Monday, October 21, 2024

Investing Your Supplementary Retirement Scheme Account?

Supplementary Retirement Scheme, or SRS for short, was introduced in 2001 and it is part of the Singapore Government’s multi-pronged strategy to address the financial needs of a greying population. It is a voluntary scheme that complements the Central Provident Fund (CPF). Thus, the SRS forms part of the basic make-up of our portfolio multiverse structure, along with the CPF and investment portfolio using disposable income. 

Besides saving for retirement, the monies that go into the SRS account are eligible for tax relief, so there may be some tax savings depending on the total relief amount and income bracket of the individual. The contribution limit for Singapore Citizens and Permanent Residents is SGD 15,300 and SGD 35,700 for foreigners per calendar year, and that means the deadline for the contribution is on or before 31 December.

 


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Should I Open An SRS Account?

Before jumping into the how of investing in one’s SRS, we need to address the why first, and honestly there is no correct answer. In my view, if you have some spare cash lying around and want to reduce your tax bill, why not start it? 

Granted that the spare cash can be deployed into your disposable income portfolio, but that does not bring down your tax payable. Similarly, you may have maxed out your CPF contribution limit and still have some more headroom to the SGD 80,000 personal income tax relief cap. If you had hit both aforementioned conditions, then the case for opening an SRS account is stronger.

Even then, if you had not hit those conditions, you could still open an SRS account, like my case; I want to reduce my tax payable, so I just contribute to it. When I started my SRS, my CPF SA had already hit the prevailing full retirement sum for some time, so any further topping up via voluntary contribution does not invite tax relief. Also, I view SRS as a form of forced savings from which I have a stash of funds by age 62 (for me. Now is 63).

 

Investing Your SRS

If left uninvested, the funds in the SRS earn 0.05% per annum based on the latest information available, which is akin to a typical savings account. From an investment viewpoint, that yield hardly compensates for the inflation rate, hence investing it is a no-brainer option.

Unlike CPF where there are limited investable amounts and choices, you can plonk in the entire SRS into various financial instruments (shares, bonds, exchange traded funds, unit trusts, etc.), endowment annuity plans, bank fixed deposits and bank structured deposits. As with any investment decision, the choice of what to invest in depends on your product preferences and familiarity, risk appetite and tolerance. You can have more than one type of product within your SRS, for it is in itself, a portfolio universe.

 

Open Your SRS

If you have yet to open an SRS account, it is advisable to do so as soon as possible. The official retirement age in Singapore is set to go higher at 64 after 1 July 20261. Opening the SRS account would “lock” the withdrawable age at the prevailing retirement age, i.e. if you open now, you are able to start drawing down your SRS account from age 63, regardless of what is the prevailing retirement age when you reach 63. You can have only one SRS account, and you can open your SRS account with either DBS, OCBC or UOB.

 

Bonus Paragraph: What Is Inside The Bedokian’s SRS?

Now I am doing a regular contribution to a robo-advisory portfolio consisting of 60/40 fixed income/equities make-up, with an annualized internal rate of return of 9.48% so far. As I do not invest the whole works and have spare funds inside, I may deploy the balance in individual securities. 


Disclaimer


Reference

Supplementary Retirement Scheme. Ministry of Finance. 7 Dec 2017. https://www.mof.gov.sg/docs/default-source/default-document-library/schemes/individuals/supplementary-retirement-scheme/srs_booklet---7-dec-2017e42cafd2dab847f78b5cfb6919b476b2.pdf  (accessed 20 Oct 2024)

 

1 – Boo, Krist. S’pore retirement age to go up to 64 in 2026, re-employment age to rise to 69. The Straits Times. 6 Mar 2024. https://www.straitstimes.com/singapore/politics/s-pore-retirement-age-to-go-up-to-64-in-2026-re-employment-age-to-rise-to-69 (accessed 20 Oct 2024)


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