exclude the primary residence that I’m currently staying in, in the essence that it generates all the expenses/liabilities associated with home-ownership with no ability to generate income. Even if I choose to sell it, there'll be heavy costs associated with it when time is not on my side so I took an aggressive $0 value assumption for such primary residence.

This concept was popularised by Robert Kiyosaki's Rich Dad Poor Dad. However, I know that some of you, especially finance enthusiasts and/or accountants would prefer to stick with the standard accounting principles so there's also an additional dotted line for that which accounts for my home value based on past transaction values with a haircut of ~10% for miscellaneous fees associated with sales of a home.

Net Worth Tracker as of December 2023

As you can see, my "1M2024" (achieving 1mil net worth using my formula by end of 2024) goalpost has been shifted to 1 year later a.k.a "1M2025" to create some space for myself.

For eagled-eyed ones, you would also notice that I no longer generate my 15-year net worth forecast as there are simply too many variables given my decision to migrate. I could end up 10 years poorer rolling back my progress so far once I take the migration decision and execute it, who knows?


2023 Goals Revisited

In 2023, I've set rather simple goals to counter the burnt-out experience I've faced in 2022:

Goal #1: Achieve at least 55% Annualised Savings Rate

Similar to last year - this is hopefully an easy one to achieve by riding on the savings momentum whilst not over-depriving myself to focus only on saving but forget to enjoy life.

Goal #2: Arrange 1x Overseas Trip for Holidays

Perhaps something that I've missed the most is to travel overseas and just go adventure around. I don't know where to go yet, perhaps Korea or Australia? The purpose is really only to divert my spending on experience rather than more and more things.

Goal #3: Finding/Regaining My "Ikigai"

Perhaps the most important goal of them all. I've been losing my motivation and staying depressed for a little far too long, and I needed a new "goal" to look forward in life - something beyond grinding on the hamsters wheel.

For too long, I have focused on and only on tangible goals such as career progression, making and preserving monies, buying tangible stuff, progressing further in career to make more monies, etc.

Read more: 2022 in Review: An Autopilot Year

That's it. Those were indeed the only goals I had set for myself last year, clearing my headspace to ensure that I can capitalize on moments as I unlock "new" opportunities, goals or objectives utilizing those free headspace.

Similar to 2022, I wanted to celebrate what we have achieved this year, in no particular order 🥳

  1. ringgitfreedom.com website is still technically alive (albeit still on life support) and is almost 4 years old!
  2. Kinda-achieved my 56% Annualised Savings Rate target if I park aside planned huge expenditures for good reasons.
  3. Arranged 2x Overseas Trip for Holidays - with one of them in my dream destination (Australia) for a prolonged period (close to 3 weeks)!
  4. Managed to do a bit of soul-searching through introspection and found a few key puzzle pieces that I desperately needed to navigate the next few decades of my life. Not the full puzzle yet, but good enough directionally.
  5. Passed my English IELTS Test and scored an Overall Band 7.5
  6. Passed my Project Management PMP Certification with Triple Above Target.
  7. Completed yet another 8 weeks' worth of strategy course with assignments.
  8. Having completed several key milestones for the Australian Immigration journey. Still a long way to go, but much closer than when I started the year!
  9. Experiencing COVID-19 on the last day of the year. No really, I am truly grateful to have not caught it since 2019 (this is my first ☠️). Really gotta be careful what you wish for.

Plans for 2024

In the spirit of simplicity and don't fix what ain't broken, I hereby copy-pasta my goals from last year with a low-effort plan! Jokes aside, with potential migration that needs to be accounted for, it is better for me to keep things simple


Goal #1: Achieve at least 55% Annualised Savings Rate (Normalized)

Similar to the last few years - this is hopefully an easy one to achieve by riding on the savings momentum whilst not over-depriving myself to focus only on saving but forgetting to enjoy life. I oughta to be more specific here as well since I foresee the ongoing momentum to beat down my mortgage extremely aggressively in 2024, coupled with potential one-offs due to migration expenditures.

The 55% Annualised Savings Rate here will be benched against the normalized savings rate to ensure consistency over the last 5 years

Goal #2: Plan Another True Holiday

I truly enjoyed the 3-weeks break I had this year for a proper holiday. I never thought I would enjoy them. Whilst I'm not sure if I can afford another 3-weeks holidays this year, I'm looking forward to plan for another true holiday, perhaps bringing my mom to Hong Kong (still trying to persuade her otherwise, there really isn't much to see in Hong Kong and she's been there twice already...) or somewhere else?

Goal #3: Carefully Craft a Move-Out Plan with Backups

Beating down my mortgage with additional principal repayments is one of those backup plans - if all else fails, at least that'll be the source of my cushion to allow me enough time to recuperate without being forced to liquidate my investment portfolios. That will be something that I'll continuously work on over the next year.

What's more important tho, perhaps closer to the end of 2024, is to craft a move-out plan with more granularities by further refining my current high-level timelines. I'll need to start researching on nitty gritty so that I won't have to scramble at the last minute to decide where to stay, where to work, submit resumes everywhere hoping to nail a new job in a foreign land, etc.


Final Thoughts

The next few years would possibly be yet another pivotal moment in my life, if not the biggest one.

Whilst I'm looking forward to changes that I've been eagerly waiting for, I'm equally worried for my future as well.

Truth be told, I've been living in a very comfortable position for far too long. With good pay and a solid career in my hand, at least for the foreseeable decade, I can easily just cruise through another 10 years and based on the forecast I've done previously, I think I would've easily crossed the RM4mil - RM6mil net worth mark, simply just by cruising through life/work.

But I know by now that this is not the life I want to have in the next decade. Maybe it's just the whole "grass is greener on the other side" that I'm feeling right now, that drives me to move out of Malaysia. But maybe it's also true - that the other side can offer me things/status/sense of security that Malaysia never can. One day, I promise to share everything - including the personal motivational factors driving this change for myself and when the time comes, maybe you can be the judge too, and tell me about my decision. Only when the time, after the "D-Day", so that I will not waver.

Throughout the article, you may notice that I've used Ramit Sethi's "Living a Rich Life" reference. Just to call out early on, I am in no way affiliated with him and I don't think Ramit even knows my existence :D. It just happened by chance when I stumbled upon his (video) podcasts on my YouTube Recommendation feed and I loved his method of "budgeting" as part of it resonated well with me, on how to design my "rich life" (the exact life that I want) and budget/spend on it without feeling guilty - something that I've been experimenting with but struggled to find the perfect way around it.

At least, this is one of the puzzle pieces I've found that may or may not solve what I want to achieve in the long run - to design and own "My Rich Life". I know what I'm going for, and I'm also aware of the risks ahead of me. At the end of the journey, I may potentially take some hit in my financials, or even lose all of my decades' worth of hard work resetting back to zero (or at worse, negatives). But I still want to try - at least that way, I won't be stuck in a position of guilt & regrets for not trying in the future.

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

Cheers,
Gracie

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Ringgit Freedom’s June 2023 Updates: Mid-Year Checkpoint https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-june-2023-updates-mid-year-checkpoint/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-june-2023-updates-mid-year-checkpoint/#respond Sat, 01 Jul 2023 07:12:39 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5608 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

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I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

Decided to do a mid-year checkpoint for this year since it has been almost half a year since I last shared an update on this blog (the quarterly numbers update at My Portfolio aside). Good time for me to also review my financial state since I've been sidelining it for a while.

Sometime around the end of last year, I decided that I will be taking 2023 slow and set almost zero achievement-oriented targets except for the annual savings rate. That actually worked well in my favour as it tremendously relieved me from the constant pressure of "I have not done this and that and that yet!", reducing the feeling of guilt and providing me the headspace needed to recalibrate my goals.

Whilst I won't deny that the year thus far has NOT been hustle-free even by slowing down (I actually achieved more), the switch of mindset from "I need to do X because I have to hit my targets" towards a more self-motivated "I need to do X because that's what I want and it aligns with my long term goals" actually helped me to achieve goals, or rather, drag my feet towards the right direction towards my goal, to say the least. One example is - I've finally gotten the PMP Certification which was long overdue since last year. Do I really want the cert? Maybe. But will it help with my long-term goal? Definitely. More on in the next sections later.

Sometime in mid-Feb to mid-March of this year, I finally acknowledged that my source of burnout last year was caused by several things - one of them being the constant pursuit of career growth whilst ignoring the fundamental sense of belonging/sense of freedom that I've always wanted. Don't get me wrong, the career growths that I've got are what got me here today, closer to the financial freedom that I've wanted. But I've come to realize and acknowledge the fact that financial freedom is only one of the many pillars in life that I want to have and they're not the single source of truth. Neither do careers.

Whilst I don't have the complete answer yet to what I want to achieve in the end, one thing that's clear for me is that I need a change. A change of environment - for the better or for the worse. I've always wanted to have a taste of life living overseas, outside of Malaysia where fundamental human rights are guaranteed even for the minorities, protected by the legalities unlike here back home. But I haven't been making hard progress, to take the actual steps forward, toward this goal and sadly I've only come to realize/accept it now.

The good thing is, I've finally started to take my baby steps forward to prepare for my migration to Australia. Will life really be better there? I don't know. But how else will I find out other than actually trying it? That's where the earlier mentioned PMP Certification helps me as it provides me with a baseline on jobs that I can potentially secure, at a bare minimum level.

Maybe I'll write a dedicated post on this topic someday, sharing the ups and downs of my journey towards this step, when I'm closer to achieving it. As of now, I'm barely starting and there are plenty more hurdles ahead of me. Let me know in the comments if you'd like me to write on this topic! If there's one thing I want myself to take away in the first half of this year - slowing down actually worked in my favour. Remember that, Gracie.

Now, let's go back to our half-year checkpoint for my finances and portfolios. Since I no longer post updates on a monthly basis, I've decided to tweak the format a little so that I can cover the first half of the year more comprehensively.


Mid-Year Checkpoint: My Savings Rate & Budget

Savings Rate

Savings Rate as at Jun 2023
Savings Trend as at December 2022

My savings over the last few months have been taking a hit really, especially since April. For the first time ever, I had a negative savings rate - to the point that I had to revise my Excel Template to be able to generate my monthly savings trendline without breaking major graphical components 😅

I don't have any other excuses other than poor control of my impulsive behaviour under stress. More details on the spending right next.

Will I still hit my target savings rate this year? I don't know - let's see. Only time will tell.

Savings Target as at December 2022

Expenses

Jan - Jun 2023 Expenses At A Glance

I had to analyse my spending behaviours during the first half of the year when I was preparing to write this blog post. Whilst I was aware that I have been spending a lot recently, even the amount shocked me. I spent 1.74x more than last year when comparing the same period.

Approximately ~18% of my expenses during the first half of the year were spent on gadgets & games. A new VR fitness headset, a new graphics card for my computer, and some games/game credits purchase here and there. Also, I decided to write off my iPhone purchase last year and recognized its remaining balance expenses in full rather than the original plan to divide it across 36 months till Sep 2025 (due to 0% instalment plans).

What's not helping is also the dip into emergency spending occasionally when my extended family had injuries/emergencies requiring some help; big wedding ang-pao for one of my closest friend's marriage; and also the miscellaneous costs associated with my Australia migration journey. I'll have to keep a tighter belt, hopefully, over the next few months, and try to respect my zero-based budgeting principles (rather than spend and pray).

On the bright side - part of the major expenses are also spent towards my 2023's Goal and Objectives - to travel overseas for holidays.

Emergency Jar

Savings Jar as at Jun 2023

Despite dipping into the Jar quite recently sometime in Feb/Mar, I managed to top it back up to 100% of my funded amount by the end of this month, keeping myself and my family protected from unforeseen events.


Mid-Year Checkpoint: Net-Worth Update

Net Worth Tracker as at Jun 2023

A quick snapshot of my net worth - having crossed the MYR 600K mark (or 1 million mark, if including the stake in my own-stay property). Am I proud of how far I have come compared to 10 years ago, being broke and poor? Definitely. But as I've come to the realization - financial freedom is only one of the many pillars in life that I treasure, and should not be the only thing that I blindly pursue (through career growth).

I will still definitely celebrate this moment (perhaps I have already done so - through the various "impulsive" spending behaviours the last couple of months); but I don't want to make this the only thing in life that I'm living for.

Also for those of you new here - you may be wondering why I explicitly exclude my own-stay property when calculating my net worth. The answer is simple - basically, the property generates many of the expenses/liabilities with no ability to generate income, tying my cash flow down – a concept popularised from Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki.


Mid-Year Checkpoint: Portfolio Review

Funding

Freedom Portfolio Funding as at Jun 2023 (excluding EPF)

Truthfully, I did not pump in as much of my free cash flow into my Freedom Portfolio as I have initially planned for. I have slowed down the investments in my Freedom Portfolio and started diverting some of them to cash-ready assets - either as a sinking fund to pay down my mortgage in the near future or as a seeding fund for my upcoming migration to Australia. Knowing that I'll be needing lots of liquidity sooner than anticipated, I kept most of my cash in my full flexi mortgage account so that it is ready for use when needed.

To offset potential currency fluctuations (looking at you, MYR), I have also started to convert some of it into SGD/AUD when the exchange rate is in my favour (though rarely).

Performance

Portfolio as at Jun 2023 (Total View)
Portfolio as at Jun 2023 (Year View)

Overall, the portfolio still sits mostly near the zero zone, fluctuating between the +/- 2% range. It'll just be a slow year, or even decade, I guess.

Allocation

Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as at Jun 2023 (excluding EPF)
Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as at Jun 2023 (including EPF)

When looking at my portfolio allocation both inclusive or exclusive of EPF portfolio - I definitely have a higher allocation towards the Commodities (mainly Gold ETF) and Fixed Income (mostly SGD Fixed Deposit) market as a hedge, as compared to my all-in onto Equities market the last couple of year.

This could end up being a wrong decision on my part, fuelled by emotions (worry & fear), but that's what I need to feel comfortable with the ongoing volatility considering the huge expenses coming my way - potentially requiring way more liquidity than anticipated.

Perhaps - it is also the thought of potentially losing my current high-pay job, though voluntarily, to go on a new adventure, that freaks me out. Knowing that I will definitely quit my high-paying job soon - only question is when and how.


Portfolio Snapshot

"Freedom" Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as at Jun 2023
Total Portfolio Overview (Freedom vs. EPF)

Snapshot as of 30 June 2023

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 5.34%
ROI: 8.01%
Profit/Loss: RM10,410.10

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: -(1.17%)
ROI: -(1.81%)
Profit/Loss: -(RM6,504.67)
True Cost: RM350,592.79
Total Value: RM360,596.13
Entrance Value: RM324,402.78
Portfolio Value: RM329,644.90

Nett Dividend (2023): RM1,126.61

Active Portfolio as at Jun 2023

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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2022 in Review: An Autopilot Year https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/2022-in-review-an-autopilot-year/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/2022-in-review-an-autopilot-year/#comments Sun, 08 Jan 2023 08:39:02 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5442 2022 hasn't been easy year for me mentally, resulting in downtimes. Without much interventions this year, how did my finances fare this year?

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I lost my motivation, passion and energy completely sometime in April/May 2022 and became extremely depressed going into a downward spiral. With the lack of motivation and passion, I basically spent most of my time doing typical unproductive activities - things like binge-watching on Netflix, playing Games, or Sleep more than usual.

As a result, most part of this year's journey has been on autopilot mode, with near zero interventions from me unlike back in 2020/21 where I was heavily invested (time wise) in the personal finance space.

Closer to the end of the year, thanks to my Psychologist, I finally managed to partially get hold of myself by focusing only on things that I can control, one at a time. This managed to significantly lower the stress, the overwhelming feeling and also the frustration with myself / workplace that have been haunting me throughout the months.

Whilst I'm definitely not out of the woods yet, but things have became so much better and less cloudy compared to months ago - so much that I can at least have some level of energy and a clear-thinking head to write this post.

Without further ado, let's jump straight into our 2022's Year in Review!

image source: quickmeme.com


My Personal Financials

Savings Rate

Surprisingly, despite my mental state taking a downward spiral since May '22, my personal finances philosophy somewhat managed to hold itself out throughout the 7 months without much intervention on its own autopilot mode.

I guess the constant staying-at-home (gaming / Netflix-ing) with only occasional shopping, plus the slightly increased income vs. 2022 January baseline levels helping me to sail through without much financial damanges done.

Overall, I managed to achieve the targeted Annual Savings Rate of 60% (originally targetted for 58%) for year ending 2022, which I'm very proud of.

Maybe except the sudden splurge on gadgets & accessories in November more on that later.

Savings Trend as of December 2022
Savings Target as of December 2022

Emergency Jar

To share another bright news - a goal that I have started since mid-2021 to expand my Emergency Jar from the typical 6-months (expenses) buffer to a 12-months buffer (as explained in my June 2021's Update post) have finally been completed since middle of the 2022.

Whilst I certainly hope that I will never need to dip into the chunks of the Emergency Jar any time in the foreseeable future, it is still a great peace of mind especially knowing that recession is coming and I am ready for it.

Savings Jar as of December 2022

Expenses

Taking an overall glance at my expenses this year, there isn't too much of a drastic change compared to last year where majority of my expenditure comes in the form of housing ownership as well as sustaining the family.

I guess it's a blessing in disguise that I'm still single and only have my mom to care of - so at the very least I'm not trapped like the sandwich generation does, for now.

Surprisingly, amongst all the mess I landed myself in - I managed to somehow spend less than last year. What sorcery is this!?!? 🤔

Yearly Expenses Summary as of December 2022

As for a quick comparison between 2022's spending vs. 2021's spending,

  • Home (~): Nothing much have changed here - as I'm just serving my mortgage loan & building maintenance fees as usual. There were more home repairs this year, especially from servicing my Daikin Inverter Aircond unitS where several of them starts giving me issue requiring circuit board replacements. Guess I better start preparing for additional Home Sinking Fund of some sort since my "new" house is 5 years old now and more appliances may start acting up.
  • Family & Giving: (+1%): No flood donation this year (thankfully), but still some increased expenditures here mainly for giving additional family allowances. Also with no quarantine and MCO requirement, there were more dinner / lunch gathering resulting in 3x amount of treats for friends or families compared to last year.
  • Luxury (+2%): Problematic category as usual where I seem to always struggle especially from the month of November onwards with the sudden splurge. This have been the 3rd consecutive year that my impulsive splurge comes into the picture during year end sales 🙁
  • Essential, Vehicle, Care & Others (+1%): Increase in living expenses attributable to the end of work-from-home era resulting in increase of meal & transportation costs. Thankfully these were offset somehow, by the lack of major vehicle services this year since I just did it last year.
  • Business (-3%): Well, not surprisingly considering this was my "shutdown" year.

If I just double click further into the top-5 single item expenditures (excluding the mortgage, family, or giving categories) that can affect more than ~10% of my total annual expenses fully within my control, these are made up of:


Luxury: New Glasses ~RM0.8k (after company deductibles)

Another last-minute splurge during the year end, as I was scrambling around to look for ways to maximize my company deductibles for 2022.

Considering that my previous glasses have already lasted me for close to 10 years with most of the coating already peeled off (plus it's also about time to give myself a refreshing new look), I decided to splurge a little on a pair of new glasses with all the fancy lenses coating stuff.

The total damage was more than RM2k+ but thanks to the company's deductibles, I only needed to contribute under RM1k.

Gotta take care of this new pair of glasses and hopefully it'll last me for at least another 8 years... *fingers crossed*


Luxury: Facial Spa & Treatments ~RM1.3k

A triggering realization after I crossed beyond the 30's mark this year, realizing that my skins will only get older from there. That had scared me like hell and I decided to kickstart my monthly facial spa journey and started using some night care routines.

After slacking on facial care for so long - gotta make sure I properly budget this in from 2023 onwards!


Luxury: Supernote E-Ink Digital Tablet ~RM1.7k

Probably one of my best purchase early this year, and I have been using it at work daily for (digital) note taking purposes. It writes and feels like the typical paper notebook - except that I can wipe down on it towards the end of day with sanitizing wipes (for the peace of mind from Covid-19) without worrying that I may accidentally destroy my notebook, unlike its paper counterparts.

This was probably the real reason why I went digital, rather than all the fancy digitization bullshits XD


Luxury: Varietal spending on digital game or game credit/token purchases ~RM3.2k

Even before I started my year-end review, I already knew that the amount spent on games/games credits this year will be much higher compared to any other years in the past.

Still, even with this expectations in mind, the end result still shocked me as the increase wasn't just 2x or 3x as initially anticipated, but a whooping ~5x increase vs past years where I spent RM600 in 2021 or RM700 in 2020 in the same category.

Whilst gaming has been my core "copium" mechanism having helped me to sail through the dark times, I definitely need to pay a closer attention on this category in 2023 to make sure that the problem doesn't get worse, at least; then see if there's a way to have the trend reverse itself slowly (since it's still my coping mechanism after all)

From another perspective, this cost as much as equivalent to a smoker's half-pack-a-day routine. So in a way, I guess I'm half feeling guilty but also not as guilty 😛


Luxury: I bought into the "Apple Ecosystem" ~RM4k

Well - the biggest culprit of 'em all during the November Impulsive Splurge period. I basically went hardcore and went all-in into the Apple Ecosystem, going from almost nothing (with only M1 Macbook I bought in Dec 2020) into almost-full Apple Family (iPhone 14 Pro, Apple Watch 7, Airpods Pro 2, and MagSafe/Other Accessories).

Being an Apple Hater myself, or rather, ex-Apple Hater, the transition from Android into Apple Ecosystem was surprisingly fluid. After using it for more than a month now, I kinda get why Apple users always go about with their cringy statement of "it just works" - because it really does 😅

My doubts basically took a 180° and went from "how long can I stick around with Apple devices?" into "can I really move myself out of Apple ecosystem after in my next phone replacement cycle?" 🤔

And yes, the RM4k wasn't a typo. Regretfully, iPhone's still on a 36-months 0% credit card installments so I must take care and use this phone for at least 3 years, just like my previous OnePlus (but 3x cheaper). If not for the installment, the amount will definitely be slightly more than double and hits my this year's budget, bringing my overall annual spending to be equal to last year's (the sorcery is now explained. this makes more sense!)


0% Debts

It's all the iPhone's fault (no Gracie it's not, it's really just you.)

Outstanding 0% Credit Card Installments as of December 2022

I managed to settle my 0% installments by September 2022 as initially anticipated during last year's review, but sadly, rather than funding my iPhone purchase through the Gadget Sinking Fund, I ended up going back to the 0% installment just because of how convenient & simple it is.

All the talks about resisting the urges to spend going down the drain, just like that T.T

To make it worse, I got the 36 months 0% installment rather than my usual 12 months or 24 months installment. Guess it'll be a long while again before I can fully clear my 0% debts incurred by the impulsive purchases 🙁


My Investments

Funding

This year's funding contributed towards my personal freedom portfolio falls shy compared to the amount contributed last year by 25%, mainly due to the autopilot mode with no Auto Debit facility in place (I stopped my StashAway Monthly Auto Debit in March 2022) resulting in only manual quarterly injections this year whenever I remembers.

Another reason, is that I'm still holding a rather bear-ish view of the market and wanted to have some reserves for deployment when the time comes. Probably not a good idea trying to time the market and I might be better off in the long run to just stay in the market, but I just don't feel like going all-in yet so there's that.

Yearly Freedom Portfolio Funding as of December 2022 (excluding EPF)

Portfolio

I have approximately injected ~RM50k worth of fresh fund into the portfolio this year, bringing the overall value of the Freedom Portfolio to ~RM280k by the end of 2022.

Unfortunately, due to the inactivity and lack of update throughout the 2nd half of the year, I do not have much data point resulting in a rather... stagnant chart for the year of 2022.

Portfolio as of December 2022 (Total View)
Portfolio as of December 2022 (Year View)

Allocation

Similar to the end of 2021, a huge majority (>80%) of my contributions this year goes straight into my ETF funds - mainly VWRA (for US + international exposures) and 3040.HK (for China exposures). All I basically do when quarter ends (and if I remember) is to convert my Ringgit into respective currencies, login into IBKR, and purchase on the spot irrespective of the trend-at-that-time.

I guess these passive-funds work best for me as they're the most boring and braindead method, fitting to my lazy investor style.

Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of December 2022
Portfolio Map as of December 2022 (excluding EPF)

In 2021 my overall portfolio split ratio (including EPF) between Malaysia/China/US/Others was somewhere between 40-15-15-30, and there was not too big of a differences for year 2022 as well. I'm still slowly working towards reducing the Malaysia exposure (at least equity wise) but still haven't found a good way from cash-equivalents since most of them are still sitting in EPF's fixed income or my fully-flexi home loan for the interest gains/savings, bringing Malaysia's total exposure from ~40% to ~35%.

Whilst a "Venezuela" is not likely to happen in Malaysia in near-term, the deteriorating currency of Ringgit still worries me and I've been trying to find ways to hedge my cash-equivalent in other currency but are always turned off by the lack-of-interests (not even inflation-matching). Maybe I should start reading up my Singaporean's Blogger counterparts to get some insights on where to keep my cash, if I choose Singaporean Dollar as my hedging currency 😁

Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as at December 2022
Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of December 2022 (including EPF)

Net Worth Updates

Whilst I am very grateful and have my career to thanks for the smooth sailing financial journey I have today, the career was also the very reason that broke me (mentally) since the last 7 months. Unlike what happened in the 2016-2019 periods though, I managed to dumb-down my financial tracking throughout the past 7 months, keeping it simple to only a basic financial tracking (a.k.a. data entry into my YNAB). Thanks to that, I managed to still track my financial health for the year and do some budgeting retrospectively. Not the best way without a proper forward-planning in place, but it got the job done for this year.

Just in case for those who are reading my year review the first time - I typically exclude my primary residence that I’m staying in for my personal net worth, in the essence that it generates all the expenses/liabilities associated with home-ownership with no ability to generate income. This concept was popularised from Rich Dad, Poor Dad by Robert Kiyosaki. However I know that some of you finance enthusiastic would prefer to stick with the standard accounting principles so there's also an additional dotted line for that.

Net Worth Tracker as of December 2022
Net Worth Forecast (2010 - 2036) as of December 2022

With all that said, I am glad that the actuals for 2022 did not deviate too far from the initial estimations, putting my net worth slightly above the RM400K mark. Whilst it will still be below my "1M2024" target, at this juncture I will just maintain the current pace rather than trying further ways to accelerate it, knowing clearly the risk of crossing the burnt-out line. Let's see if the forecast for the future comes anywhere close, when we revisit this in 10 years time!


2022 Goals Revisited

Early 2022, I have set a quite a number of stretching goals for myself, which probably contributed to my eventual burn-out on top of the career stress. As a quick recap, these were the goals set for myself early last year.

#1: I want to maintain at least 58% Average Annualised Savings Rate by end of 2022 to fuel either my Emergency Jar or Freedom Portfolio.

#2: I want to study and take up the PMP Certification Exam by end of 2022 to boost my potential career aspects (since that's mostly what I do day in day out, and are sponsored by Company anyways)

#3: Let's try this again - I want to read at least 8 non-fictional books by end of 2022 - leadership, business, finance, self-development; you name it!

#4: I want to write at least 12 additional articles in 2022 aside from my monthly / yearly updates; as a means to continue sharing my thoughts and things I've learnt throughout my financial journey, hopefully in return motivating more people to onboard the financial freedom journey.

#5: This one's a stretch goal - but I really want to pick up the Korean language by end of 2023. For 2022, let's try to learn at least 10 new vocab per week!

#6: Also a stretch goal - I want to attempt to apply for Singapore jobs - and sit in for at least 5 interviews by end 2022. Definitely not in rush to leave my job; but just wanted to tap into whatever opportunities arising and who knows what I'll land myself onto (and leave Malaysia) 

Read more: 2021 in Review: A Little Too Soon?

Unlike the review done in 2021 where I gave a pass or fail rating for each of the respective goals creating a rather negative overall vibes considering that I "failed", by definition, quite a number of unachieved goals.

Let's take a different approach this year to instead celebrate what we have achieved this year, shall we? 🥳

  1. Kept my sanity.
  2. Achieved a 60% Annualised Savings Rate this year, +2% above the original target!
  3. Fully-funded my 12-Months Emergency Jar initiative.
  4. Keeping my ringgitfreedom.com website alive (even if it's still on life support). The old me would've probably pressed the kill-switch and scrapped it entirely.
  5. Getting promoted at work with bigger responsibility and team.
  6. Continued prioritizing paying-myself-first and invests into my Freedom Fund periodically (although it's quarterly++ than monthly now, but still counts, right?)
  7. Completed a 6-weeks worth of strategy/leadership course.
  8. Managed to host/moderate a Financial Wellness talk!
  9. Won 3 lucky-draws this year!

Plans for 2023

Obviously, I only hit 1 out of 6 goals originally listed which was the target set for annual savings rate. This year, I will be trying out something new - perhaps to officially slow down my year rather than the never-ending forward chase so there will only be 3 concise goals by end of 2023.


Goal #1: Achieve at least 55% Annualised Savings Rate

Similar to last year - this is hopefully an easy one to achieve by riding on the savings momentum whilst not over-depriving myself to focus only on saving but forget to enjoy life.

Goal #2: Arrange 1x Overseas Trip for Holidays

Perhaps something that I've missed the most is to travel overseas and just go adventure around. I don't know where to go yet, perhaps Korea or Australia? The purpose is really only to divert my spending on experience rather than more and more things.

Goal #3: Finding/Regaining My "Ikigai"

Perhaps the most important goal of them all. I've been losing my motivation and staying depressed for a little far too long, and I needed a new "goal" to look forward in life - something beyond grinding on the hamsters wheel.

For too long, I have focused on and only on tangible goals such as career progression, making and preserving monies, buying tangible stuff, progressing further in career to make more monies, etc.


Final Thoughts

In a way, I'm very grateful and proud of myself that this did not end up just like the 2016-2019 storm where I completely lost control of my personal finances, completely. I've slowed down a lot in 2022, but not without a sense of guilt which requires me to constantly remind myself that it is okay to slow down.

I'll probably still be slowing down my 2023, but this time, to try achieving it without a sense of guilt. This way, hopefully it can create the mental capacity that I needs to figure out how I'd like to navigate through the second half (or 2nd quarter?) of my lifelong journey.

There are so many questions that linger in my mind that I do not have an answer to - but one thing's for sure is that I will need to prioritise self-love and self-care which are much more important than just the financial journey alone.

Let's hope that all the clouds and storms will be gone before 2023 comes to an end!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for latest updates!

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

Cheers,
Gracie

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Ringgit Freedom’s April 2022 Updates https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-april-2022-updates/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-april-2022-updates/#comments Mon, 16 May 2022 14:34:15 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5420 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

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I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

April's been a pretty hectic month for me.

On one hand, I'm trying to slowly adjust back to the reality of going back to the office after staying home for almost 2 years (minus the essential outings/groceries trip). Whilst the Company had been nice enough to give us flexibility to choose to return to office/work from home thus far, things are about to change in May (and have already taken effect by the time I publish this post) where all of us will have to return to office, except for Friday and one of our self-selected day.

On the other hand, I'm pretty much status quo in terms of my personal well being. I am generally more chill nowadays, using video games to recharge myself after a long day (or week) of workplace toxicity. Perhaps I'll end up quitting sooner than I initially planned, but whilst I still can take it - I'll continue the grind to accelerate my freedom plan and milk what I can (financially).

Maybe I am just not stern enough to push myself out of my comfort zone amidst the ongoing toxicity. But I guess there's only so much I can push myself where there'll always be a peak/bottom of performance following the cycle. I definitely don't want to get burned out again so I'll just take baby steps as I continue to go forward.

One interesting discovery I've made in April (sadly I didn't continue after that) was attending one of the doodling class. It was definitely a fun self-discovery exercise and also an eye opener for me as I never knew I could doodle using just simple shapes (without needing "art mastery" skills).

Now, going back to our usual monthly update for my finances and portfolios.


My Savings Rate & Budget

Savings Rate as of April 2022
Savings Trend as of April 2022
Savings Jar as of April 2022

Savings Rate

Not much changes in terms of my spending towards family & personal commitments - but there were some leisure spending made in April for my gaming hobby. I basically found out (by chance) that a game I stopped playing years ago had released an expansion pack - so I decided to hop back in since I'm in the gaming mood nowadays 😛

Unfortunately through this exercise, I also found out that several of my PC parts were dying (slowly) and I ended up spending a small amount to buy a replacement part (spare RAM) helping me with my troubleshooting exercise, which unfortunately still wasn't the root of my PC problems. I ended up sending some other of my PC parts for warranty (2 months before they end, phew) which also means that I'm out of my gaming PC for the next 6-8 weeks. Thankfully I still have my Macbook (M1 Air) which I can do some "light" gaming with it

Frankly, I am quite tempted to just go out and buy the new PC parts to replace the potentially faulty hardware (and re-sell the old ones once they are fixed & returned to me by the manufacturer RMA process), but I'm feeling darn guilty if I do so - as I basically am breaking my own promise of budgeting. So let's see where we ended up going - you'll definitely see my savings rate drop if I choose to do so 😛

One good news (worth celebrating for, I guess?) is that I'm now almost reaching the end of my goal, of hitting the 12-months Emergency Jar target I've set for myself. Hopefully with this, it'll provide me with sufficient buffers in case if things turn south for me.

April 2022 Expenses At A Glance

What happened to my Portfolio?

Portfolio as of April 2022 (Total View)
Portfolio as of April 2022 (Year View)

Investments

This year hasn't been a good so far, with my portfolio value continuing to tumble down especially some of my individual stock selections. This really have affected my confidence with self doubts starting to creep into my head. Well, I guess the only sensible thing to do now is just to continue sailing forward and see where the journey takes me.

No major investment have been made yet in April as I've forgotten to top up and do my usual monthly Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) exercise. Things were definitely easier back then when I was doing monthly DCA into StashAway, as I didn't need to think about it at all and the monies just get deducted automatically from my bank account. Thankfully, the smaller DCA's are still being deducted automatically (namely PRS, Luno and Trading212) but the amount are insignificant to mention.


Portfolio Snapshot

Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of April 2022
Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of April 2022
Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of April 2022

Snapshot as of 30 April 2022

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 6.36%
ROI: 9.59%
Profit/Loss: RM9,682.41

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: -(0.13%)
ROI: -(0.19%)
Profit/Loss: -(RM366.30)
True Cost: RM256,492.69
Total Value: RM256,386.01
Entrance Value: RM220,220.94
Portfolio Value: RM229,688.48

Nett Dividend (2022): RM759.70

Active Portfolio as of April 2022

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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Ringgit Freedom’s March 2022 Updates https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-march-2022-updates/ https://ringgitfreedom.com/updates/ringgit-freedoms-march-2022-updates/#respond Fri, 15 Apr 2022 07:45:55 +0000 http://ringgitfreedom.com/?p=5380 My financial journey in a bite-sized monthly updates - including my thoughts, feelings, progressions or decisions made

The post Ringgit Freedom’s March 2022 Updates appeared first on Ringgit Freedom.

]]>
I have decided to write down on a monthly basis all my thoughts, feelings, progressions, decisions made throughout my financial journey and anything about life really. Hopefully this will shed some insights for all readers, and even myself when I look back onto the past. If you're interested in my past month updates, take a look at Monthly Updates and I hope you enjoy reading!

My Life & Mental State

March's update came later than usual. I've procrastinated from completing this post since I started drafting it around end-of-March. Took me more than 2 weeks to finish it off, instead of the usual 2 days.

It seems that I'm again in a state of avoiding reality - spending time paralyzing myself in mindless games/videos after work. I'm not really sure why, but it does indeed feels like my brain telling me "enough is enough" - get out of the toxicity if you can't stand it anymore.

I'm earning very well, but I am not happy. Shouldn't I feel grateful instead!?!? And there goes the vicious cycle.

Now, going back to our usual monthly update for my finances and portfolios.


My Savings Rate & Budget

Savings Rate as of March 2022
Savings Trend as of March 2022
Savings Jar as of March 2022

Savings Rate

Similar to the same time year, this month's savings rate skyrocketed as I received my annual performance bonus. Yay!

Since I overspent on my gadgets in Feb for my digital notetaking e-ink tablet, I decided to channel all of the excess income (on top of my monthly baselines) to either my investments or savings jar.

This obviously helped as I managed to boost my 12-months jar from the stagnant 73% to 93% achieved. Just a few more months to go to wrap up the jar and refocus back on my investments, hopefully, I don't need to touch the emergency funds anytime soon!

p/s the digital e-ink tablet is really awesome! I bring it everywhere I go now - to write things down both for work and personal. I bought the Supernote A5X for portability and it even has my name engraved on the pen! 😀

March 2022 Expenses At A Glance

What happened to my Portfolio?

Portfolio as of March 2022 (Total View)
Portfolio as of March 2022 (Year View)

Investments

March is definitely an interesting month for my portfolio. Probably one of the few months with large portfolio movements.

Ukraine War and Volatility

The ongoing crisis happening in Ukraine have sent shockwaves to the global economy, with uncertainties shooting up and this was evident in the early/mid-March where the global stock market took a hit, with some having it worse (e.g. China). Whilst I did not inject much of my fresh funds this month (to focus first on my emergency jar) aside from my typical monthly investment amounts; most of the injection comes from my StashAway relocation.

StashAway's Re-optimisation (again!?)

Whilst the storm of rage against StashAway have calmed down recently, and with their rationale explained during their webcast - "to reduce exposure to the unknown unknown's to realign portfolio's volatility against standard benchmarks"; I still find it a bitter pill to swallow as it goes against my wishes to maintain exposure in China.

Whilst I may be darn wrong in my decision in the long run (who knows, China stocks may never reclaim their glory due to CCP); I still hoped for a little more control in my own portfolio like the previous option where you can choose to opt-in/out from the re-optimizations.

This taught me a lesson that the only way to maintain most of my control is to go full DIY. Whilst this has been on my mind since 2 quarters ago (when my StashAway portfolio exceeded the RM30K mark, just nice for Wise's maximum allowable transfer size), I have been putting it off as I was lazy to execute my market exit & re-entry with minimum gap time so that I don't miss out on market opportunities by not "being there in the market". This KWEB-exit drama was the final nail to the coffin after the many rounds of re-optimization in a year.

You'll probably see it already in my portfolio, but my approach was quite straightforward where I split my funds withdrawn from StashAway 30% Portfolio into mixture of VWRA (All World ETF), 3040.HK (China ETF), and IAU (Gold) at a 60:20:20 split respectively.

Will I lose out more in the end, if StashAway's decision outperformed mine? Maybe. But will I regret it? Probably not - as I will have better sleeps at night knowing that my portfolio will be as lazy as I am - to sleep through the cycles.

While I won't go too deep into the how's of the entire withdrawal / re-investment process, I'd still like to shout out a few things that really helped to make the transition process a smooth one:

  • StashAway withdrawal took me approximately 3 days (submitted request to withdraw on 14 Mar and got my funds back on 17 Mar), similar to my previous small-sum withdrawal (portfolio closure) and this information helped me to manage my cashflow in the 3 days time (though not a huge issue since I have close to 8 months of emergency fund sitting in cash to offset the cashflow impact)
  • Before the withdrawal was even complete, I initiated my buy-orders on Day 2 (15 Mar), which is about the same time when StashAway executes my portfolio sell-order. Whilst this probably is useless/neglectable when we zoom out 10 years later, this gave me a peace of mind to minimize transaction gaps in timing.
  • Since I hasn't received cash yet (to re-inject back into my IBKR account), having my IBKR set as a Margin Account (with plenty of margin buffers) definitely helped here. If my IBKR was a Cash Account, I'd probably have to use some of my Emergency Fund cashflows to first fund my IBKR prior to purchase orders.

Having said all that, I am still not 100% out of StashAway. Whilst I will stop my DCA onto StashAway going forward (and only DCA-ing straight into my IBKR account), two of my small portfolio started last year (worth approx ~40%) will still remain in StashAway, just in case if I'm wrong 😉

BABA ADR Conversions

About the same time with the StashAway-KWEB drama and also the Ukraine Crisis sending China stocks down south, there were also plenty of hoohahs going around the risk of China's stock getting delisted (including BABA). Since the price is darn low at this point (15 March), I decided to "swap" my Alibaba stocks from the US-listed BABA to Hong Kong-listed 9988.HK.

Unfortunately, I found out later that whilst IBKR supports the ADR Conversion Process seamlessly, the price tag is huge and we need to pay $500 US to convert ADRs into the secondary listings. This does not make sense for a small retail investor like me unless you are managing a multimillion portfolio. But I still wanted to do the swap with or without going through this ADR so I've decided to do it the classical way: to sell my BABA (hence realizing my losses) and quickly buy 9988.HK (starting another "portfolio").

Whilst BABA and 9988.HK are pegged at 1:8 ratio, where price gaps between the two are usually neglectable. At that point in time, I hold approx. 29 units of BABA which is equivalent to 232 units of 9988.HK.

Question is - "how do I minimize my potential unexpected losses/gains considering the market fluctuation at the time, especially when China stocks are going up (or down) by 10% +/- on a day-to-day basis?"

This is where my IBKR Margin Account saved my day, AGAIN!

Firstly, I made a buy order closer to the end-of-day Hong Kong time, for 300 units of 9988.HK at the price of 73.8 HKD each. This equates to buying BABA at approx 75.39 USD if we follow the 1:8 ratio between BABA:9988.HK.

After about 3-4 hours later, I made a similar market sell order at the start-of-day US time, on my existing 29 units of BABA at the price of 75.4 USD. Net-net, I did not lose any of my portfolio's worth other than paying approximately $10 US in transaction/currency conversion fees. Whilst it is still a risky move - as anything can happen in 4 hours nowadays, this is the best I could do to save $500 US.

As a matter of fact, BABA's price shot up from ~$75 to ~$100 the next morning so I literally dodged a bullet there. The best time to do these kinds of sell-and-buy is when markets are stable, but desperate time calls for desperate measures I guess. Been wanting to buy 9988.HK instead of BABA but the minimum 100 lot per transaction is not wallet-friendly at all :'(

Portfolio Consolidation

This is still a work in progress (a long way to go) - but I decided to further simplify my portfolio as I did not have much time to track & manage my portfolio, especially the individual-stock picks. Over the next few quarters, I'll be trimming down my portfolio to only ETF's and selected dividend stocks, slowly selling the rest away (so that I have less things to monitor/worry about).

EPF Dividend

Surprisingly, EPF declared a 6.1% dividend for 2021. Yay to that!

Could've gotten most of it if I hasn't diluted part of my EPF's onto international funds as part of my portfolio rebalancing last year, but no regrets there as it was a conscious decision made. EPF, even after excluding the divested funds, are still making the majority in the totality of my portfolio (EPF Fund + Personal Freedom Fund).


Portfolio Snapshot

Portfolio Summary by Asset Class as of March 2022
Portfolio Allocation by Region/Asset Group as of March 2022
Portfolio Allocation by Sector as of March 2022

Snapshot as of 31 March 2022

Note: For the definition of snapshots, please check My Portfolio where I elaborated it in detail.

Sold (Retired) Portfolio (accumulative)
IRR: 6.31%
ROI: 9.50%
Profit/Loss: RM9,524.27

Active (Invested) Portfolio
IRR: 3.62%
ROI: 3.72%
Profit/Loss: RM9,455.35
True Cost: RM250,339.60
Total Value: RM260,048.17
Entrance Value: RM215,493.75
Portfolio Value: RM234,617.10

Nett Dividend (2022): RM 283.07

Active Portfolio as of March 2022

If you're interested in my past updates - do check out my previous Monthly Review or Year In Review!

As always, thanks for reading and I will see you again in my next post! If you haven't already, be sure to follow me on my Instagram, Facebook and YouTube for the latest updates!

Cheers,
Gracie

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