cooked food inflation

j4 this bpost.. cooked food inflation is the most visible of all inflations.

After I returned from Japan, I visited food courts a few times. Cooked foods like 杂菜饭 in those places are getting expensive. Perhaps 10 or 15 years ago, I used to buy the same cooked foods regularly.

For everyone who needs to buy cooked food every day, this is bad news. However, on the flip side, this visible inflation bring out something good — It suddenly mad me appreciate home cooking .. cleaner, better ingredients, more nutritious, often 更好味道. For the same quality, $10 to $20 would be the price in those low-cost outlets. Fancy restaurants would sell even higher, for pretty much the same food.

Why did the Japan trip matter? Because in Japan I reminded myself to avoid all Chinese food. As soon as I was back in Singapore, I wanted to try Chinese food again. I went to a few places and checked out many Chinese foods. Then I came to notice the widespread inflation in cooked food.

[24]SG inflation affect`annuities #FLI15

 


k_FLI2

— SGD inflation.. affects cpfLife, FLI150, FLI250, FWD300

The further out you receive the $4472 annual payout, the less stuff it buys. Payout is not rising with inflation. A common issue with all bonds + annuities, which deserve a place in every portfolio. In 30 years, SGD may not be so strong, and imported inflation may become less well-controlled. Singapore is a small, open economy, tightly connected to the regional and global economy, so the local government has a bigger impact on this economy than the governments of bigger countries. Therefore, long-term inflation risk depends critically on government policies and performance… regime risk.

A true blue annuity product will feature a lengthy accumulation phase. It enhances payout rate (like 6% DYOC), to combat long-term inflation. On the flip side, the accumulation phase entails a prolonged prison term or slow breakeven.

Long-term inflation (beyond 30Y) is harder to predict. See my letter to Aaron in https://tanbinvest.dreamhosters.com/15331/ready-lifeincome-aaron/. So any payout received 50Y later has a questionable present value i.e. my family “may live in a very different world so would they appreciate a pocket money of $1000/Y  or $1400/Y or whatever?”

FLI2 is perceived by many as 90% a short-term bond, and 10% a true annuity. In the “10% scenario”, prevailing IR drops to 3%, then this annuity becomes cash-cow for some time up to 5Y.

==== FLI150

FLI2 = [Singlife Flexi Life Income II ]

  • $50,066 x 3 = $150,197 total premium payable in Sep | Mar24 | Mar25.
  • Annual payout: Mar 2026 to start receiving $4,472/Y until my passing. 2.98% of total premium
  • Upfront rebate: 3k+$3,129 by end of 2023, representing a 4%+ discount.

Annual payout consists of guaranteed 2.2% of SAss + projected 3% of SAss. “Once declared, considered guaranteed” because you receive “projected” amount in real cash. If actual payout drops below 2.98%, or if tBill yield stays above 3%, you can liquidate/surrender/cash out

Q: (sharp question) How does this deal compare with earlier annuity products like PLIP{Markus;ReadyLifeIncome{Aaron ?

  • Now in mid 2023 I have more spare cash
  • Now in mid 2023 I am not so keen about U.S. stocks like 300k ptf
  • #1 difference — liquidity i.e. quick breakeven in terms of surrender value

Liquidity .. Total premium amount becomes guaranteed from Mar 2026 onwards. Until then, surrender value was described to be $0. Therefore, _prison_term_ is 2.5Y from Sep23 to Mar26

Scenario 1: liquidate after first payout. Total “profit” is 6129+4472 coming out of $150,197 over 2.5Y

##jolts2tighten belt^勇敢花钱

Whether it’s a reason to spend my savings or a reason for tighter-belt, each reason usually comes to me as a jolt, or sometimes a wake-up call. The more I internalize these ideas, the less of a jolt they will be.

[s=specific jolts.. much preferred]

[G2] job insecurity .. If I lose this job, I’m forced to return to the U.S.

Stress job -> income insecurity -> tighten belt.

[s] During the December 2024 long chat with R.Dong, I felt his (hardly sustainable) work stress, the fragile boss-relationship, tough deadlines, PIP … all the stressors. They actually remind me of my GS, Qz,,, jobs.

[G7] return to U.S. as family .. higher living costs

[G3] long-term .. the uncertainty over long-term inflation
How much confidence do we have in the PAP team to control the omnipresent inflation hazard, and keep up SGD purchasing power?

[G5] grandma .. may need to live with us in Sgp. She may need lots of medical care. Both grandparents need medical care already. I don’t need “projected” figures.

++ [G7<6] [s] oversized bonus .. invest meaningful amount in my productivity, home office, commute
A short-lived jolt.

++ [G7] [s] pay for more stress-reliefs, given our rising income

 [G9] barebones .. my ffree is barebones. I may gradually feel impoverished about it.

++ [G6] I disapprove the Chinese tradition of million-dollar inheritance .. it could deprive them of the motivation, the rewarding strugle, the confidence, and the self-learning adventure.

There are plenty of /documented/ hazards of an /oversized/ bequest. I can spend more time reading. See ## faking-> slow conviction-> behavior change

If my kids lack character then such a bequest is probably more harm than good.
 [G9] my kids may not become high-earners.
I would want to show them conserver livestyle .. tight-belt

[s] med costs after MLP .. after I leave MLP, I need to prepare my family for medical costs, including my CAD check-up

++ CRBR: Financial advisors often point out that we only need about a million to retire

[s] private schools .. my son may end up in some private school rather than a poly

++ NetAsset annual snap in recent years [ex_china, high pay] often show a large increment, but I remind myself to arrest the splurge impulse

++ Shiller: live more like millionaires

[s] DJDJ pricing and care level increase

my frequent DJDJ visits .. is a smaller but more visible cost

++ I’m considering donations to “buy” social interaction in my old age.

am effectively long LIR

So far, I have experienced two short windows of LIR (pre-paid). So far, I see myself as net-long LIR i.e. thriving on rising LIR. However, this 3rd loan tenor will be “indefinite”… the prem financing loan (https://tanbinvest.dreamhosters.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=110&action=edit). Am 90% confident that I’m still long LIR.

— Observation: rising LIR has always accompanied rising DIR, though DIR may rise less than LIR.

— Fact: net creditor to banks… My cash balance always dwarfs my bank loan. At any time I always have enough to pay off my loans.

— Fact: big saver… Most of my adult life (let’s focus on post-2007) I have enjoyed a good brbr. Consequently, during high-LIR times, I have amassed growing cash piles and rode the DIR wave, or suffered from low yield

— Fact: high-LIR environment helps prop up payout rate of my paid-up insurance plans.

— Observation: high LIR may accompany inflation [ erosion of SGD purchasing power ] but LIR and inflation are not well-correlated. Singapore inflation is more correlated with exchange rate not LIR .. a key feature of the Sgp economy and MAS.

retire too late2enjoy golden years@@ #JL.Yuan

A friend wrote “I’ve heard of some examples in which people were unable to enjoy their late lives due to unexpected things.” Here’s my reply to him —

I’m curious what examples you have. There are examples of health conditions or grandchildren responsibilities, but..

1st) I want to address a realistic scenario — my kids get into financial trouble or career low-point including job loss. This kind of thing actually happened in my extended family, before the parents retired.

Q: In that situation, am I lucky or unlucky to be still working full time, as a /septuagenarian/?
A: Depending on the situation, I would say “Lucky to be employed”. One reason to feel unlucky is “OMG my dream of carefree retirement after age 75 is now destroyed. Now I have to work a few more years to help my son/daughter”. Well, in that situation, I do NOT think I would feel that way.

2nd) there is a risk that some government financial reform kicks in, which hurts the late-retirees like my father and me. I am confident that in well-managed systems like U.S. or Singapore, the super-old workers would be given sufficient advance notice/warning so I would have a viable option to reschedule and bring forward my retirement start date. This option would let me mitigate any penalty brought about by the impending reform.

2b) The flip side of this risk — economic or fiscal deterioration leading to inflation or currency devaluation. Black swan or white swan hitting my retirement nest egg. A very real risk to the early retiree. In conrast, the late retirees would worry much less about inflation. Nobody can have a watertight protection providing complete insulation from external shocks.

2c) beside external shocks, there are also missteps that could wipe out large portions of your retirement nest egg.

See career longevity= Bedrock@ %%fledgling ffree

Q: In that situation, am I lucky or unlucky to be still employed full time, as a septuagenarian?3rd) example is an unwanted request to help with grandchildren. My kids actually received help from four grandparents until all four quit due to health.

A: perhaps Unlucky .. “Now I have wasted my opportunity to enjoy peaceful retirement with my wife for the last 5 years. Now I have to help with my grandchildren until I’m too old. So I won’t get any opportunity whatsoever !”

I would balance 1) grandchildren care 2) work 3) leisure. Stressful balancing act? I hope not. My work and the grandchildren are not job duties _imposed_ on me. I think that in reality, grandparents do have the option to say No but I won’t say No for no reason. If my health or my job doesn’t permit, then I would say No. That’s what happened in my family.

4th) reason .. health is the most common “example in which people were unable to enjoy their late lives”. My wife does plan to retire in her 60s and pursue some unknown retirement things. For me, I thought long and hard.

What I enjoy doing in my late life, if I’m healthy, is mostly about work, light-duty but productive work with some job responsibilities, some deliverables, some real users. Stress is inevitable, but after my 60s I would want only light, positive stress. If the unwanted type of stress is too much then I would change job or retire.

Therefore, for me “unable to enjoy late life due to health” == “forced to retire when I still want to work”.

This is NOT a regretful outcome due to poor planning.

Therefore, the “example” of health is not a reason for me to retire earlier. (More like a reason to stay healthy enough to keep working.) Specifically,

  • If my health declines in my 70’s during my late-career and I can’t go out and enjoy retirement, I am sure I won’t have major regrets. There’s very little desire in me to leave my work and enjoy a 6M long vacation. I know what I enjoy, but I am even more confident about what I do NOT enjoy, like sightseeing year and year!
  • If my health declines during my 60’s, then my late-retirement plan needs adjustment. There’s no “regret” per se since I would end up retiring around standard retirement age.

In conclusion, in my prognosis there are very few examples that would sway me away from my long-standing plan of late retirement. I believe in my plan but I keep an open mind, ready to adjust my plan.

— rmSelf ^ xpSelf.. This letter I sent to a friend was all about the rmSelf making judgements for the xpSelf.  The rmSelf does care about the xpSelf [hedonimeter]

2ADL→$5k/M provid`Decades@ decent living has in-depth discussion of living with chronic conditions.

retirees do worry about inflation erod`nest egg

https://www.cnbc.com/2021/06/07/heres-an-option-to-protect-your-portfolio-from-inflation.html  says CPI-inflation is a top concern as investors fret about the rising cost of groceries, housing, gasoline and other living expenses.

Q: Is this widespread in the U.S. or Singapore?
A: I have limited insight. I would assume this is a top concern among some retirees in _every_ country, but less in SG

We can look at realized inflation. One of the biggest complaints of Chinese citizens is inflation in everyday purchases i.e. CPI inflation (housing doesn’t qualify). SG is not bad as discussed in several bposts.

Q: is SGD 3k CRBR realistic?
A: I still feel confident.

CPIx-inflation[def]=exclub-driven

— 3 types of inflation, as I told boy (CCA)

  • CPI inflation .. (retail market)
  • Commodity inflation .. (wholesale market) .. agriculture, construction, minerals, energy, shipping, extreme weather, geopolitical tensions,,,,, “News-related”
  • Asset inflation .. I think mostly real assets, perhaps equities, not bonds.

How about wage inflation? Well wage is not a price tag, so “wage inflation” is an unnatural extension of the “shrinking dollar bill” inflation concept.

Commodity inflation is a driver of CPI inflation, but often invisible to laymen.

— CPIx

Is this(income+asset) inflation || improving` livingStandard — “Inflation” in this context goes beyond CPI. I call it CPIx-inflation in my blog, and is related to asset inflation, among other things.

CPIx inflation is hard to estimate. See also latency无底洞 about medical inflation as an exmaple of CPIx inflation

In contrast, CPI-inflation is implied and assumed, whenever we talk about retirement, cpfLife, basket or inflation figures like 2%.

 

CPIx-inflation]rEstate, my CPI basket #w1r3

update post on CPI^prop inflation
I repeated my rental yield reservations to Susan

Susan said HDB flat is not only a form of rental property investment, but also a family residence. Renovation “investment” is more like burn rate rather than investment. Mortgage interest is definitely burn rate.

wife has concern about “hard to sell” in 20Y. Similarly, Susan said decades ago, HDB price level was considered very high and many ordinary Singaporeans were worried about buying at the peak, but I guess they had no choice.

Jolt: This “inflation” renders rental yield decline basically inevitable whenever we upgrade or even downgrade. As I said in another blogpost, rental inflation is slower than prop inflation ….

By excluding housing, CPI is massively understated – MacroBusiness

—- Let’s put on the “red hat” and examine inflation due to …. real estate
See also inflation applies to rent not property price

Granted, if you have no family and live in a shared or tiny room, then rental will be a small cost. From 1993 to 2005 I paid around s$300/month, sometimes below $300 in Yishun (Agilent/Spherion). It didn’t rise a lot. Even if it does rise to $600, it is easily affordable to me.

(In contrast, Americans renters often spend a sizeable portion of income on rental.)

As shown above, Singapore experienced mild CPI inflation across the board. However, in relative terms my net worth shrank relative to my peers who owned private properties, because our perception of richer or inferior is dominated by FOMO (peer comparison), not inflation affecting livelihood.

This paradox is probably more obvious in Beijing or Shanghai. Your rental won’t go up much, so you don’t feel that much inflation, but relative to your ex-classmates who now own multiple properties, your net worth shrinks significantly over 10Y to 30Y.

Therefore, for both owners and tenants, property appreciation is clearly felt, even if rent inflation is slower and delayed.


Q: If someone were to rent your home today, how much do you think it would rent for monthly, unfurnished and without utilities? This answer is the OER (Owner’s Equivalent Rent), included in CPI survey of homeowners. See https://www.bloomberg.com/opinion/articles/2021-05-13/april-cpi-housing-may-be-inflation-s-hidden-danger

Spending to purchase and improve[3] houses and other housing units is investment and not consumption. Home price inflation is not consumption, therefore not part of CPI. However, for most middle-class Chinese families I know, home price inflation is one of the biggest inflations they _feel_ in their wallet, on a monthly basis…. paradox ! Well, whether it’s home inflation or food inflation, at the core, a high inflation (like 11% p.a.) means that our savings are losing purchasing power by 11% a year, as measured by a (realistic) fixed basket of things-to-purchase.

We can also remove “fixed” — high inflation means our basket shrinks 11% from last year, for the same dollars spent.

By conventional wisdom, property, stocks, gold are assets with enduring value, not consumed. But imagine you need to buy silver jewelry every year, perhaps as gifts to many kids in the extended family, as a local tradition. Silver price inflation would hit your basket and contribute to everyday inflation.

[3] Consider property renovation. Suppose you own several commercial/residential properties so every year something would need upgrading. Renovation inflation would hit your basket and contribute to a clearly felt inflation. Renovation is investment… Paradox!

Therefore, in reality we don’t need to hang on to the investment^consumption theoretical dichotomy.

Now consider the middle-class Chinese families. Many [2] of them carry a heavy mortgage. Once the mortgage is halved, (family) free cash grows, and they would want to buy a better home, esp. in the Singapore context[3]. Not every year, but perhaps every decade. The home price inflation hits their basket real hard, because .. hold your breadth… because higher down-payment and higher monthly commitment dry up their free cash flow. As a result, the family has far less free cash to spend on vacations, dining, enrichment and other /discretionary/ spends. Their living standard suffers due to that expensive home. In Tier 1 Chinese cities, one expensive home could dry up the cashflow of 3 generations.

[3] The new home often offers about the same rental income and resale value as the old home. That translates to lower investment returns. I told my wife that

“If we spend additional $300k on a more comfortable home but consequently earn an inferior investment return, then we kiss goodbye to our carefree easy life, and cashflow high ground.”

Q: [2] Is this common behavior? Does it affect majority of the middle-class Chinese families? I would say yes.

Q: why do these families allocate such /disproportionate/ amount of (ultimately limited) resources to such luxury homes?
A: I can see it in my wife. The desire for better home seems insatiable.

In the U.S. we will experience the same “upgrading” process. Perhaps in most U.S. locations appreciation is not much more than CPI inflation.

— Paradox: Property price rises and falls more like stocks and gold, while rent and most CPI items experience slow and one-way movement i.e. inflation?

  • property, stocks, gold can be sold by individuals, so price fluctuation is higher than “supplied” goods and services.
  • Property, gold, stocks are driven by investor sentiment such as greed (hot money) and fear.

Q: When valuation drops 9% in a year, why does rent stay basically unchanged?
A: I feel most owners would rather leave the unit vacant than reducing the monthly rate. I am more “flexible” than them.

— home ownership is not a necessity, more like an investment, though the middle-class Chinese don’t feel that way.

Everyone needs housing as a basic need just as food, transport, entertainment, but not everyone needs to BUY a house, esp. in a volatile property market. Note a volatile market is usually too risky for consumers, and possibly more suitable for long-term investors.

In Beijing, the residential rental market is underutilized and only acceptable to the migrant workers. Most long-term residents prefer to buy, despite the volatile and extremely overpriced market.

Fundamentally, the middle-class Chinese sacrifices current spending in order to save/invest for the future, including future generations. Singapore government’s Past Reserve is the most institutionalized example. At the individual level, the most visible and significant save/invest item is home-purchase.

I think many consumers in western society spend more than the stereotypical middle-class Chinese, even at the same income. One of the biggest reasons is renting vs buying.  Suppose the westerner (renter) and the Chinese (buyer) live in two neighboring identical homes . I bet the renter’s housing outlay is much lower than the buyer’s, on a monthly basis.  If (a big if) both families have the same household outlay of $5000/M, then a bigger portion of that outlay goes towards housing for the Chinese than the renter. As a consequence, the Chinese family have less to spend on other things. Home price inflation shrinks their basket.

Is it(income+asset) inflation || improving` livingStandard

See also globalization reduc`min cost@ BasicHealthy Food

In China over 40Y salary went up 100~1000 times, rEstate appreciated as much (if not more). CPI inflation also stayed high for years, but probably less than salary. That’s why living standard improved for ordinary wage earners.

Fancy food, branded clothing, residential property, luxury car, branded college [3] … inflation largely driven by exclub. Xiaosheng.Liang (梁晓声) is the first to point out — As exclub demand increases, vendors increase prices. I think governments can’t do much about this demand, except property cooling measures.

Consider this semi-realistic scenario —

  • your salary has grown by 100%+ (i.e. more than doubled) over 10Y, but may gradually plateau or decline.
  • your equity asset portfolio has appreciated by almost 100% over 3Y, though you worry about crash. See Shiller: live more like millionaires
  • your rEstate asset portfolio has appreciated by (weighted) average 100% over 20Y, though you are not sure about bubble

Q: is your burn rate rising along?
A: it depends on the individual lifestyle (creep), and savings habits. So in some cases, burn rate would not rise as much as salary and investments. Look at my friend AshS.

Q: Compared to the China experience, is the above scenario evidence of currency depreciation (i.e. falling purchasing power)?
A: income and asset inflation perhaps, but I think CPI basket (your own, not the official basket) of goods in Singapore may show a modest inflation like 1-2%. You can easily verify that using your own food basket price, transportation price etc

Q: is rEstate and housing inflation ignored by CPI?
A: basically yes, but rental inflation is a major component of CPI. A home is classified as an investment asset rather than a consumption. See consumption inflation: inapplicable@realEstate

Based on these answers, the scenario can be very lucky, something like carefree easy life, provided AA) you maintain low burn rate and high brbr like 2.5 , and BB) the bulk (not a tiny portion) of your savings go into those high-growth investments exemplified above.

Actually, I choose to avoid BB in favor of current income.

Q: if you are “lucky” as explained, then how relevant is your own effort?
A: tricky. See blogpost on internal locus of control. Effort is part of each element. 1) Many people (me included) dare not touch U.S. stocks, so their mutual funds or Asia stocks are possibly less spectacular. 2) rEstate portfolio requires cash flow and (if overseas) active management

[3] U.S. elite private universities raise tuition fees at around 5% per year, based on my UChicago experience. This is clearly a luxury. This is the highest inflation in my personal experience.

— A paradox
(This scenario is fairly realistic. For tcost, I won’t explain the evidence.) I would say many of my peers enjoy salary and rEstate asset growth, but still complain. They complain about work-life balance, job insecurity, technology churn, parenting cost, housing cost, …. and their mediocre salary, but their income is in the top 5% nationally. Paradox !

I guess the paradox has to do with exclub and FOMO. See my “dream job” mail to CSY.

A similar paradox is FOMO^livelihood.

feeling richer^inferior @unchanged income #FOMO^livelihood explains “People feel richer when they rise relative to perceived peers, regardless of inflation/deflation, or income rise/fall.”

Therefore, these peers (XR, Deepak, CSY,,,) are actually much richer than before and much richer than their fellow countrymen, thanks to income and asset inflation, but they choose to benchmark with high flyers, spend like them, and therefore feel poor.

[[Living off Dividends in Retirement]] #5%CDY

See also

https://www.simplysafedividends.com/intelligent-income/posts/1-living-off-dividends-in-retirement (updated after the 2020 pandemic) is fairly in-depth as an info-commercial, written to promote dividend stock picking as an alternative to bonds/ETF/annuities…

The webpage mentions a 2015 WSJ illustration (not in-depth analysis) assuming

  • assuming (Treasury yields match the inflation rate) stock dividends grow 3.5% per year
  • assuming you retire with $1 million .. perhaps for an affluent couple
  • assuming you desire $40k/Y in annual inflation-adjusted retirement income… higher than cpfLife ERS payout
  • assuming inflation runs at 2% .. comparable to the official SGD inflation target
  • assuming 600k of your nest egg goes into dividend stocks, generating $18k/Y at 3% DYOC .. realistic

“(Dividends) can reduce volatility and make it psychologically easier for retirees to stay the course during times of turbulence.” — I feel the same.

“Living on dividend income in retirement can make it easier to stick to a plan by providing passive cash flow without incurring the stress of figuring out which assets to sell and when, especially if another market crash is around the corner.” — echoed on my blogpost https://tanbinvest.dreamhosters.com/wp-admin/post.php?post=17257&action=edit

— Why dividend stock picking beats dividend ETF .. “Some of (the stocks in an ETF) are good businesses with safe dividends, while others are lower in quality and will put their dividends on the chopping block. Some have high yields, others hardly generate much income at all. Simply put, an ETF is a hodgepodge of companies which may or not match your own income needs and risk tolerance very well.” — echoed on another blogpost or email

— concentration risk in high-yield sectors .. “only owning high-yielding stocks concentrated in one or two sectors, like real estate investment trusts (REITs) and utilities. Should interest rates rise and trigger a major investor exodus in high-yield, low-volatility sectors, significant price volatility and underperformance could occur.”

— Be suspicious of unsustainable CDY above 5% … “In our opinion, investors are usually better off pursuing lower-risk stocks that yield 5% or less. These companies tend to have better prospects of maintaining and growing earnings and investors’ principal over time.”

T:US is a rare high-yield blue-chip.