I have moved this blog to the new site at (1) www.KoonLip.com, where I continue to chronicle my life journey after 26, and (2) www.ForexAsiaAcademy.com, where you see my graduates LIVE results.

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If you are interested to find our more about me, Forex Trading or my Forex Asia Academy, let me welcome you to my complimentary Forex session. Please feel free to visit my corporate website to find out more. Get in touch with you real soon!

Friday, September 14, 2007

First win on New Trading Platform

Recently, I found a trading platform called MB Trading that requires only $1 commission per contract (for options). I used to trade with (and still using) optionsXpress, but the commission is at least $14.95.

I just tried using MB Trading and managed to squeeze out my first win on this platform. Here's the details:

1. Underlying Stock: FMC, trading ~93.00
2. FMC's stock is spliting 2:1, payable on 13/9 and executing on 14/9.
3. Buy to Open @ 93.06 and Sell to Close @ 93.57
4. I bought FMC Oct 90 Call at 5.30 and sold at 5.70: 7.5% profit in 42 minutes.



Typically, if I trade only 1 contract with gross profit $40 (based on the same trade), I will only make $10.10 (= $40 - 2 comm x $14.95). But now, with MB Trading, I can make $38 (commission summed up to only $2). So if you are a new options trader and trade small number of contracts, it's good to use MB Trading. Otherwise, optionsXpress is excellent for big time traders.



ps: Please note MB Trading doesn't support options spread (MB Trading is incorporating the spreads within 2 to 3 months). Anyway, the spread order (up to 4 legs) optionsXpress also costs only $14.95, so it's not too bad and OX has excellent trading infrastructure.

pps: When I trade, I usually look into the ROI percentage rather than the absolute amount. You may not think $40 is any great; but if you see 7.5% return in 42 minutes, you'll know what I mean!

ppps: Imagine you are buying stock of FMC @ 93.06 and selling it @ 93.57, your ROI is only 0.5% compared to 7.5% through trading options. You do the math.

Thursday, September 13, 2007

Retire at 40: Here's how

Here's an article I read from MSN Money (think it's contributed by The Simple Dollar) about how to retire at 40 through working hard and invest on Indexes, starting from age 20!

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It's simple, but hard. Take 20% of your gross income every month, invest it in a balanced index fund and leave it there, then retire 20 years later with enough for a lifetime. Do you have what it takes?

A young, forward-thinking man wrote and asked this simple question:

Right now, I'm 20 years old. I am willing to take a large percentage off the top of my salary for the rest of my working life in order to be able to retire very young and live off of the proceeds of my investments and do volunteer work. How many years would I have to work if I saved 20% of my income?

He went on to name a number of other specifics about his situation, but they're really not important. If you were to take 20% of your annual income starting at age 20 and put it in a fund following the S&P 500 Index ($INX), that fund continued to grow at the long-term historical rate (12%) and you received a 4% raise each year, you could walk away from your job and live off the interest at age 41 matching your current salary -- or quit at 43 and be able to give yourself a 4% "raise" each year from the interest, which is probably the better plan because it combats inflation.

Raise the amount to 25% and you're done at age 38 and able to live in perpetuity at age 40.
Obviously, some people are going to balk at this and state that it "can't" be done. The truth is that it can be done if you have the willingness to live below your means and authentically behave as if 20% of your total salary doesn't exist.

It is challenging, don't get me wrong. Let's take the case of someone who makes about $60,000 a year. He brings home a paycheck every month in the amount of $3,200. In order to save 20% of his whole annual salary ($12,000), he would have to be willing to immediately take $1,000 of that take-home paycheck every month, put it straight into an investment and not touch it at all. This takes an amount of financial fortitude and will power that, quite honestly, most Americans don't have.

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In fact, when we put our money into the index (whether it is S&P 500 or Straits Time Index for Singapore), it's safer since putting your money into any stock. Reason is simple (but not that obvious):

  1. Many people think that stock is risky, so investing in index may be in the same league.
  2. Index doesn't rise everyday, just like stocks.
  3. Index doesn't even rise every year, just like stocks.
  4. But, the not-so-obvious fact about Index is that it tracks the best-performing stocks in a certain category. There will be new performing stocks added to the index and lousy performing ones removed from the index every now and then.
  5. You can safely assume that over time the index will rise in value. But you must be thinking how long will the index will confirm rise?
  6. Index rises 10% (for STI) and 12% (for SPX) on average every year. But, it is only the average; sometime the indexs do fall on a yearly basis (due to economic recession or correction, 9-11 kinda' incidents, Iraq war, dot-com burst etc etc).
  7. But through research, over 5 years, putting your hard-earned money into the Index will confirm generate the guaranteed returns for you!
  8. And over 10 years, you can SAFELY get back the compounded average returns (for 10 years) on your money.
  9. If we put it in mathematically terms, money + 10 years' compounded 10% to 12% per annum = 2.5x to 3x your money.

If you compare with putting your money in your savings account, think again! With a measly 0.25% per annum, you money will only grow less than 30% (almost 10x slower)!

Wednesday, September 12, 2007

Today is my 25th Birthday!

Ya, today is my 25th birthday. I popped up from bed to start this blog 'I'm Going To Retire By 26'.

It was 5am (GMT +08:00) in the morning of Singapore and I intended to start this blog. Today I turn 25 (the quarter mark!) and I made this commitment to retire by this time next year. Maybe 'retire' seems a bit too exaggerated, but I want to be in control and do whatever I like by 26. So, it's more like a 'semi-retirement'! Is this better?

Many may think that how can it be possible! And ya, they are really really a lot of such people and 'pour cold water' at me. And especially so, recently! Anyway, I will talk about it when I have nothing to write about.

Here I am going to conclude my first blog: Happy Birthday (to myself)!
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