Five Cents Ten Cents

Tuesday, November 27, 2007

Year-end bonuses are here!

What are you going to do with your year-end bonus?
November and December are the months when the school holidays start, people clear their annual leave and dream about what they are going to do with their bonuses.

Different organisations pay different amounts for the year-end bonuses. Tight-fisted employers may pay nothing. Generous employers may pay the 13th month (i.e. 1 month) plus something extra. Other employers may benchmark year-end bonuses to performance and pay handsomely to their rainmakers or those who make a lot of money for the organisations or exceeded their key performance indicators. No matter the quantum of the year-end bonus, if you are fortunate enough to receive this windfall, you have to decide what to do with it?

Spend or save?
The key issue facing all of those who are receiving some form of year-end bonus is... SPEND or SAVE? How much to spend/save and how not to feel guilty about our decisions. If you have been following my blog, you will realise that it is not about what decision you make, but it is about how that decision brings you closer or further away from your financial goals.

If your goal is to live life to the fullest and have $0 to your name when you die, then you will probably consider spending ALL of your bonus because that is how you want to live your life.

If you goal is to retire BEFORE the CPF withdrawal age of 62 or 67 or whatever the gahmen decides after the next general elections, then you have to set aside SOME or even ALL of your year-end bonus towards savings, paying off debt or investment.

There is no magic formula on how much you should save or spend. It is entirely up to you to determine from 0% to 100% in either direction.

Panzergrenadier's year-end bonus decision for 2007
Ordinarily, my own rule of thumb is to spend 10%-20% of windfalls and save the remainder for investment. This year, I have decided to tweak my rule in the opposite direction because my own life circumstances will be changing. A new addition to the family will be coming early next year and I need to plan for my revised transportation needs and wants. I have been using the public transport system since the day I started work until now. However, given that I want to transport my family in better comfort next year, I have earmarked a lot of my year-end bonus towards financing a vehicle.

Some of you who have read my posts about not driving would be horrified! What heresy! Wasting your retirement fund on a car! Horror or horrors! :-)

Whilst I would have loved to continue to retire earlier based on my current rate of savings, I realise that I would probably need to shift my plans to retire earlier than 67 but later than what I wanted to. This is because I have decided that I WANT to drive to give my family a better way to get from point A to point B. No excuses. It is a WANT and I am not ashamed to say so.

Life is about balancing between the wants of today with the needs of tomorrow. I have decided that I have used the public transport system long enough and should live life a little better by paying (through my nose! haha) for a car and subjecting myself to the joys or ERP, COE, road tax, insurance, parking etc. So, for once in my life, Panzergrenadier is choosing to give himself a bit of luxury in transportation.

The rest of my frugal lifestyle remains. I still own only 3 pairs of watches of which 1 is sponsored by Mindef being the token of appreciation for my 10 years of reservist service while 1 was a gift for my birthday. The other watch that I bought costs all of $35. I hardly buy new clothes except during Chinese New Year and the Great Singapore Sale. I am happy to consume vegetarian food for lunch that costs only $3.00 and I go jogging in my Mindef sponsored New Balance running shoes for recreation and to destress while keeping fit.


What will your year-end bonus be doing for you?
There is no right or wrong answer. You alone determine how your year-end bonus is to be used. Making capital repayment of your outstanding mortgage loan. Going for a trip to Japan for a holiday. Buying the latest iTouch from Apple. Having your home renovated to look like the latest IKEA catalogue.

Your bonus.
Your rules.
You decide.

Be well and prosper.

7 comments:

Anonymous said...

PZ,
Congratulations to your new addition.
I think there is absolutely nothing wrong to buy a car. Yes, it is a luxury item and is a liability. But if you have weighed all the pros and cons, and can afford it, let you and your family members enjoy this extra convenience and comfort.

starlight.

Anon.Dimwit said...

C o N G R a T u L a T i o N S, Panzer!

Is it a boy or a girl?

Anon.Dimwit.

PanzerGrenadier said...

Dear Starlight

Thanks for your congratulatory message. Baby is due in March 2008, so akan datang... :-)

Yup, a car brings with it convenience and comfort at a price. But I guess I am now ready to pay that price. ;-)

PanzerGrenadier said...

Anon.Dimwit

She's a girl. :-)

Cheers!

Anon.Dimwit said...

Yes, U paid a price for the value U wish & believe in.

That is SuCCeSS - n living in it.

My humble definition that is. God bless U, your loved ones & your aspirations! :-)

Anonymous said...

congrats on your new addition.

the vehicle does really help with ferrying the kids around to visit their GMs and GGMs.

Further to that, you can also increase your vehicle usage by shopping for groceries and baby formula in JB

PanzerGrenadier said...

Dear anonymous

Yes, I do agree that driving gives you the convenience when you have to transport of group of individuals from one place to another. :-)

Be well and prosper!