Finance Smiths

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Why do we invest with robo-advisors

02.17.2019 by Finance Smiths //

I have a younger colleague who started investing with Smartly and StashAway (Singapore robo-advisors) about the same time as my wife and I back in 2017. She invested a lump sum of about S$1,000 with each of them and didn’t contribute any further cash funds into her accounts.

To date, my colleague’s account returns are negative and she doesn’t understand why that’s the case. She’s now turned off investing with Singapore robo-advisors and recommends against them with our other colleagues.

I have another older colleague who heard about Smartly and StashAway but didn’t invest with these Singapore robo-advisors because she doesn’t understand them. In her own words, she prefers real estate such as residential property because she can see and touch it.

This is just within my department, which is a small sample size of the population in the bank that I work in. But it’s clear that there’s more work to be done in terms of promoting robo-advisors in Singapore. Even when you read online comments on forums about them, people are complaining about their negatives returns, high fees and saying stuff like they are worse than savings accounts.

I’m not saying Smartly and StashAway are perfect as investment tools because there are flaws with these Singapore robo-advisors. The key is to understand whether they fit within your investing strategies before you write them off or invest with them.

Please don’t disregard or start investing with Smartly and StashAway just because people in general (or even financial bloggers like us) say or do so. It’s the worst thing you can do.

For time-strapped corporate employees like my wife and I, Smartly and StashAway works well. Our total monthly automated funds transfer into both of our accounts is about S$2,500. It’s a good way to gain exposure to global equities regardless of whether the markets go up or down.

When the markets dip or crash, we manually transfer funds into both of our accounts. This can total up to a few hundreds or thousands depending on the extent of the downward movement of the markets.

This Dollar-Cost Averaging (DCA) and Value-Cost Averaging (VCA) component is an effective hedge against the Market Timing component of our total asset portfolio.

Most importantly, it frees up my personal time to focus on the things that matter to me. Family, friends and work. Our jobs remain essential to us because this is the one area we derive all of our active income from (salary) and spend most of our day at (12 hours from the point we leave our door at home in the morning to the point we step back through in the evening). We spend just as much time with our colleagues as well.

Since my wife and I are more suited to be corporate employees than being self-employed for now, we are much better off keeping ourselves focused on being in more positive job environments. This will go a lot further in keeping ourselves happy than worrying about our investing strategies.

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Comments

  1. Irshah says

    17 February 2019 at 10:22 PM

    Hi,
    I’m a supporter of the Robos. May I know who did better so far? Smartly or stashaway for you guys?

    • Finance Smiths says

      3 March 2019 at 1:23 PM

      Hi,

      Currently, the account returns on our StashAway portfolios are higher than our Smartly portfolios. I’m tracking my portfolios on my blog pages so you can have a look there as well!

  2. Mickey J says

    18 February 2019 at 2:20 PM

    I totally agree with your statement that investors need to understand what they are investing in before they jump in.

    Your first colleague invested a lump sum when the market was pretty good and complains of negative returns in a market where everything is down. I’d be very surprised if she saw positive returns because that platform would have been a scam.

    If that colleague had done a monthly investment, she would have gotten a better return because she’d be buying the same ETFs/stocks at a cheaper price each month.

    • Finance Smiths says

      5 March 2019 at 1:06 AM

      Yeap, which is why I prefer to make monthly investments and do lump sum investing at times when the market dips!

  3. MMF Solutions says

    22 February 2019 at 9:29 PM

    Nice blog and interesting post. Roboadvisors are good but not always but it seems that you are really satisfied using them. Thanks for sharing your experience.

    • Finance Smiths says

      5 March 2019 at 1:06 AM

      Yup, robo-advisors work well for me in my current situation. Will see how it goes. No worries!

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