Monday, October 19, 2015

Philippines NAIA is out of World's 10 Worst Airports

I might consider using NAIA when coming in and going out of the Philippines next year. After three years of being one of the worst airport in the world finally this airport is now better though not the best. The renovations paid off. Last year was the worst when they renovated the area with no Air Conditioning. It was really very hot and the toilet was terrible.

Still this airport is of the worst in Asia.
MANILA - The Ninoy Aquino International Airport (NAIA) has finally shed its tag of being one of the "worst airports" in the world, at least in this poll site.

 In the latest Worst Airports in the World list by travel website The Guide To Sleeping in Airports, the "worst airport" in the world based on overall airport experience is Port Harcourt International Airport in Nigeria.
NAIA

 The second worst airport in the world is Jeddah King Abdulaziz International Airport in Saudi Arabia while third is Kathmandu Tribhuvan International Airport in Nepal. Missing from the 10 worst airports list is NAIA, which held the title of "worst airport in the world" for three straight years from 2011 to 2013. 

In the 2014 list, NAIA ranked fourth worst.

However, the Manila airport has a long way to go before making it to the Best Airports list, as it ranked 8th worst in Asia. NAIA remains one of the worst in Asia due to leaking ceilings, collapsing floors, and long queues. "Rehabilitation efforts have helped decongest and clean up Terminal 1, and the introduction of things like the Wings Transit Lounge in Terminal 3 have helped make things more comfortable, albeit for a price," the website said. "That said, things like leaking ceilings in Terminal 1 and collapsing floors in Terminal 2 show there is still room for improvement.

Passengers remain annoyed by the poor customer service, the long queues, the sub-par food selection, the lack of restrooms and the crowded seating areas. There is definitely a long way to go but we're thrilled to see improvements come along bit by bit," it added. Efforts to rehabilitate NAIA Terminal 1 were completed this year by DMCI, which bagged the P1.3 billion contract in 2014. 

According to the survey, travelers voted Kathmandu Tribhuvan International Airport as the worst airport in Asia. The best airport in Asia and in the world is still Singapore's Changi International Airport.

 The Best and Worst Airports survey is conducted every year by SleepingInAirports.com, a site that asks travelers to rate their airport experiences based on the services and facilities available within the terminal, cleanliness, customer service, comfort, and their overall airport experience. The website noted that the worst airports "fall flat in terms of providing any kind of enjoyable overall airport experience. "Instead, they're dirty, uncomfortable, unfriendly and lack the most basic of services and amenities.

They elicit passionate critiques from those who visit them, and countless warnings for future travelers to avoid these places at all costs," it added.

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5 Tips on how to Save and Invest for OFWs

Many Filipinos left their love ones to earn money abroad even if they don't want to leave. They do this because they have no choice. There is no job opportunities in the Philippines. Right now millions of Filipinos are in Middle East, United States of America and other countries to work. They are not there as tourist.

 I felt sad for some of these Filipinos who became victims of abuses and some of them even died without a fight. Maltreatment from their bosses and loneliness make them pathetic. I think it is just right that they should know where to put their money for savings and investments. Most of the OFWs went home without money and even poorer after many years working abroad because they don't know how to invest and start a business.

 For OFWs, the need to invest smartly is particularly urgent since your opportunity to raise funds is linked to the length of your contract. Once your contract of work is over, it is possible that you would find yourself without having a source of income, until you find a contract again. For this reason, you need to come up with the right investment choices that match your circumstances and make your money work harder for you. Essentially, OFWs should be guided by the same investment principles as Filipinos who are working and based at home, save for a few considerations to reflect your circumstances, in particular not being in the country.

 Here’s a simple five-step guide to help you in making your investment decisions: 

 1. Consider liquid and professionally managed investments. Shop for investment products that are easy to purchase and dispose off even if you are not in the Philippines. The nice thing with today’s technology is you can scan online, start by looking at the individual websites of financial institutions.

Your choices include the following:

Mutual funds – These are pooled funds invested in different types of assets to match your desired time frame and level of risk. Some may have the potential for high gains but will also come with higher risk. These are available to retail investors for a beginning account of as low as P5,000. ·

Unitary investment trust funds – These are also pooled funds invested in various assets to match your risk profile and investment horizon. These are available to retail investors for a beginning account of as low as P5,000.

Insurance-linked investments – This is an insurance product combined with an investment fund, fulfilling your need for protection and capital gains. Your monthly payment would depend on the amount of coverage you purchased, as well as the type of asset you chose to invest in.

Equities – These shares represent shareholdings in a company. You profit from the trading of these shares in the stock market. Online brokerages can facilitate your trades, with some of them requiring an opening balance beginning at P10,000.

Bonds – These represent debt taken by either the Philippine government or companies. They usually have a fixed return and are therefore safer. They may be purchased through most banks for as low as P5,000.

 2. Keep your papers in order. Ensure that you have proper documentation to open and maintain these accounts, either while you are visiting the Philippines, or from abroad. Download their online forms, then mail a clear copy of your required IDs. Before sending these documents over, it may be helpful to personally contact the financial institution through their emails so that they can review your signed forms and requirements before you send these. This will save you a lot of time and effort.

 3. Use safe and direct channels for sending money. Find a secure and cost-effective way to put money into your investment from where you are. Online banking services, which are now available to those with accounts in local banks, are among the safest channels you can use. You can also use bank-to-bank transfers. If you wish to go through remittance channels, consider companies with long track records and recommended for customer service if something should go wrong. Unsafe ways of sending money are physically through people, no matter how much you trust them; through other people’s bank accounts; or by sending the money in the mail.

 4. Make your payments or remittances regularly. If you send money to the Philippines, it would be good to do so following a schedule, so that you and your loved ones back home can plan your cash flows better. Have the discipline to send money on schedule so that your loved ones can make payments on time, letting you avoid penalties in the process. Luckily, major financial institutions all allow you to make payments or transfers online.

 5. Ensure the legality and integrity of your planned investment. OFWs are often the target of investment scams. Check out the site of the Commission of Filipinoshttp://www.cfo.gov.ph/to read the latest news and updates on legitimate and illegitimate business deals. You may also have relatives luring you into get-rich-schemes that offer nothing but false promises. While you may trust your loved ones, it is but prudent to check out everything about the proposed investment deal before you turn over your hard-earned money.

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Saturday, October 17, 2015

Pros and Cons of Mutual Fund Investment

Mutual funds have often seemed like a golden investment because what can be a relatively small amount of money ends up being greatly diversified. The core idea of this kind of investment goes back to the basic rule of, don’t put all your eggs in one basket.

 In recent years it has become more apparent that there is no such thing as a guaranteed investment. Companies that appear to be solid from all angles can quickly fall apart no matter how big they are. Because of this you would never want to invest all of your money in one or two companies because no matter how good the investment may seem, anything can happen tomorrow; however, when you invest in hundreds of companies that each look like they will have positive returns then even if a high amount of them fail the others should inevitably make up the difference.
Mutual Funds

 Since so many of us can not afford to build such a diverse portfolio on our own, a mutual fund is a great idea. That alone is perhaps the best pro a mutual fund has over things like stock by stock investments. Of course it is important to know that, even over a long period of time, there is never a guarantee your initial investment will pay off. Mutual funds are by no means immune to mistakes and their chosen stocks are by no means immune to failure.

Put simply, a mutual fund is a pool of money provided by individual investors, companies, and other organizations. A fund manager is hired to invest the cash the investors have contributed. The goal of the manager depends upon the type of fund; a fixed-income fund manager, for example, would strive to provide the highest yield at the lowest risk.

 Advantages 

 1. Mutual Funds Offer Diversification 
The beauty of a mutual fund is that you can buy a mutual fund and obtain instant access to a hundreds of individual stocks or bonds. Otherwise, in order to diversify your portfolio, you might have to buy individual securities, which exposes you to more potential volatility.

 2. Mutual Funds are Professionally Managed 
Many investors don’t have the resources or the time to buy individual stocks. Investing in individual securities, such as stocks, not only takes resources, but a considerable amount of time. By contrast, mutual fund managers and analysts wake up each morning dedicating their professional lives to researching and analyzing current and potential holdings for their mutual fund.

 3. Mutual Funds Come in Many Varieties 
A mutual fund comes in many types and styles. There are stock funds, bond funds, sector funds, target-date mutual funds, money market mutual funds and balanced funds. Mutual funds allow you to invest in the market whether you believe in active portfolio management (actively managed funds) or you prefer to buy a segment of the market with no interference from a manager (passive funds and index mutual funds). The availability of different types of mutual funds allows you to build a diversified portfolio at low cost and without much difficulty.

 4. Mutual Funds Have Low Minimums 
Many mutual fund companies allow investors to get started in a mutual fund with as little as P10,000.

5. Systematic Investing and Withdrawals with Mutual Funds 
It is simple to invest regularly in a mutual fund. Many mutual fund companies allow investors to invest an affordable amount per month directly into a mutual fund. Money can be pulled directly from a bank account and invested directly in the mutual fund. On the other hand, money can be regularly withdrawn from a mutual fund and be deposited into a bank account. There are generally no fees for this service.

 6. Mutual Funds Offer Automatic Reinvestment
An investor can easily and automatically have capital gains and dividends reinvested into their mutual fund without a sales load or extra fees.

 7. Mutual Funds Offer Transparency
Mutual fund holdings are publicly available (with some delays in reporting), which ensures that investors are getting what they pay for.

 8. Mutual Funds Are Liquid
Just like an individual stock, a mutual fund allows you to request that your shares be converted into cash at any time. If you want to sell your mutual fund, the proceeds from the sale are available the day after you sell the mutual fund.

 9. Mutual Funds Have Audited Track Records
A mutual fund company must maintain performance track records for each mutual fund and have them audited for accuracy, which ensures that investors can trust the mutual fund’s stated returns.

 10. Safety of Investing in Mutual Funds
If a mutual fund company goes out of business, mutual fund shareholders receive an amount of cash that equals their portion of ownership in the mutual fund. Alternatively, the mutual fund’s Board of Directors might elect a new investment advisor to manage the mutual fund.

 Disadvantages
 1. Mutual Funds Have Hidden Fees
If fees were hidden, those hidden fees would certainly be on the list of disadvantages of mutual funds. The fee is disclosed in the mutual fund prospectus and can be found on the mutual funds’ web sites. 

2. No Guarantees. 
The value of your mutual fund investment, unlike a bank deposit, could fall and be worth less than the principle initially invested. And, while a money market fund seeks a stable share price, its yield fluctuates, unlike a certificate of deposit. In addition, mutual funds are not insured or guaranteed by an agency of the U.S. government. Bond funds, unlike purchasing a bond directly, will not re-pay the principle at a set point in time.

 3. No Control
Mutual funds also offer very little control. In fact, once you have chosen a mutual fund to invest in your control of your money has pretty much come to an end. With most, of, if not all of, these funds the investor not only has no say in what companies get invested in but they can not even find out what the mutual fund’s portfolio looks like. Aside from the funds being unwilling to divulge all of this information they are also often unable to seeing as the day to day trading is so vast.

 4. Lack of Liquidity
Yes, there are a lot of different mutual funds in the investment world, but that doesn’t necessarily mean they are very liquid. With mutual funds, the final transactions aren’t complete until the end of a trading day. It’s not until the final bell when you actual know the price of trades for the fund as a whole. That creates difficulties on days when the market is a volatile time-bomb. You need instant information in order to adjust your trading strategy. Mutual funds do not offer that option.

 5. Fluctuating Returns
Mutual funds are like many other investments without a guaranteed return: there is always the possibility that the value of your mutual fund will depreciate. Unlike fixed-income products, such as bonds and Treasury bills, mutual funds experience price fluctuations along with the stocks that make up the fund. When deciding on a particular fund to buy, you need to research the risks involved – just because a professional manager is looking after the fund, that doesn’t mean the performance will be stellar.

 6. Costs
Mutual funds provide investors with professional management, but it comes at a cost. Funds will typically have a range of different fees that reduce the overall payout. In mutual funds, the fees are classified into two categories: shareholder fees and annual operating fees.

 7. Over Diversification
Although diversification is one of the keys to successful investing, many mutual fund investors tend to overdiversify. The idea of diversification is to reduce the risks associated with holding a single security; overdiversification occurs when investors acquire many funds that are highly related and so don’t get the risk reducing benefits of diversification.

 8. Misleading Advertisements
The misleading advertisements of different funds can guide investors down the wrong path. Some funds may be incorrectly labeled as growth funds, while others are classified as small-cap or income. 

9. Investment style fluctuations
An investor who wants to maintain a certain asset allocation has to rely on the manager of the fund that he or she selects not to deviate from their stated investment styles. Any changes in priorities or investment styles could override and defeat the investor’s asset allocation.

 10. Panic selling 
 During sharp market downturns, investors often have a tendency to panic. When this happens, they look to sell their fund shares. Since the fund managers must redeem the shares, they have no choice but to sell the underlying securities at a time when there are few, if any, buyers. If not for the flood of redemptions, the fund manager would likely not sell the underlying securities. Thus, the professional manager’s expertise, judgment, and objectives are upset and overridden by the actions of the fund’s investors.

 11. No Insurance 
 Mutual funds, although regulated by the government, are not insured against losses.

Conclussion

 When you buy any investment, it’s important to understand both the good and bad points. If the advantages that the investment offers outweigh its disadvantages, it’s quite possible that mutual funds are something to consider. Whether you decide in favor or against mutual funds, the probability of a successful portfolio increases dramatically when you do your homework.

 All of this being said, mutual funds are a diverse investment that allows you to buy in with limited money. Perhaps their best perk is that your money ends up being professionally managed by people who are often amongst the best in the business.

 List of Leading Mutual Fund Companies in the Philippines

 ATR- Kim Eng Equity Opportunity Fund – www.mutualfund.com.ph
 DWS Deutsche Philippine Equity Fund, Inc.
 First Metro Save and Learn Equity Fund – www.fami.com.ph
 Philam Strategic Growth Fund, Inc. – www.philamfunds.com
 Philequity Fund, Inc. – www.philequity.net
 Philequity PSE Index Fund Inc.
 Sun Life Prosperity Phil. Equity Fund, Inc. – www.sunlifefunds.com
 United Fund, Inc.

sources: mutualfunds.about.com, open-ira.com, nasdaq.com, etf.about.com, finweb.com, pinoymoneytalk.com

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