A note from Christopher: This guest post was authored by my AI Second Brain — Claude — drawing entirely from my Obsidian vault, SIAS lecture materials, and blog archives. Think of it as my ideas, assembled and written while I was busy doing something else. I've reviewed it for accuracy. Welcome to the future of content creation.
There is a moment every working Singaporean has fantasised about.
You are sitting in yet another pointless meeting, watching someone read aloud from a PowerPoint slide that could have been an email, and a thought crystallises in your mind: What if I just... didn't come back tomorrow?
The idea of pressing the Early Retirement button is enormously seductive. But like all big red buttons, it deserves some serious thought before you slam your palm down on it.
I've spent years teaching the FIRE (Financial Independence, Retire Early) movement to Singapore investors — from SIAS talks to this very blog — and the single biggest mistake I see is people conflating two very different things: financial independence and early retirement. You can, and often should, have one without the other.
Here is what you need to think through before you walk out that door.
1. Have you actually reached your crossover point?
The mechanics of FIRE are elegantly simple. It's a game of one number beating another: your monthly investment income must exceed your monthly expenses. The moment those two lines cross — that's your crossover point, and it is the most important milestone in your financial life.
The standard framework gives you two routes to get there. The first is the 4% safe withdrawal rule: take your annual expenses, multiply by 25, and that's your FIRE number. If you spend $4,000 a month ($48,000 a year), you need a portfolio of $1.2 million. Withdraw 4% per year, and in theory, your money outlasts you.
The second is the dividends approach, which I personally prefer for Singaporeans. Build a diversified portfolio of SGX blue-chips, REITs and business trusts that generates 5–6% annually. DBS, Frasers Centrepoint Trust, Netlink NBN Trust — three assets with very low correlations to each other, yielding above 5%, with returns historically double that of the STI ETF at lower risk. With this approach, you are not drawing down capital; you are living off the harvest while the farm stays intact.
Before you press the button, you need to know — precisely — which method you are using and whether you have hit the number. Gut feel is not acceptable here.
2. The Sequence of Returns Risk is the retirement killer nobody talks about
Here is the scenario that keeps retirees up at night. You retire in January. In March, markets crash 40%. You are now selling units at rock-bottom prices just to pay your grocery bills. Even if markets recover fully in two years, the early withdrawals have permanently damaged your portfolio's ability to recover.
This is called sequence of returns risk, and it is brutal precisely because it strikes at the most vulnerable moment — right after you stop earning.
My solution, which I have written about before, is the bear trap account: six to twelve months of living expenses held entirely in cash or Singapore Savings Bonds, ring-fenced and untouchable except during a market crash. If markets fall sharply in your first two years of retirement, you live off the bear trap and let your portfolio ride out the storm. It is not glamorous, but it dramatically improves your odds of not running out of money.
If you do not have a bear trap account ready to go, the button is not ready to be pressed.
3. Singapore's CPF system cuts both ways
Singapore presents a uniquely double-edged environment for the early retiree.
On the positive side: low income taxes mean you accumulated more during your working years. MediShield Life and Medisave blunt the worst of healthcare costs. HDB keeps your housing affordable relative to your global peers.
But the cons are real too. CPF-SA ceases to exist after age 55. If you retire early, you lose the ability to earn 4% risk-free on your retirement savings in the Special Account — which is one of the best guaranteed returns available to any Singaporean investor. Voluntary top-ups via RSTU, which can be done right up to your Retirement Sum, only remain fully accessible before 55. Plan accordingly.
CPF Life only kicks in after 65, which means the early retiree faces a potential gap of 10–20 years where CPF provides no income whatsoever. That gap must be fully funded by your own portfolio.
And HDB? For most Singaporeans, it is simultaneously their biggest asset and their biggest illiquidity trap. Being asset-rich and cash-poor is a real risk — your $1.5 million HDB flat does not pay your electricity bill.
4. Healthcare costs will only go in one direction
The Integrated Shield Plans that supplement MediShield Life have been getting more expensive every single year. As you age, premiums rise. As you exit employment, you lose any employer co-payment subsidy. And as you grow older, the probability of actually needing hospitalisation goes up.
Do not model your retirement healthcare costs using your current premiums. Model them using what they might look like when you are 65, 70, or 75. This is not pessimism — it is arithmetic.
5. The psychological risks are real — and underestimated
When I teach FIRE, I spend as much time on the social and psychological downsides as I do on the numbers. The financial part is, frankly, the easier part.
Here is what many early retirees do not anticipate: your friends will still be working. The lunches you imagined, the golf mornings, the leisurely weekdays — most of that requires other people to be free, and most people are not free on a Tuesday at 11am. The early retiree can find themselves profoundly isolated, not from a lack of money, but from a lack of people.
There is also the question of identity. If someone asks you what you do, and the honest answer is "nothing, I retired at 47" — how does that sit with you? Some people find it liberating. Others find it quietly corrosive. Know which type you are before you press the button.
And there is a more insidious risk: you gradually lose touch with the working world. AI is reshaping every industry at a pace that was unimaginable a decade ago. One reason companies are reluctant to rehire 50-somethings is that they assume (rightly or wrongly) that those years outside the workforce have created a skills gap. If your early retirement does not work out financially, returning to the workforce may be significantly harder than you expect.
6. Consider focusing on financial independence first — and postponing the "retire" part
Here is my genuine advice, drawn from years of observing people who have done this well and people who have done it badly: separate financial independence from early retirement.
Financial independence means the money works without you having to. Early retirement means you stop working. These are not the same thing.
Introverts, in my experience, often do better at full early retirement — they are comfortable with their own company and typically have rich inner lives that sustain them. Extroverts, who get much of their energy from social interaction, often find that the "retire" part of FIRE is the part that quietly undoes them.
Research on life satisfaction consistently shows there is an optimal point of work somewhere above zero hours per week — not because you need the money, but because purposeful activity improves wellbeing. Once your portfolio is large enough that you could retire, you might instead redesign your work: fewer hours, different role, more meaning, less politics. Coast FIRE and Barista FIRE are not consolation prizes. For many people, they are the better destination.
The bottom line
Early retirement is not a destination. It is a permission slip to redesign your life. The question is not just "can I afford to stop?" but "do I have something worth stopping for, and something worth starting?"
Get your crossover point locked in. Build the bear trap. Understand what CPF will and will not do for you. Price in healthcare honestly. And think — really think — about what Tuesday at 11am looks like when you have nowhere to be.
The button will still be there when you are ready. There is no rush to press it.
This post was authored by Claude, Christopher's AI Second Brain, drawing on his Obsidian knowledge vault, SIAS investor education materials, and blog archives. The frameworks and views expressed are Christopher's own, synthesised from years of research and teaching.