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Chitchat Your CPF managed by an Expert?

scroobal

Alfrescian
Loyal
http://theindependent.sg/you-can-be-the-ceo-of-cpf-board-too/You can be the CEO of CPF Board too!
By The Independent - May 13, 2016 55 12951
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By: 永久浪客/Forever

Philip Ang wrote an interesting piece highlighting that an SAF general has been put in charge of our CPF monies (https://likedatosocanmeh.wordpress....retirement-screwed-up-by-unqualified-ceos).He questioned if such people are qualified to manage our finances.
Currently, the CEO of CPF Board is RADM (NS) Ng Chee Peng, brother of LG (NS) Ng Chee Meng who is the current acting Education Minister.

RADM (NS) Ng enlisted in the SAF in December 1988 and served in the Navy. He spent his early days with the Missile Gun Boats, first as a junior officer and later as the Executive Officer on board the RSS Sea Tiger. He was also the Anti-Submarine Warfare Officer on board the RSS Valiant. He assumed his first command on board the Missile Corvette RSS Victory. He also held various staff appointments in MINDEF, including:
• Head, Operations Planning Branch, Naval Operations Department
• Head, Long Term Planning Secretariat, Office of the Chief of Defence Force

After returning from his studies in Harvard University in 2002, he was appointed as the Commanding Officer of the Missile Corvette Squadron in July 2003, and concurrently served as the Commander of the First Flotilla from January 2004. He held the following appointments later:
• Director (Policy), MINDEF (2005–2007)
• Fleet Commander (2007–2009)
• Chief of Staff, Naval Staff (2009–2010)
• Chief of Staff, Joint Staff (2010–2011)

He became the Chief of Navy in Mar 2011 and was promoted to the rank of Rear-Admiral (two stars) in Jul 2011. He stepped down from his position as the Chief of Navy in Aug 2014 before joining the Manpower Ministry as Deputy Secretary (Special Projects) for several months. Thereafter, he became the CEO of CPF Board in March 2015 last year.

Philip noted, “When Ng became CEO, CPF had total balances of about $280 billion.”

“Was Ng qualified to manage $280 billion? Would any fund employ an ex-military guy with no fund management background to manage even $28 million?” Philip asked.

“If ex generals are well qualified, then shouldn’t PAP be employing US generals who have vastly more real life experience instead of ours with only paper experience?”

No experience really needed for CPF CEO’s job

“In reality, Ng also does not need to know how to manage a fund because our CPF has not been invested in any fund but loaned to the PAP government. Ng’s job is to place our CPF in a sort of a very long term fixed deposit with the government, the terms of its use dictated by PAP,” Philip explained.

“If Ng’s job is to simply hand over our CPF to the government – no questions asked – isn’t that something every Ah Kow or Ahmad knows? I mean, how difficult is it to go to a bank to open an FD account?”

Indeed, according to MOF website, our CPF monies are invested by the CPF Board in Special Singapore Government Securities (SSGS), bonds that are issued and guaranteed by the government (http://www.mof.gov.sg/Policies/Our-...n-the-Government-pay-all-its-debt-obligations).

“This arrangement assures that the CPF Board will be able to pay its members all their monies when due, and the interest that it commits to pay on CPF accounts,” MOF said on its website.

“This is a solid guarantee. The Singapore Government is one of the few remaining triple-A credit-rated governments in the world.”

At the moment, new SSGS are issued at a fixed coupon of 4% (https://www.cpf.gov.sg/Members/AboutUs/about-us-info/cpf-interest-rates). And currently, monies in members’ CPF OA earn a minimum interest rate of 3.5% on the first $20,000, and 2.5% for the rest of their OA savings. This difference in interest rates would be the amount CPF Board made for itself.As long as you are honest and don’t pocket our CPF monies yourself, you can do this job as CEO of CPF Board too.
Anyone game?
 

scroobal

Alfrescian
Loyal
https://likedatosocanmeh.wordpress....rs-retirement-screwed-up-by-unqualified-ceos/
20160508 CPF members’ retirement screwed up by unqualified CEOs
May 8, 2016 by Phillip Ang
Our CPF has been seriously mismanaged and CPF members had better wake up to this fact.

For a start, look no further than the current CEO of CPF, ex paper general equivalent Chief of Navy Ng Chee Peng. When Ng became CEO, CPF had total balances of about $280 billion. Questions:

– Was Ng qualified to manage $280 billion?
– Would any fund employ an ex military guy with no fund management background to manage even $28 million?

If ex generals are well qualified, then shouldn’t PAP be employing US generals who have vastly more real life experience instead of ours with only paper experience?

Ng served in the Navy from 1988 to 2014. But he had actually served only 22 years, not 26 years, because taxpayers funded his 4 years of studies at Oxford and Harvard. After leaving the navy, Ng was promoted to Deputy Secretary (Special Projects) in the Ministry of Manpower for about 6 months to gain some ‘experience’. CPF Board is a statutory board under the MOM.

Ng’s 6-month stint at MOM is a sort of highly-paid OJT to prepare him for his role as CEO of CPF Board. No one can now claim Ng has no ‘experience’.

(Ng has a brother who is currently the Perm Sec (Defence) and another who is SMOS (Transport). All three are ex paper generals)

In order to discharge his responsibilities to CPF members, Ng needed some fund management experience. He has none.

In reality, Ng also does not need to know how to manage a fund because our CPF has not been invested in any fund but loaned to the PAP government. Ng’s job is to place our CPF in a sort of a very long term fixed deposit with the government, the terms of its use dictated by PAP.

If Ng’s job is to simply hand over our CPF to the government – no questions asked – isn’t that something every Ah Kow or Ahmad knows? I mean, how difficult is it to go to a bank to open an FD account?

When we look at past CEOs of CPF Board, we begin to understand how screwed up our system is.

Ng’s predecessor is Yee Ping Yi who has depended on tax dollars his entire working life. Like paper general Ng, Yee had zero fund management experience prior to joining CPF Board.

How was this joker looking after the retirement interest of CPF members by lending our hard-earned savings to the government at rock bottom interest rates?
CPF Board CEO Yee Ping Yi

Joker’s predecessor was a Liew Heng San, another Jack of all trades scholar who joined the civil service in 1977 and was appointed:
-Director, MTI (1990 to 1992)
-PPS to DPM (1991 to 1995)
-Dep Sec for Communications (1995 to 1996)
CEO, LTA (1995 to 1998)
Dep Sec (Development ), PSD, 1998 to 2000)
Perm Sec, Law (2001 to 2005)
CEO, CPF Board (2005 to 2011)

Was scholar Liew qualified to manage our CPF funds?

Prior to Liew Heng San, PAP appointed Willie Tan, another SAF Scholar, as CEO from 2002 to 2005. Willie was with SAF/Mindef from 1974 to 1989. He had also served in the MND, PSD, HOH and Health Corporation of Singapore. These are all irrelevant experience where fund management is concerned.

The role of a CPF CEO is simply to take instructions from PAP in return for guaranteed promotion in salary and status. The issue of retirement shortfall has been festering for decades and there’s no solution in sight because we have been overpaying these clowns to do a job which they are not qualified.

CPF members should not imagine our interests are being looked after by these Jack of all trades CEOs. How can most of us ever retire comfortably when these million-dollar jokers are lending our hard-earned savings to the government in the form of very long-term fixed deposits?
 

po2wq

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
people skolar woh! ... big deal, man! ...

skolars r special elites dat r haven sent 2 save sinkielan ...

how can u compare sinkielan generals wif usa generals? ... usa generals r skolars meh? ... dey got go thru sinkielanz world crass education system meh? ...

if dun put haven-sent skolars in charge, den put a daft sinkie or a sinkielan peasant in charge? ...
 
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