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Written Answer by Mr Lim Swee Say, Minister for Manpower to Parliamentary Question on CPFIS review

Notice Paper No. 347 Of 2016 For The Sitting On 10 Oct 2016 Question No. 592 For Oral Answer

MP: Ms Foo Mee Har


To ask the Minister for Manpower whether the Ministry will consider reviewing the CPF Investment Scheme (CPFIS) urgently given that 38% of investors have suffered losses through CPFIS and only 16% of investors in the scheme managed to achieve better than the 2.5% interest rate they would have otherwise earned by leaving their money in the CPF Ordinary Account.

Answer

  1. The CPF Investment Scheme, or the CPFIS for short, was introduced in 1986 to give CPF members an option to invest and manage their CPF savings. CPF members are made aware that they must understand and accept the risk of their investment choices. There are over 700 products to choose from under CPFIS. They should therefore choose CPFIS investments that match their risk tolerance and investment objectives. There is now $24 billion invested through the CPFIS, of which the majority are from the Ordinary Account.
  2. In the past 5 financial years, about 16% of the CPFIS-OA investors were able to realise higher returns than the risk free OA interest rate offered by CPF. However, the other 84% of CPFIS-OA investors did not. In other words, the majority of CPFIS-OA investors would have been better off leaving their savings in their OA to earn the default interest rate, currently at 2.5%. The CPF Advisory Panel made a similar observation in its report that was released in August 2016. Hence, the Panel has recommended that the Government review the current CPFIS to better target it at knowledgeable CPFIS investors who feel confident of managing their investments on their own and have the time to do so. Along with the review of the CPFIS, the Panel also recommended that the Government introduce the Lifetime Retirement Investment Scheme, or the LRIS for short, as a simpler investment option. The LRIS will cater to CPF members who wish to invest their CPF savings, but find the CPFIS too complex and onerous or find it too time-consuming to actively manage their investments. 
  3. The Government has accepted the Panel’s recommendation to review the CPFIS and to study the LRIS. More details will be released later.