We got swamped with work, personal and baby stuff. But we are still here and surviving. So that has to count for something. Anyway, this post is a rant about our love/hate relationship with DBS. While we use DBS banking products extensively, they continue to annoy us with the little things.
Like signing up for the DBS BYOB Promotion and SAYE Account back in Aug 2017. It gave us the highest interest we have ever earned on any bank account. But the number of hoops we had to jump through to get it was ridiculous.
Another thing was my wife’s salary crediting bank account that got converted into the useless DBS Multi-Currency Account instead of the more useful DBS Multiplier Account. And she still ended up having to make a trip to the branch to do the conversion.
Anyway, the newest thing to annoy us is the DBS DigiPortfolio. When we read the articles and blog posts online, they had mostly positive reviews of it. Even though we read the introduction to the DBS DigiPortfolio on its webpage, we made the mistake of not reading the FAQs.
As banking employees, that is a dumb ass mistake. Because we know how important FAQs are and those can sometimes be used to hide important information about the banking product. Meaning the bank has disclosed the fact but just that it’s not immediately obvious to the customer.
We thought, let’s set up both the Asia Portfolio (with S$1,000) and Global Portfolio (with US$1,000) using my wife’s DBS account. After all, only she has the multi-currency account (DBS Multiplier Account) to do this. While the setting up process was easy and the interface was user-friendly, these are the 2 main problems we have with the DBS DigiPortfolio.
1. The feature of setting up a regular savings plan is not available yet.
What in the world?! Nobody thought it was a good idea to flag this issue out extensively!? The whole point of robo-investing for us is so my wife can dollar-cost average by using a regular savings plan. That is how she can increase her robo-investments without monitoring the markets and having to do it herself. She does not enjoy watching the market and doing any form of manual investments.
By not having this feature, it becomes like a lump sum investment at a point in time. If she wants to increase our investment in the DBS DigiPortfolio, she has to close it and open another one. Isn’t that like selling her robo-investments and buying more robo-investments manually? Makes no sense when it’s supposed to be fuss-free investing. Might as well make the investments manually yourself with the ETFs. Speaking of which.
2. It was difficult identifying the ETFs in the portfolios
We understand the position taken not to disclose the ETFs in the DBS Asia and Global DigiPortfolios upfront in the introduction and FAQs webpage. After my wife opened both portfolios, she could see the name of the ETFs in them. But there was barely any information on them.
Where are the stock symbols on the stock exchanges? No introduction to what these ETFs holdings are. Are there dividends/distributions and what is the frequency like? Do some of these ETFs have no dividends/distributions themselves and are on a reinvestment basis? Does it even matter since the DBS DigiPortfolios reinvest any dividends/distributions?
So many questions and so little answers. I was trying to track the ETFs purchased in my wife’s DBS Asia and Global DigiPortfolios using StocksCafe. Took me a long time to identify the relevant UK-listed ETFs in the Global Portfolio. And there was that 1 Singapore-listed ETF in the Asia Portfolio that was not easy to find as well. It would be nice for DBS to provide more information on these ETFs to the customers that actually set up the portfolios.
I’m going to tag this post under Robo-Advisor. It’s technically not accurate but this is still a form of robo-investing. Fancy words for what’s essentially the same thing. DBS as the service provider is paid a fee based off my wife’ AUM in the DigiPortfolio to manage her robo-investments.
If she can’t set up a regular savings plan, what is the point of charging that fee if you can’t invest the contributions she wants to make? Is DBS charging a fee for just making the initial investments in setting up the DigiPortfolio, rebalancing and reinvesting any dividends/distributions? You aren’t even doing much in between those activities.
And why should my wife pay DBS for research done on ETFs as part of the fee charged? There’s barely any information on them that my wife can read about. Think about this and improve your service DBS. This message goes out to all robo-advisors in Singapore. Keep improving and be relentless in your drive to serve the customers whose investments you manage at a fee in the best way possible.
FC says
haha.. thanks for the honest review. .and to think so many online bloggers have been promoting it. (sponsered post obviously)
quite strange on #1 though. kinda defeats the purpose of robo investing, one would think..
Finance Smiths says
I’m okay with sponsored posts provided the views provided are somewhat fair. There are some significant issues (especially with #1 as you have mentioned) with DBS DigiPortfolio that were not highlighted at all.