Want to earn more than Php 900,000.00 per month?
Then go for 3D Fast Track Package at Php 11,964.00 per package.
For inquiries
Contact: Christopher
email: limchrc@yahoo.com
mobile: 0917-840-9332
http://vmobileloadxtremephilippines.blogspot.com/
Why is Financial IQ important in Philippines? Financial IQ is extremely important not only in the Philippines, but in the entire world. With solid Financial IQ, better financial choices are made. With good Financial IQ, money works for us. With excellent Financial IQ, we can easily find business opportunities in Philippines. With excellent Financial IQ, we can ride the growth of Philippines stock market. With great Financial IQ, we can gain Financial Independence.
Thursday, October 28, 2010
Wednesday, October 27, 2010
Financial IQ: VMobile Technologies - Part 2
Feasibility Studies
Worse Case Scenario
1. Endorsed 2 VMobile Fast Track Package in YOUR LIFETIME!
2. And pass your misfortune to all of your sales force
3. Save all your income within the period
What If... Scenario
1. Endorsed 4 VMobile Fast Track Package in YOUR LIFETIME!
2. And pass your misfortune to all of your sales force
3. Save all your income within the period
For inquiries
Contact: Christopher
email: limchrc@yahoo.com
mobile: 0917-840-9332
http://vmobileloadxtremephilippines.blogspot.com/
Worse Case Scenario
1. Endorsed 2 VMobile Fast Track Package in YOUR LIFETIME!
2. And pass your misfortune to all of your sales force
3. Save all your income within the period
What If... Scenario
1. Endorsed 4 VMobile Fast Track Package in YOUR LIFETIME!
2. And pass your misfortune to all of your sales force
3. Save all your income within the period
For inquiries
Contact: Christopher
email: limchrc@yahoo.com
mobile: 0917-840-9332
http://vmobileloadxtremephilippines.blogspot.com/
Financial IQ: VMobile Technologies - Part 1
Overview
VMobile is established on April 29, 2008 and is a subsidiary of Penta Capital Investment Corporation. Penta Capital Investment Corporation is a financing company of various big Philippines' companies such as ABS-CBN, Alaska, Cebu Pacific, JG Summit Holdings, KFC, Manila Water, MRT, Petron, 7-Eleven, San Miguel Corporation, Shell, and SM Prime Holdings.
How to Earn as Technouser
1. Retail - Selling of discounted loads
How to Earn as Technopreneur
1. Retail - Selling of discounted loads
2. Access Card Override - Technopreneur can earn 1% to 2% for every load consumed by its Access Cards
3. Direct Sales Incentive (DSI) - Unlimited Php 500.00 per referral
4. Team Sales Bonus (TSB) - Earn Php 500.00 when a new name falls in the Blue and Red slots
Technopreneur Packages
1. Fast Track Package = Php 3,988.00
- 20 Retailer Access Cards
- 20 Retailer Kits (Quick Guides, Price Lists, Product Guides, Brochures)
- 2 Tarpaulins
- Business and Entrepreneur Flagship Training
2. 3D Fast Track Package = Php 11,964.00
- 80 Retailer Access Cards (60 Access Cards + 20 Free Access Cards)
- 60 Retailer Kits (Quick Guides, Price Lists, Product Guides, Brochures)
- 6 Tarpaulins
- Business and Entrepreneur Flagship Training
Frequently Asked Topics:
1. E-wallet can be reloaded in:
3. Safety net
Online Loading - http://www.loadxtreme.ph/new/index.html
Inventory System - https://mylx.biz/blogs/
For inquiries
Contact: Christopher
email: limchrc@yahoo.com
mobile: 0917-840-9332
VMobile is established on April 29, 2008 and is a subsidiary of Penta Capital Investment Corporation. Penta Capital Investment Corporation is a financing company of various big Philippines' companies such as ABS-CBN, Alaska, Cebu Pacific, JG Summit Holdings, KFC, Manila Water, MRT, Petron, 7-Eleven, San Miguel Corporation, Shell, and SM Prime Holdings.
How to Earn as Technouser
1. Retail - Selling of discounted loads
How to Earn as Technopreneur
1. Retail - Selling of discounted loads
2. Access Card Override - Technopreneur can earn 1% to 2% for every load consumed by its Access Cards
3. Direct Sales Incentive (DSI) - Unlimited Php 500.00 per referral
4. Team Sales Bonus (TSB) - Earn Php 500.00 when a new name falls in the Blue and Red slots
Technopreneur Packages
1. Fast Track Package = Php 3,988.00
- 20 Retailer Access Cards
- 20 Retailer Kits (Quick Guides, Price Lists, Product Guides, Brochures)
- 2 Tarpaulins
- Business and Entrepreneur Flagship Training
2. 3D Fast Track Package = Php 11,964.00
- 80 Retailer Access Cards (60 Access Cards + 20 Free Access Cards)
- 60 Retailer Kits (Quick Guides, Price Lists, Product Guides, Brochures)
- 6 Tarpaulins
- Business and Entrepreneur Flagship Training
Frequently Asked Topics:
1. E-wallet can be reloaded in:
- VMobile office
- Technopreneur to Technopreneur/Technouser transfer
- Deposit to any of the banks (BDO, BPI, Landbank, Metrobank)
3. Safety net
- Php 30,000 / day
- Php 210,000 / week
- Php 900,000 / month
Online Loading - http://www.loadxtreme.ph/new/index.html
Inventory System - https://mylx.biz/blogs/
For inquiries
Contact: Christopher
email: limchrc@yahoo.com
mobile: 0917-840-9332
Monday, October 25, 2010
Financial IQ: Lessons from Mang Inasal
Image via Wikipedia
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Big thumbs up to Mang Inasal!!
Lessons from Mang Inasal & Jollibee: Why build if you can buy?
While the rest of Philippine society prepared for the recent super typhoon called Juan, a super business deal last week has surprised and impressed most business people — the recent sale of Mang Inasal fast-food resto chain’s 70 percent shareholdings by young Iloilo-born founder Edgar Injap Sia to Jollibee for P3 billion.
Edgar Injap Sia is one of the fast-rising business achievers this writer has recently cited in this column; I also invited him to be guest speaker at the monthly dinner meeting of the Anvil Business Club.
Fluent in English, Tagalog, Hokkien, Mandarin and Ilongo, Edgar Sia shared that when a Pangasinan businessman approached him to apply for the franchise for that entire province, he only agreed on condition that the new franchisee shall commit to open more outlets than the existing number of Jollibee stores in Pangasinan within a few years. That guy has amazing guts, vision and entrepreneurial energy.
Congratulations to him and his buyer, the Tan family of Jollibee led by founder Tony Tancaktiong and president Ernesto “Ato” Tanmantiong, for their remarkable win-win deal. Why win-win? Edgar told me the sale to Jollibee “will be good for the long-term future of Mang Inasal,” which I agree with, due to the operational excellence and complementary nature of their business models. Instead of going through the arduous process of an initial public offering (IPO) at the Philippine Stock Exchange to cash in on his phenomenal success, Sia got P3 billion and still gets to retain 30 percent of the business which could become even more valuable as part of the Jollibee fast-food conglomerate which is No. 1 in the Philippines.
For the Tan family and other stockholders of Jollibee, instead of directly competing and trying to outflank an aggressive and fast-rising competitor (their own former attempt at Mary’s Chicken had flopped several years ago), it’s strategically brilliant and logical for Jollibee to just buy out Edgar Sia. The P3 billion they spent for Mang Inasal could easily be regained with increased sales, more profits and the overall enhancement of the Jollibee brand as the Philippines’ undisputed fast-food industry leader. Why build if you can buy? If you can’t beat your competitor, buy him! (Psssst, this is an open secret: the strategy of buying foes you can’t beat has been a strategy of our many shamelessly corrupt politicos for ages!)
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Big thumbs up to Mang Inasal!!
Lessons from Mang Inasal & Jollibee: Why build if you can buy?
While the rest of Philippine society prepared for the recent super typhoon called Juan, a super business deal last week has surprised and impressed most business people — the recent sale of Mang Inasal fast-food resto chain’s 70 percent shareholdings by young Iloilo-born founder Edgar Injap Sia to Jollibee for P3 billion.
Edgar Injap Sia is one of the fast-rising business achievers this writer has recently cited in this column; I also invited him to be guest speaker at the monthly dinner meeting of the Anvil Business Club.
Fluent in English, Tagalog, Hokkien, Mandarin and Ilongo, Edgar Sia shared that when a Pangasinan businessman approached him to apply for the franchise for that entire province, he only agreed on condition that the new franchisee shall commit to open more outlets than the existing number of Jollibee stores in Pangasinan within a few years. That guy has amazing guts, vision and entrepreneurial energy.
Congratulations to him and his buyer, the Tan family of Jollibee led by founder Tony Tancaktiong and president Ernesto “Ato” Tanmantiong, for their remarkable win-win deal. Why win-win? Edgar told me the sale to Jollibee “will be good for the long-term future of Mang Inasal,” which I agree with, due to the operational excellence and complementary nature of their business models. Instead of going through the arduous process of an initial public offering (IPO) at the Philippine Stock Exchange to cash in on his phenomenal success, Sia got P3 billion and still gets to retain 30 percent of the business which could become even more valuable as part of the Jollibee fast-food conglomerate which is No. 1 in the Philippines.
For the Tan family and other stockholders of Jollibee, instead of directly competing and trying to outflank an aggressive and fast-rising competitor (their own former attempt at Mary’s Chicken had flopped several years ago), it’s strategically brilliant and logical for Jollibee to just buy out Edgar Sia. The P3 billion they spent for Mang Inasal could easily be regained with increased sales, more profits and the overall enhancement of the Jollibee brand as the Philippines’ undisputed fast-food industry leader. Why build if you can buy? If you can’t beat your competitor, buy him! (Psssst, this is an open secret: the strategy of buying foes you can’t beat has been a strategy of our many shamelessly corrupt politicos for ages!)
Related articles
- Jollibee seals P3-B takeover of Mang Inasal (business.inquirer.net)
- 'Mang Inasal' CEO confirms P3B sale to Jollibee (business.inquirer.net)
Sunday, October 10, 2010
Financial IQ: Lessons from Facebook
Cover via Amazon
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Two thumbs up to Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook!!
Instead of indicating that you “like,” will “accept” and “friend” the Hollywood film The Social Network, I urge you to turn off your Facebook and your computer, go to the cinema and watch this surprisingly excellent, well-crafted, funny, witty and immensely entertaining movie about the enigmatic founder of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg.
Congratulations to actor Jesse Eisenberg who convincingly and hauntingly plays Mark Zuckerberg (both are Jewish in heritage), talented director David Fincher and scriptwriter Aaron Sorkin (who based the story on the book The Accidental Billionaires authored by Ben Mezrich). I bet a hundred pizzas they will win Oscar Awards next year!
By the way, the 26-year-old Zuckerberg is now the world’s youngest billionaire with a net worth of US$6.9 billion. He also announced a $100 million donation to an educational charity on Oprah Winfrey’s TV show, just before the release of this unflattering and uncensored though not derogatory film on how he created Facebook and changed the world.
Here are some life lessons I learned from this movie:
• People yearn for true friendships. Our modern frantically-wired world of high-tech instant communications and the biggest social networking site Facebook with over half a billion members show us that all of us human beings, deep down in our hearts, need friends. We humans need to be connected to others or to somehow belong to a group or community.
Ironically, Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, is depicted in this film as having only one real friend: investor, business partner and later litigant Eduardo Saverin. Zuckerberg is intellectually smart but socially inept. He has just been dumped by a girlfriend, so he furiously creates a social networking site called Facematch, then Facebook, partly it seems to become popular with girls, to be more accepted in the Harvard campus where his nerdiness excludes him from the social elite.
• Dream big and think long-term. This saga of computer programming whiz Mark Zuckerberg dreaming big is ideal for all of us to emulate. While his schoolmate and business partner Eduardo Saverin keeps impatiently nagging him to get advertisers and cash in on their fast-growing yet still fledging Facebook, Zuckerberg wisely resists because he is aiming bigger. Zuckerberg and his next business partner Sean Parker (played by singer Justin Timberlake) were proven right — it’s better to catch a huge marlin in the long-term instead of just 14 small trouts now!
• Ideas change the world. It is not true that there’s no more room in the world for another Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison or Bill Gates. Innovation and new ideas continuously bring out new global icons like Zuckerberg because of sheer creativity, with the phenomenon Facebook co-created by him just in 2004 in his Harvard dorm room.
• Invest wisely. Instead of us or overseas Filipino workers investing their earnings in houses, cars or karaoke systems first, invest in your kids’ education or in your own self-improvement for the best future returns. Invest also in income-generating assets. Our politicos should also lessen wasting taxpayers’ money on more waiting sheds, basketball courts or municipal halls, and instead invest wisely in more public schools or health clinics, raise the salaries of all teachers public or private and don’t cut the budget for state schools like University of the Philippines!
• Be “cool.” This writer was struck by Mark Zuckerberg’s statement that Facebook’s biggest asset was its being “cool,” thus he didn’t seek pop-up advertising. Even now, with ads, Facebook is still cool because it primarily serves the purpose of social networking. What he meant by “cool” is being perceived by others as credible. Let us maintain and enhance our credibility as individuals, as institutions, even as leaders or government officials. Indeed, be cool.
• Be kind to all, never underestimate anyone. Be kind to every person, especially those without friends in school, in the office or in your neighborhood, the loners or the problematic. Be kind not because he or she might become unexpectedly a future success like the campus nerds Bill Gates or Mark Zuckerberg, but because it is the civilized and Christian way to live.
• Was it the ancient Chinese strategist Sun Tzu and/or the classic Godfather film which said “Keep your friends close but your enemies closer?” The film The Social Network shows how Zuckerberg, a socially unpopular Jewish nerd, was able to outsmart the WASP elite twin brothers and Harvard senior students Cameron Winklevoss and Tyler Winklevoss, who struggled with their own Harvard Connection social network site project.
• Have passion! Throughout the film, one can see that many great achievers like Zuckerberg were not just after big bucks; nor was it just wanting to have girls to date. He had passion, believed in what he was and what he is still doing. Why would Zuckerberg stay up until the wee hours of the morning, programming code on his laptop while his colleagues were out partying? Why do Cebu Pacific Air taipan John Gokongwei, Jr. at age 84 and with billions of pesos in wealth, or SM founder Henry Sy with the biggest malls or world’s richest investor Warren Buffet still work so hard? Why do the best artists, musicians and writers spend hours painting, sculpting, composing and writing nonstop in what psychologists describe as the “flow” phenomenon wherein one loses the sense of time and space? Isn’t it all ultimately because of sheer passion?
• No matter who we are or become, don’t be an a-hole! Among the intriguing aspects of the Mark Zuckerberg persona portrayed in the film — which isn’t a completely accurate biopic but also not total fiction — is that he is never shown to smile or sincerely tell his associates or his few friends the all-important words, “Thank you.”
Zuckerberg is incredibly smart, driven, hardworking, wily and eventually successful, yet his weaknesses, as shown in this movie at least, his often being too self-centered and lacking a balanced life. His remarkable success and personal pathos should be a reminder to those among us who may have forgotten the correct priorities in life. I strongly believe that to be a better, humane and truly successful person, we need to balance career and any quest for success with love of God, family and friends — real-life friends and not just Facebook friends!
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Two thumbs up to Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook!!
Instead of indicating that you “like,” will “accept” and “friend” the Hollywood film The Social Network, I urge you to turn off your Facebook and your computer, go to the cinema and watch this surprisingly excellent, well-crafted, funny, witty and immensely entertaining movie about the enigmatic founder of Facebook Mark Zuckerberg.
Congratulations to actor Jesse Eisenberg who convincingly and hauntingly plays Mark Zuckerberg (both are Jewish in heritage), talented director David Fincher and scriptwriter Aaron Sorkin (who based the story on the book The Accidental Billionaires authored by Ben Mezrich). I bet a hundred pizzas they will win Oscar Awards next year!
By the way, the 26-year-old Zuckerberg is now the world’s youngest billionaire with a net worth of US$6.9 billion. He also announced a $100 million donation to an educational charity on Oprah Winfrey’s TV show, just before the release of this unflattering and uncensored though not derogatory film on how he created Facebook and changed the world.
Here are some life lessons I learned from this movie:
• People yearn for true friendships. Our modern frantically-wired world of high-tech instant communications and the biggest social networking site Facebook with over half a billion members show us that all of us human beings, deep down in our hearts, need friends. We humans need to be connected to others or to somehow belong to a group or community.
Ironically, Zuckerberg, the founder of Facebook, is depicted in this film as having only one real friend: investor, business partner and later litigant Eduardo Saverin. Zuckerberg is intellectually smart but socially inept. He has just been dumped by a girlfriend, so he furiously creates a social networking site called Facematch, then Facebook, partly it seems to become popular with girls, to be more accepted in the Harvard campus where his nerdiness excludes him from the social elite.
• Dream big and think long-term. This saga of computer programming whiz Mark Zuckerberg dreaming big is ideal for all of us to emulate. While his schoolmate and business partner Eduardo Saverin keeps impatiently nagging him to get advertisers and cash in on their fast-growing yet still fledging Facebook, Zuckerberg wisely resists because he is aiming bigger. Zuckerberg and his next business partner Sean Parker (played by singer Justin Timberlake) were proven right — it’s better to catch a huge marlin in the long-term instead of just 14 small trouts now!
• Ideas change the world. It is not true that there’s no more room in the world for another Albert Einstein, Thomas Edison or Bill Gates. Innovation and new ideas continuously bring out new global icons like Zuckerberg because of sheer creativity, with the phenomenon Facebook co-created by him just in 2004 in his Harvard dorm room.
• Invest wisely. Instead of us or overseas Filipino workers investing their earnings in houses, cars or karaoke systems first, invest in your kids’ education or in your own self-improvement for the best future returns. Invest also in income-generating assets. Our politicos should also lessen wasting taxpayers’ money on more waiting sheds, basketball courts or municipal halls, and instead invest wisely in more public schools or health clinics, raise the salaries of all teachers public or private and don’t cut the budget for state schools like University of the Philippines!
• Be “cool.” This writer was struck by Mark Zuckerberg’s statement that Facebook’s biggest asset was its being “cool,” thus he didn’t seek pop-up advertising. Even now, with ads, Facebook is still cool because it primarily serves the purpose of social networking. What he meant by “cool” is being perceived by others as credible. Let us maintain and enhance our credibility as individuals, as institutions, even as leaders or government officials. Indeed, be cool.
• Be kind to all, never underestimate anyone. Be kind to every person, especially those without friends in school, in the office or in your neighborhood, the loners or the problematic. Be kind not because he or she might become unexpectedly a future success like the campus nerds Bill Gates or Mark Zuckerberg, but because it is the civilized and Christian way to live.
• Was it the ancient Chinese strategist Sun Tzu and/or the classic Godfather film which said “Keep your friends close but your enemies closer?” The film The Social Network shows how Zuckerberg, a socially unpopular Jewish nerd, was able to outsmart the WASP elite twin brothers and Harvard senior students Cameron Winklevoss and Tyler Winklevoss, who struggled with their own Harvard Connection social network site project.
• Have passion! Throughout the film, one can see that many great achievers like Zuckerberg were not just after big bucks; nor was it just wanting to have girls to date. He had passion, believed in what he was and what he is still doing. Why would Zuckerberg stay up until the wee hours of the morning, programming code on his laptop while his colleagues were out partying? Why do Cebu Pacific Air taipan John Gokongwei, Jr. at age 84 and with billions of pesos in wealth, or SM founder Henry Sy with the biggest malls or world’s richest investor Warren Buffet still work so hard? Why do the best artists, musicians and writers spend hours painting, sculpting, composing and writing nonstop in what psychologists describe as the “flow” phenomenon wherein one loses the sense of time and space? Isn’t it all ultimately because of sheer passion?
• No matter who we are or become, don’t be an a-hole! Among the intriguing aspects of the Mark Zuckerberg persona portrayed in the film — which isn’t a completely accurate biopic but also not total fiction — is that he is never shown to smile or sincerely tell his associates or his few friends the all-important words, “Thank you.”
Zuckerberg is incredibly smart, driven, hardworking, wily and eventually successful, yet his weaknesses, as shown in this movie at least, his often being too self-centered and lacking a balanced life. His remarkable success and personal pathos should be a reminder to those among us who may have forgotten the correct priorities in life. I strongly believe that to be a better, humane and truly successful person, we need to balance career and any quest for success with love of God, family and friends — real-life friends and not just Facebook friends!
Financial IQ: CEB marks lucky 10/10/10 with P10 all domestic and P1010 all international seat sale
Image via Wikipedia
Awesome deal! Take advantage of the cheap fare if your flight schedule coincides with the sales promotion.
Your low fare leader Cebu Pacific (CEB) puts up 101,010 seats on sale to mark the special day of October 10, 2010, considered lucky by many. The seat sale as low as P10 is only available on October 10, 2010 or until seats last, for travel this January 1-March 31, 2011.
For the ‘Go Lite’ seat sale fare of P10, you can travel to any of CEB’s 33 domestic destinations. This includes Boracay (Caticlan), Legazpi, Bacolod, Coron (Busuanga), Cagayan de Oro, Calbayog, Catarman, Cebu, Davao, Iloilo, Kalibo, Naga, Ozamiz, Puerto Princesa, San Jose, Surigao, Tacloban, Tagbilaran, Tuguegarao and Zamboanga.
Guests can also avail of P1,010 ‘Go Lite’ seats to any of CEB’s 16 international destinations, such as Beijing, Brunei, Osaka, Seoul (Incheon), Jakarta, Kota Kinabalu, Bangkok, Macau, Singapore and Hong Kong.
Because this date only comes once in a lifetime, we're offering seats as low as P10 to give you more opportunity to visit different destinations in the country and in Asia. So hurry, visit www.cebupacificair.com for your bookings now!
Related articles
- Cebu Pacific increases int'l flights amid PAL woes (business.inquirer.net)
- Cebu Pacific IPO priced at P125 per share (business.inquirer.net)
- Flight attendants dancing to Lady Gaga good for airline IPO (usatoday.com)
- You: Cebu Pacific eyes $620m from IPO (menafn.com)
Friday, October 8, 2010
Financial IQ: 6 Habits That Will Make You Broke
Image via Wikipedia
This is an interesting article about money habits. I do agree, though, that it takes discipline to instil good money management in each of us.
It's still a week until payday, but your checking account is almost empty already. Where did all your money go? We all have our black holes, those money pits that seem to magically make our cash disappear. Here are six bad habits that will make you broke, and how to break them:
1. Window Shopping
2. Carrying Lots of Cash
3. Saving Your Info With Vendors
4. Clipping Unneeded Coupons
5. Shopping With Your Emotions
6. Not Planning Ahead
The Bottom Line
It takes some discipline to break these bad habits. With some planning, discipline and avoiding tempting situations, you can break these habits -- and maybe even find you'll have a little extra cash at the end of the month.
Related articles
- How To Break Your Bad Money Habit (hellobeautiful.com)
- High IQ = Life Success? (ask.metafilter.com)
Wednesday, October 6, 2010
Financial IQ: Smart Double Deal
Seems like a potentially good deal as you can acquire a 2-year installment plan for mobile phone and laptop for Plan 1800 (Samsung Champ + Samsung Notebook), Plan 2500 (Samsung Corby WIFI + Samsung Notebook), and Plan 3500 (Blackberry Curve 8520 + Samsung Notebook).
Of course, a lot depends on the Samsung laptop model and how much it cost. Anyone knows?
Related articles by Zemanta
- Samsung Q430 14in notebook (go.theregister.com)
- Samsung sells 5 million Galaxy S smartphones in 4 months, on its way to overtake Apple (armdevices.net)
Monday, October 4, 2010
Financial IQ: Insurance for those with GSIS
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
In my opinion, ensuring that the insurance coverage is enough is the most important priority. It is so much better to be over-insured than under-insured.
How to improve insurance for people already with gsis?
I studied at the University of the Philippines (UP), Harvard and AIM, and am the youngest of 11 candidates for president of UP, who will be elected first week of November. I want to ask Insular Life officials for their suggestions or advice on how we can further improve the retirement and life insurance benefits of all UP employees, faculty and even their dependents nationwide. Right now, UP faculty and staff are covered by GSIS insurance. Life insurance does not exceed P1 million in benefits.
Dr. Patrick T. Azanza, 42 years old, CEO of WinSource Business Solutions & candidate for president of UP, Mandaluyong City
Answer
Thank you, Dr. Azanza, for thinking about the welfare of the faculty and staff of the University of the Philippines. Retirement should be the most rewarding of our life stages and should be a period when one can truly enjoy the fruits of a lifetime of devoted work by being financially secure. This can readily be achieved if one prepares early and well enough for it. It is worth setting aside a reasonable portion of one’s income for this purpose. While we are provided pension benefits from either the SSS or the GSIS, these can only constitute a minimal portion of our retirement income and thus cannot cover all our expenses. They need to be supplemented by our own savings and additional insurance for retirement security.
For employee groups, Insular Life offers a Comprehensive Group Program (CGP) consisting of group life insurance with a side fund that invests a generous portion of the premiums in order to create and augment needed retirement funds. We would be most happy to present this to you for your consideration.
Additionally you may also want to consider the health security of your coworkers. What many don’t realize or take for granted is the fact that when an employee reaches the normal age of retirement, he/she will no longer be eligible for medical insurance or health care. Yet it is during one’s elderly years when health maintenance expenses increase significantly. Once again this can be prepared for financially and we can present certain options for this concern.
In my opinion, ensuring that the insurance coverage is enough is the most important priority. It is so much better to be over-insured than under-insured.
How to improve insurance for people already with gsis?
I studied at the University of the Philippines (UP), Harvard and AIM, and am the youngest of 11 candidates for president of UP, who will be elected first week of November. I want to ask Insular Life officials for their suggestions or advice on how we can further improve the retirement and life insurance benefits of all UP employees, faculty and even their dependents nationwide. Right now, UP faculty and staff are covered by GSIS insurance. Life insurance does not exceed P1 million in benefits.
Dr. Patrick T. Azanza, 42 years old, CEO of WinSource Business Solutions & candidate for president of UP, Mandaluyong City
Answer
Thank you, Dr. Azanza, for thinking about the welfare of the faculty and staff of the University of the Philippines. Retirement should be the most rewarding of our life stages and should be a period when one can truly enjoy the fruits of a lifetime of devoted work by being financially secure. This can readily be achieved if one prepares early and well enough for it. It is worth setting aside a reasonable portion of one’s income for this purpose. While we are provided pension benefits from either the SSS or the GSIS, these can only constitute a minimal portion of our retirement income and thus cannot cover all our expenses. They need to be supplemented by our own savings and additional insurance for retirement security.
For employee groups, Insular Life offers a Comprehensive Group Program (CGP) consisting of group life insurance with a side fund that invests a generous portion of the premiums in order to create and augment needed retirement funds. We would be most happy to present this to you for your consideration.
Additionally you may also want to consider the health security of your coworkers. What many don’t realize or take for granted is the fact that when an employee reaches the normal age of retirement, he/she will no longer be eligible for medical insurance or health care. Yet it is during one’s elderly years when health maintenance expenses increase significantly. Once again this can be prepared for financially and we can present certain options for this concern.
Related articles
- Should Life Insurance Be Purchased as an Investment? (wisebread.com)
- Whole Life Insurance: Ways to Use Cash Value (prnewswire.com)
- Have life insurance? Is it enough or maybe too much? (usatoday.com)
Financial IQ: Life insurance for kids?
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
It is better to invest in equities or mutual funds for kids, than life insurance.
Do you advise life insurance for kids as young as two?
My wife and I got insurance already. My two kids likewise have educational plans. Do you advise that kids as young as two years old have life insurance?
Andy Ong
Answer
The essence of life insurance is being able to compensate for the income lost as a result of one’s demise. Proceeds of the life insurance is intended for the beneficiaries’ use so that they will be able to sustain their needs until a more permanent means of replacing the deceased’s lost income is found. Given this line of thought, availing of life insurance for a young child may not be a priority.
However, we do recognize that life insurance products have evolved to fit financial needs other than risk protection. Current life insurance policies serve as viable long-term savings and investment products. It is also general knowledge that premiums for life insurance policies generally are lower for younger ones; hence, if you see the need to set aside funds for your children’s future needs, like birthday celebrations or educational trips abroad, you may as well consider getting these plans at a more affordable rate by identifying your children as the insured party.
As added advice, though, put in a rider that will waive future premiums should the policy’s payer become totally and permanently disabled or pass away so that in case this eventuality happens, the policy will remain in force and the kid will still be able to use the policy’s benefits. Assign a guardian as well so that this person can transact business with the insurance company if the child is still a minor when this particular scenario happens.
It is better to invest in equities or mutual funds for kids, than life insurance.
Do you advise life insurance for kids as young as two?
My wife and I got insurance already. My two kids likewise have educational plans. Do you advise that kids as young as two years old have life insurance?
Andy Ong
Answer
The essence of life insurance is being able to compensate for the income lost as a result of one’s demise. Proceeds of the life insurance is intended for the beneficiaries’ use so that they will be able to sustain their needs until a more permanent means of replacing the deceased’s lost income is found. Given this line of thought, availing of life insurance for a young child may not be a priority.
However, we do recognize that life insurance products have evolved to fit financial needs other than risk protection. Current life insurance policies serve as viable long-term savings and investment products. It is also general knowledge that premiums for life insurance policies generally are lower for younger ones; hence, if you see the need to set aside funds for your children’s future needs, like birthday celebrations or educational trips abroad, you may as well consider getting these plans at a more affordable rate by identifying your children as the insured party.
As added advice, though, put in a rider that will waive future premiums should the policy’s payer become totally and permanently disabled or pass away so that in case this eventuality happens, the policy will remain in force and the kid will still be able to use the policy’s benefits. Assign a guardian as well so that this person can transact business with the insurance company if the child is still a minor when this particular scenario happens.
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Financial IQ: On Prenuptial agreement
Image by The Library of Congress via Flickr
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Prenuptial agreement is gaining popularity on foreign countries. Personally, I believe it is a good tool as both parties start planning ahead.
Do you recommend prenuptial agreements?
Are prenuptial agreements before marriage already accepted here in our society, or is this just for movie stars and the super-rich? Can a very large life insurance policy bought before marriage be covered by a prenuptial agreement also? Like in the case of a separation, can insurance be used to pay off a spouse? Do you advise couples with lots of properties or assets to sign prenuptial agreements, or will this sour a relationship?
Lawrence V. Del Mundo, 33 years old, single, businessman, Makati City
Answer
Marriage settlements or prenuptial agreements that would govern the property relations of the married couple during their marriage are provided in our law on family relations under the Family Code. The parties may choose among absolute community, conjugal partnership of gains, complete separation of property, or any other regime. We do not have statistics to help us determine the extent of its practice, but most of the married couples we know do not have marriage settlements. We may have heard about such prenuptial agreements among certain personalities only mainly because they are well-publicized. Under the Family Code, in the absence of a marriage settlement, the law provides that the system of absolute community of property under the code shall govern.
Entering prenuptial agreements is dictated primarily by the need of the parties and not merely by the size of the assets. It could be made for the purpose of preserving one’s family properties, or for providing for the needs of family members from an earlier marriage, or for simply defining the property relations between spouses during the marriage. However, since discussions on property relations could be emotional, it is best that the parties are already mentally and emotionally prepared before they enter into prenuptial agreements; otherwise, as you mentioned, it may contribute to the souring of their relationship at that point when they are already preparing to get married.
A life insurance policy, just like any property, can be the subject of a prenuptial agreement. As such, it could properly be covered by the agreed upon property relations between spouses. However, I do not think there is life insurance that will pay benefits in case of separation of spouses (legal separation or annulment) to “pay off” a spouse. As we know, in life insurance, the contingent event that triggers the payment of the basic benefit is the loss of life of the insured.
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Prenuptial agreement is gaining popularity on foreign countries. Personally, I believe it is a good tool as both parties start planning ahead.
Do you recommend prenuptial agreements?
Are prenuptial agreements before marriage already accepted here in our society, or is this just for movie stars and the super-rich? Can a very large life insurance policy bought before marriage be covered by a prenuptial agreement also? Like in the case of a separation, can insurance be used to pay off a spouse? Do you advise couples with lots of properties or assets to sign prenuptial agreements, or will this sour a relationship?
Lawrence V. Del Mundo, 33 years old, single, businessman, Makati City
Answer
Marriage settlements or prenuptial agreements that would govern the property relations of the married couple during their marriage are provided in our law on family relations under the Family Code. The parties may choose among absolute community, conjugal partnership of gains, complete separation of property, or any other regime. We do not have statistics to help us determine the extent of its practice, but most of the married couples we know do not have marriage settlements. We may have heard about such prenuptial agreements among certain personalities only mainly because they are well-publicized. Under the Family Code, in the absence of a marriage settlement, the law provides that the system of absolute community of property under the code shall govern.
Entering prenuptial agreements is dictated primarily by the need of the parties and not merely by the size of the assets. It could be made for the purpose of preserving one’s family properties, or for providing for the needs of family members from an earlier marriage, or for simply defining the property relations between spouses during the marriage. However, since discussions on property relations could be emotional, it is best that the parties are already mentally and emotionally prepared before they enter into prenuptial agreements; otherwise, as you mentioned, it may contribute to the souring of their relationship at that point when they are already preparing to get married.
A life insurance policy, just like any property, can be the subject of a prenuptial agreement. As such, it could properly be covered by the agreed upon property relations between spouses. However, I do not think there is life insurance that will pay benefits in case of separation of spouses (legal separation or annulment) to “pay off” a spouse. As we know, in life insurance, the contingent event that triggers the payment of the basic benefit is the loss of life of the insured.
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Financial IQ: Taxes on life insurance policies
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Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Irrevocable insurance is 100% tax exempted. Revocable insurance is suject to estate tax.
Taxes on life insurance policies?
My husband and I have several ordinary life insurance policies, all with Insular Life, except for one. We are now senior citizens with adult and economically independent children. We now want to make sure that the proceeds of our policies will not be subjected to any kind of tax so it will be sufficient to cover our respective estate taxes. My parents did not have any life insurance coverage and it was difficult for me to come up with my share of the estate taxes then, especially since it was during the Asian financial crisis. We want to provide our children with enough insurance money to cover whatever estate taxes they will incur in the future.
Justice and Eric Mondragon, Loyola Grand Villas, Quezon City
Answer
Thank you for insuring with Insular Life. You have made the right decision as your insurance policies will surely take care of your estate planning concerns. As to your query, please allow us to respond here in a general way for the benefit of the other readers. However, we shall provide you with specific answers to your questions through your private e-mail.
On your questions about life insurance taxation, two possible taxes come to mind: one is the income tax on the part of the beneficiary of the policy, and the other is the estate tax.
Under Section 32 (B) (1) of our National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC), “the proceeds of life insurance policies paid to the heirs or beneficiaries upon the death of the insured…” are not included in the gross income and therefore exempt from income tax. However, if the proceeds are left with the insurer to earn interest, such interest payments shall be included in the gross income of the beneficiary subject to income tax.
On the other hand, life insurance proceeds may be subject to estate tax under certain conditions. Section 85 (E) of the NIRC states that even if the proceeds are payable to the beneficiary upon the insured’s death, such amount shall be considered as part of the deceased-insured’s estate subject to estate tax when such beneficiary was designated as “revocable.” This means that the insured-policyholder still has complete “control” over the policy, such that he can make any policy transaction all by himself (without the consent or approval of the beneficiary), especially for the change, addition or removal of the beneficiary. Other transactions could be the securing of a policy loan or policy surrender to get cash values. If there is no beneficiary designation, it shall be presumed that the designation is “revocable.”
The proceeds shall likewise be subject to estate tax if these are payable to the executor or administrator of the insured’s estate and, of course, if proceeds are payable to his estate, even if the designation was irrevocable. If no beneficiary was named, most insurance policies state that the proceeds shall be paid to the insured-policyholder’s estate, and therefore subject to estate tax as discussed above.
It is when the beneficiary designation is “irrevocable” that the insurance benefit will not be subject to the estate tax. The irrevocable beneficiary designation removes from the insured-policyholder “control” over the policy so that all policy transactions affecting the interest of the irrevocably designated beneficiary would require the latter’s approval. With this, the proceeds are not considered part of the deceased-Insured’s estate, and therefore not subject to the estate tax.
Financial IQ Philippines Quick Hit(s):
Irrevocable insurance is 100% tax exempted. Revocable insurance is suject to estate tax.
Taxes on life insurance policies?
My husband and I have several ordinary life insurance policies, all with Insular Life, except for one. We are now senior citizens with adult and economically independent children. We now want to make sure that the proceeds of our policies will not be subjected to any kind of tax so it will be sufficient to cover our respective estate taxes. My parents did not have any life insurance coverage and it was difficult for me to come up with my share of the estate taxes then, especially since it was during the Asian financial crisis. We want to provide our children with enough insurance money to cover whatever estate taxes they will incur in the future.
Justice and Eric Mondragon, Loyola Grand Villas, Quezon City
Answer
Thank you for insuring with Insular Life. You have made the right decision as your insurance policies will surely take care of your estate planning concerns. As to your query, please allow us to respond here in a general way for the benefit of the other readers. However, we shall provide you with specific answers to your questions through your private e-mail.
On your questions about life insurance taxation, two possible taxes come to mind: one is the income tax on the part of the beneficiary of the policy, and the other is the estate tax.
Under Section 32 (B) (1) of our National Internal Revenue Code (NIRC), “the proceeds of life insurance policies paid to the heirs or beneficiaries upon the death of the insured…” are not included in the gross income and therefore exempt from income tax. However, if the proceeds are left with the insurer to earn interest, such interest payments shall be included in the gross income of the beneficiary subject to income tax.
On the other hand, life insurance proceeds may be subject to estate tax under certain conditions. Section 85 (E) of the NIRC states that even if the proceeds are payable to the beneficiary upon the insured’s death, such amount shall be considered as part of the deceased-insured’s estate subject to estate tax when such beneficiary was designated as “revocable.” This means that the insured-policyholder still has complete “control” over the policy, such that he can make any policy transaction all by himself (without the consent or approval of the beneficiary), especially for the change, addition or removal of the beneficiary. Other transactions could be the securing of a policy loan or policy surrender to get cash values. If there is no beneficiary designation, it shall be presumed that the designation is “revocable.”
The proceeds shall likewise be subject to estate tax if these are payable to the executor or administrator of the insured’s estate and, of course, if proceeds are payable to his estate, even if the designation was irrevocable. If no beneficiary was named, most insurance policies state that the proceeds shall be paid to the insured-policyholder’s estate, and therefore subject to estate tax as discussed above.
It is when the beneficiary designation is “irrevocable” that the insurance benefit will not be subject to the estate tax. The irrevocable beneficiary designation removes from the insured-policyholder “control” over the policy so that all policy transactions affecting the interest of the irrevocably designated beneficiary would require the latter’s approval. With this, the proceeds are not considered part of the deceased-Insured’s estate, and therefore not subject to the estate tax.
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