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Singapore is richer by over S$200B thanks to COVID-19, as Temasek announces record returns

And how do you know that SG is running a surplus because "it is collecting more money from people than it needs"?

View attachment 762533

Before Covid, we're spending more than our tax revenue. The sole reason why we're having a surplus is because up to half of long-term real returns on our reserves can be used to supplement our budget.




By spending a part of the long term returns on the people. As indicated above, we are already spending more than what we collect. The NIRC is already our largest source of revenue, and it is still growing faster than our tax revenue.

You can say that the performance of fund managers in our SWFs have greater implications on our budget than a tweak in tax policy lol.






Lololol. So having returns worth 3% and still growing of our GDP to supplement our budget is problematic and not justified, but paying 3% of your GDP on interest and leaving snowballing debt for future generations is justified and not problematic - both morally and practically?

View attachment 762537

I thought you said by law SG is not allowed to run budget deficits. Even if Sg is not running forced budget surplus now - what is the reason for holding on to past surpluses which have ballooned to billions of dollars. I am not saying it shouldnt but there should be a purpose - water security or defense preparedness or something. A govt cannot simple hold on to people money in a general way,
 
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A govt cannot simple hold on to people money in a general way,

Lol. Let's just say that we have different values and perspectives. I would prefer my country to accumulate surpluses rather than debt.
 
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GoUS can run budget deficit because fed can always print out of thin air. This is the privilege of being the reserve currency, period.

Most government can run a 3% budget deficit safely for a long period of time in line with rate of monetary expansion.

However GoS is among the most indebt government in the whole world for the reason of holding a forced saving system.

This is safe because debt denominations is sgd and creditors are people. Upon any crisis GoS can always print herself out.
 
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Temasek is pretty well diversified.

Temasek-2-1.jpg


As you can see on the pics Temasek is more exposed to financials than tech. That’s what I said if you did invest in chinese tech stocks the returns would be much lower.
 
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GIC returns a record 37.5%, reaching S$1T in assets: Here are some of its recent investments

Last month I covered Temasek, now it’s time to take a closer look at its larger sibling. Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC released its annual report in July but, as ever, the figures are not complete, as some remain withheld.

Officially, GIC reports neither the total Assets Under Management nor the one-year return rates (what is understandable, of course, considering its long-term investment horizon). Nevertheless, independent analysts provide estimates of both performance and the value of its portfolio.

Global SWF, a three-year old platform tracking sovereign wealth and pension funds founded by an ex-PWC Global Director and COO of SWF practice at PwC, calculated that GICs results have reached a record 37.5 per cent over the past year ending March 31st, outcompeting even the typically more aggressive Temasek which returned 24.5 per cent.

Their estimates also put the total figure of AUM at US$744 billion – or just over S$1 trillion, for the first time in GIC’s history.

Notably, this comes after a few years of stability in the fund’s performance, as exhibited in this chart below (figures are in US dollars). It turns out that the pandemic was rather good for business.

1630151463755.png


Singapore keeps getting richer thanks to COVID-19
As I explored a few weeks ago, worldwide Covid-19 crisis has actually made the prudent city-state wealthier by a few hundred billion dollars, due to stock market rallies around the world (a result of fiscal and monetary stimulus unleashed to battle the economic crisis induced by the virus) coupled with a surge in demand for the Singapore dollar.

Turns out that my earlier estimates of over S$200 billion that Singapore likely has gained in the past year have been rather cautious. If the above figures are accurate, the correct number is easily over S$400 billion, given the S$260 billion surge in the value of GIC’s holdings, on top of the S$181 billion gained through a combination of growing foreign reserves and Temasek’s portfolio – even after subtracting government’s Covid-19 support packages, which are going to amount to ca. S$54 billion by the end of this year.

Time to go shopping
Given these eye-popping amounts you may now be thinking – “Great! What can we spend it all on?” But the answer is, sadly – “not much”. Here’s why:

Singapore’s foreign reserves protect the currency exchange rates and are not meant to be liberally drawn from. Occasionally some amounts are moved to GIC for more profitable investment but, all in all, billions of dollars at MAS are held in liquid assets to ensure that SGD is neither very strong nor very weak.

Billions in Temasek are invested in equities – some of which may be quite liquid but are typically long-term investments. A quarter of its portfolio is tied up in Singapore and in critical companies like Singapore Airlines. Also, about 45 per cent is in unlisted assets which would be tough to liquidate.

Finally, there’s GIC, which is indirectly managing the central provident fund (CPF) money, as the proceeds from sales of special bonds protecting your CPF savings are transferred to it for investment.

Current CPF balances stand at S$485 billion – nearly half of GICs total assets. The remaining S$500+ billion out of the trillion dollar pile would technically constitute a part of national reserves but the company has to maintain a healthy buffer, assuming future economic crises may erode the value of its portfolio (while millions of Singaporeans remain legally entitled to steady returns on their CPF).

Its primary role is not to invest aggressively but rather maintain a fairly low-risk profile, with an above average return over a multi-decade horizon.

Hypothetically, between Temasek and GIC there may be S$200-300 billion worth of reserves which could theoretically be unwound without much hassle, if the companies liquidated some of their positions (and the government got a mandate to draw down this exorbitant amount of money, of course). But even in this fantasy scenario there’s a problem – as these investments are held in foreign currencies, they would first have to be exchanged to Singapore dollar, massively influencing currency exchange rates (since the funds would be liquidating foreign assets).

As you can see, it’s not so easy to actually take and spend hundreds of billions – which is why the stable returns in the form of NIRC (Net Investment Returns Contribution) flowing to the budget each year (to the tune of around S$20 billion) are a much more reasonable way of utilizing Singapore’s growing cushion of reserve money, without disrupting anything else in the process (and ensuring that these returns gradually increase with time).

But there’s another way that Singaporeans may benefit from GIC – and it’s by learning from its prudent management. So, here’s a look at some of its investments made in the past year, as it has been the most active fund globally, with over US$17.7 (S$24) billion deployed in calendar 2020.
1630130088082.png

GIC Investments in 2020
Where did Singapore’s premiere investment corporation place its bets during the pandemic? Here is a handful of the 65 deals it did in 2020.

Along with Temasek, GIC is one of the biggest investors in tech.

1630130072084.png


GIC was the biggest investor in the data center sector, providing nearly a third of investment. Much of it was devoted to a US$ 1 billion joint venture with Equinix to develop and operate hyperscale data centers in Japan to support the workload deployment needs of a targeted group of hyperscale companies, including the world’s largest cloud service providers. The venture follows on from a similar deal signed in 2019 by the partners for hyperscale data centers in Europe, indicating a long-term partnership in the sector.

This deal has since been expanded, with another US$3.9 billion pledged by Equinix and GIC to expand to 32 datacenters globally.

In India it has done deals with and around Reliance Retail, a subsidiary of Reliance Industries – the most valuable Indian company led by India’s (and Asia’s) richest man, Mukesh Ambani. Together with TPG (formerly Texas Pacific Group) it pumped US$1 billion into the retail business in the autumn of 2020.

In a parallel investment, led by Canadian Brookfield and British Columbia’s pension fund, GIC acquired from Reliance its telecom tower operator, Tower Infra Trust, for a combined US$3.4 billion (with GIC taking a 55 per cent stake).

And, in collaboration with SAFE, it put US$670 million into India’s leading mortgage lender and largest privately owned bank HDFC.

On Chinese soil GIC remained one of the top investors in real estate, buying LG Twin Towers in Beijing (pictured above) and another 1.1 million sq ft. office building in the capital, together with a real estate manager AEW. With Yanlord, a Chinese real estate developer listed in Singapore, GIC has taken a 49 per cent stake in a S$1.46 billion joint-venture to develop integrated commercial/residential properties in China. It joined CITIC in its logistics property fund and in a strategic investment in Xugong Group Construction Machinery. And a stake in Ming Yuan Cloud Group gives it a share of the real estate software market too.

With Temasek it invested in an EdTech startup Yuanfudao, which was worth over US$15 billion last year – though this particular deal may turn sour after Beijing’s crackdown on tutoring companies (can’t win it all). But, perhaps, its stake in Aixuexi, which is specializing in STEM education and is leveraging cloud computing AI and internet of things, will yield better results.

This is in addition to its other bids in GigaDevice Semiconductor (flash memory chip manufacturer) and IPOs of Yihai Kerry Arawana (a food processing company) and bottled water manufacturer Nongfu Spring’s, US$1.1 billion launch in the stock market.

In the UAE, Singapore’s leading SWF participated in one of the largest infrastructural investments, acquiring – in a consortium with several international partners – a 49 per cent stake in Abu Dhabi National Oil Company’s gas pipeline assets, worth US$10 billion.

In Australia, with Hong Kong listed ESR Cayman, GIC acquired a S$4 billion property portfolio. In California it led a US$353 million funding round for Apeel Sciences, which is creating solutions for food waste and a US$500 million round by Affirm, a San Francisco fintech startup launched by PayPal co-founder Max Levchin (offering delayed ecommerce payments by instalments).

With an average of about five deals totalling S$2 billion per month, GIC was the most active state-owned investor (SIO) in the world in 2020.

While we certainly can’t judge the company by a single-year performance (which is why it doesn’t report it itself) its long-term consistency has made it one of the most successful SIOs in the world.

And, today, decades of prudent financial management have proved their worth during the worst pandemic in a century, growing Singapore’s financial cushion unlike at any other time in the past.
 
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My admiration for Singapore mostly stems from how smartly and sustainably the entire country is financed.

In particular, how the government — by laws it has imposed on itself — is not permitted deficit spending and has to accumulate surpluses, which are profitably invested through Monetary Authority of Singapore (MAS), GIC, and Temasek Holdings.

The last one of the three has just reported record returns of 24.5 per cent for the year ending 31 March 2021, buoyed by stock market rallies fuelled in no small part by global stimulus packages released into economies stricken by the COVID-19 crisis.

This has lifted the total portfolio value up from S$306 billion to S$381 billion — and the increase is likely to continue for as long as governments around the world are releasing fiscal and monetary measures to stave off deeper economic woes, with much of the funds pushing stock markets higher and higher.

In other words, after decades of prudent financial planning and state investment, Singapore is making money while others are desperately trying to save themselves from sinking.

Temasek’s shareholder return of S$75 billion alone is higher than the entire amount of S$53.7 billion in local relief spending packages passed in 2020 and 2021, propping up the economy, staving off retrenchments, helping Singaporean businesses weather the storm of the pandemic.

S’pore has gained S$235B in reserves in MAS, Temasek
That’s not all. While COVID-19 shook the world, Singapore’s foreign reserves under management of MAS have grown by another S$160 billion.

View attachment 762374


At the end of 2019, total official foreign reserves amounted to S$375 billion, growing to S$478 billion by end 2020 and S$535 billion by June 2021.

In total, Singapore has gained S$235 billion in reserves in these two entities (MAS and Temasek Holdings).

Even if we subtract the ca. S$54 billion it had to earmark for support packages in 2020 and 2021, it is still S$181 billion up — and this is even without GIC posting its results (due by the end of this month), which are bound to be similarly strong, as they are boosted by the same underlying causes.

While we don’t know the exact amount under GIC’s management, the net impact on reserves is bound to be in at least tens of billions of dollars as well.

As a result, even if we account for all the economic pains incurred by the pandemic and massive spending the government had to use to support the country, the city-state is easily over S$200 billion richer than it was before COVID-19 ravaged the world.

Of course, there’s a caveat. These gains are not necessarily permanent and may still fluctuate depending on the international situation and the demand for Singapore dollar.

However, this also highlights the simple genius of Singapore’s reserve system. It is designed in a way that not only yields healthy and steady returns over long-term, but its diversified investments act as shock-absorbers, balancing the impact of negative external events.

S’pore will not be disadvantaged regardless of economy conditions

Due to a robust combination of equities (for high growth) and government-issued securities like bonds (for security and stability), coupled with a strong currency, a global net creditor status (i.e. Singapore is a creditor to other countries and doesn’t have external, public debts to worry about), there’s hardly a situation in which the city-state would be bad off.

If the global economy is good, it’s obviously good for Singapore too.

If the global economy is bad but countries are using fiscal and monetary measures to stimulate their economies (like it is happening today), Singapore still benefits thanks to its foreign investments, even if domestic GDP is taking a temporary hit.

The cherry on top of it all is the fact that Singapore has no external public debt to speak of (since it can’t borrow to finance budgetary deficits), and it has now added another tool to make the most of its financial might.

Under the recently-passed SINGA, the government can borrow up to S$90 billion to finance long-term infrastructure investments, which is actually cheaper than if it wanted to unwind a portion of its reserves to do so. It would lose more in lost returns on investments than it has to pay to lenders.

In other words, even when it’s borrowing, Singapore is actually making more money than if it didn’t.

Unlike other countries, which are now taking on humongous levels of debt, pushing the burden on its repayment to future, ageing generations, Singapore is actually using debt to optimise the returns from its various investments and be even more resilient in the face of global crises.

In this particular Covid-19 pandemic, it has not made the country weaker, but wealthier than ever before.
Temasik is papa Lee's personal pension fund, right?
 
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GIC returns a record 37.5%, reaching S$1T in assets: Here are some of its recent investments

Last month I covered Temasek, now it’s time to take a closer look at its larger sibling. Singapore’s sovereign wealth fund GIC released its annual report in July but, as ever, the figures are not complete, as some remain withheld.

Officially, GIC reports neither the total Assets Under Management nor the one-year return rates (what is understandable, of course, considering its long-term investment horizon). Nevertheless, independent analysts provide estimates of both performance and the value of its portfolio.

Global SWF, a three-year old platform tracking sovereign wealth and pension funds founded by an ex-PWC Global Director and COO of SWF practice at PwC, calculated that GICs results have reached a record 37.5 per cent over the past year ending March 31st, outcompeting even the typically more aggressive Temasek which returned 24.5 per cent.

Their estimates also put the total figure of AUM at US$744 billion – or just over S$1 trillion, for the first time in GIC’s history.

Notably, this comes after a few years of stability in the fund’s performance, as exhibited in this chart below (figures are in US dollars). It turns out that the pandemic was rather good for business.

Singapore keeps getting richer thanks to COVID-19
As I explored a few weeks ago, worldwide Covid-19 crisis has actually made the prudent city-state wealthier by a few hundred billion dollars, due to stock market rallies around the world (a result of fiscal and monetary stimulus unleashed to battle the economic crisis induced by the virus) coupled with a surge in demand for the Singapore dollar.

Turns out that my earlier estimates of over S$200 billion that Singapore likely has gained in the past year have been rather cautious. If the above figures are accurate, the correct number is easily over S$400 billion, given the S$260 billion surge in the value of GIC’s holdings, on top of the S$181 billion gained through a combination of growing foreign reserves and Temasek’s portfolio – even after subtracting government’s Covid-19 support packages, which are going to amount to ca. S$54 billion by the end of this year.

Time to go shopping
Given these eye-popping amounts you may now be thinking – “Great! What can we spend it all on?” But the answer is, sadly – “not much”. Here’s why:

Singapore’s foreign reserves protect the currency exchange rates and are not meant to be liberally drawn from. Occasionally some amounts are moved to GIC for more profitable investment but, all in all, billions of dollars at MAS are held in liquid assets to ensure that SGD is neither very strong nor very weak.

Billions in Temasek are invested in equities – some of which may be quite liquid but are typically long-term investments. A quarter of its portfolio is tied up in Singapore and in critical companies like Singapore Airlines. Also, about 45 per cent is in unlisted assets which would be tough to liquidate.

Finally, there’s GIC, which is indirectly managing the central provident fund (CPF) money, as the proceeds from sales of special bonds protecting your CPF savings are transferred to it for investment.

Current CPF balances stand at S$485 billion – nearly half of GICs total assets. The remaining S$500+ billion out of the trillion dollar pile would technically constitute a part of national reserves but the company has to maintain a healthy buffer, assuming future economic crises may erode the value of its portfolio (while millions of Singaporeans remain legally entitled to steady returns on their CPF).

Its primary role is not to invest aggressively but rather maintain a fairly low-risk profile, with an above average return over a multi-decade horizon.

Hypothetically, between Temasek and GIC there may be S$200-300 billion worth of reserves which could theoretically be unwound without much hassle, if the companies liquidated some of their positions (and the government got a mandate to draw down this exorbitant amount of money, of course). But even in this fantasy scenario there’s a problem – as these investments are held in foreign currencies, they would first have to be exchanged to Singapore dollar, massively influencing currency exchange rates (since the funds would be liquidating foreign assets).

As you can see, it’s not so easy to actually take and spend hundreds of billions – which is why the stable returns in the form of NIRC (Net Investment Returns Contribution) flowing to the budget each year (to the tune of around S$20 billion) are a much more reasonable way of utilizing Singapore’s growing cushion of reserve money, without disrupting anything else in the process (and ensuring that these returns gradually increase with time).

But there’s another way that Singaporeans may benefit from GIC – and it’s by learning from its prudent management. So, here’s a look at some of its investments made in the past year, as it has been the most active fund globally, with over US$17.7 (S$24) billion deployed in calendar 2020.
View attachment 773697
GIC Investments in 2020
Where did Singapore’s premiere investment corporation place its bets during the pandemic? Here is a handful of the 65 deals it did in 2020.

Along with Temasek, GIC is one of the biggest investors in tech.

View attachment 773696

GIC was the biggest investor in the data center sector, providing nearly a third of investment. Much of it was devoted to a US$ 1 billion joint venture with Equinix to develop and operate hyperscale data centers in Japan to support the workload deployment needs of a targeted group of hyperscale companies, including the world’s largest cloud service providers. The venture follows on from a similar deal signed in 2019 by the partners for hyperscale data centers in Europe, indicating a long-term partnership in the sector.

This deal has since been expanded, with another US$3.9 billion pledged by Equinix and GIC to expand to 32 datacenters globally.

In India it has done deals with and around Reliance Retail, a subsidiary of Reliance Industries – the most valuable Indian company led by India’s (and Asia’s) richest man, Mukesh Ambani. Together with TPG (formerly Texas Pacific Group) it pumped US$1 billion into the retail business in the autumn of 2020.

In a parallel investment, led by Canadian Brookfield and British Columbia’s pension fund, GIC acquired from Reliance its telecom tower operator, Tower Infra Trust, for a combined US$3.4 billion (with GIC taking a 55 per cent stake).

And, in collaboration with SAFE, it put US$670 million into India’s leading mortgage lender and largest privately owned bank HDFC.

On Chinese soil GIC remained one of the top investors in real estate, buying LG Twin Towers in Beijing (pictured above) and another 1.1 million sq ft. office building in the capital, together with a real estate manager AEW. With Yanlord, a Chinese real estate developer listed in Singapore, GIC has taken a 49 per cent stake in a S$1.46 billion joint-venture to develop integrated commercial/residential properties in China. It joined CITIC in its logistics property fund and in a strategic investment in Xugong Group Construction Machinery. And a stake in Ming Yuan Cloud Group gives it a share of the real estate software market too.

With Temasek it invested in an EdTech startup Yuanfudao, which was worth over US$15 billion last year – though this particular deal may turn sour after Beijing’s crackdown on tutoring companies (can’t win it all). But, perhaps, its stake in Aixuexi, which is specializing in STEM education and is leveraging cloud computing AI and internet of things, will yield better results.

This is in addition to its other bids in GigaDevice Semiconductor (flash memory chip manufacturer) and IPOs of Yihai Kerry Arawana (a food processing company) and bottled water manufacturer Nongfu Spring’s, US$1.1 billion launch in the stock market.

In the UAE, Singapore’s leading SWF participated in one of the largest infrastructural investments, acquiring – in a consortium with several international partners – a 49 per cent stake in Abu Dhabi National Oil Company’s gas pipeline assets, worth US$10 billion.

In Australia, with Hong Kong listed ESR Cayman, GIC acquired a S$4 billion property portfolio. In California it led a US$353 million funding round for Apeel Sciences, which is creating solutions for food waste and a US$500 million round by Affirm, a San Francisco fintech startup launched by PayPal co-founder Max Levchin (offering delayed ecommerce payments by instalments).

With an average of about five deals totalling S$2 billion per month, GIC was the most active state-owned investor (SIO) in the world in 2020.

While we certainly can’t judge the company by a single-year performance (which is why it doesn’t report it itself) its long-term consistency has made it one of the most successful SIOs in the world.

And, today, decades of prudent financial management have proved their worth during the worst pandemic in a century, growing Singapore’s financial cushion unlike at any other time in the past.
That's amazing performance. I like the portfolio. It hits all the growth areas. It's been a good year for wealth funds in general. Chinese funds also had a fantastic 2020 as well.
 
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That's amazing performance. I like the portfolio. It hits all the growth areas. It's been a good year for wealth funds in general. Chinese funds also had a fantastic 2020 as well.

Temasek has its largest exposure in China, and they have been hurt in recent months due to the crackdowns and fears.


 
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Temasek has its largest exposure in China, and they have been hurt in recent months due to the crackdowns and fears.


Short term Chinese tech stocks has been bad. Mid to long term they are fine. Education companies are harder to say. They will need to change their business model.

Ironically, Chinese sovereign wealth funds will probably perform better in 2021 because they have less exposure in China.
 
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Short term Chinese tech stocks has been bad. Mid to long term they are fine. Education companies are harder to say. They will need to change their business model.

Ironically, Chinese sovereign wealth funds will probably perform better in 2021 because they have less exposure in China.

I'm wondering to buy some Chinese edu stocks as meme stocks lol. They have more cash than their market value.
 
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I'm wondering to buy some Chinese edu stocks as meme stocks lol. They have more cash than their market value.
It does seem like a good bargain stock. Most investors are waiting to see the new business model. I don't know much about the sector so I won't touch it.
 
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I'm wondering to buy some Chinese edu stocks as meme stocks lol. They have more cash than their market value.
I thought china forced them to be non-profit. whats there for investors in non-profit stocks ?
 
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You probably have lots of US stocks, haven’t much chinese stocks. Otherwise the returns would be less.
Why? Why would they? Because it would affirm the selfdelusional narrative China haters like to spew?

For your information the exact opposite is the case. They are simply "allowed" to thrive on a commonly unfeasible and risky model due to lack of certain foreign intervention to outright destroy and undermine their economy.
 
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