What to consider when opening a PERA account

Opening a Personal Equity and Retirement Account (PERA) in the Philippines requires careful selection of an administrator and investment products to ensure long-term retirement savings success. This article outlines the roles of key parties involved and types of eligible investments.

PERA is a retirement account structure offering tax benefits to encourage long-term saving. At its core is the contributor, who deposits money and selects investments. Three main parties are involved: the PERA administrator, custodian, and product provider.

The administrator, which could be a bank like BDO or BPI, trust corporation, insurance company, or broker such as DragonFi, manages the account, processes contributions, and provides updates. It must be accredited by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas (BSP), Securities and Exchange Commission (SEC), or Insurance Commission. The custodian, typically Landbank, safeguards assets separately to ensure checks and balances.

The product provider offers investments like PERA-specific Unit Investment Trust Funds (UITFs) from BDO or BPI. When choosing an administrator, consider ease of use—if you use a bank app, options from BDO, BPI, or Metrobank may reduce friction. For active stock traders, DragonFi provides an intuitive platform.

Be mindful of fees: setup or account fees, cash-custody charges including per-transaction costs with Landbank, annual administration fees as a percentage of account value, and investment-specific costs such as trust fees for UITFs or brokerage fees for stocks and REITs.

Investment choices should align with risk tolerance. Common options include money market funds (low risk, modest returns); government bond funds (low risk, subject to interest-rate fluctuations); corporate bond funds (higher yields, increased credit risk); equity funds (high risk, strong growth potential); equity index funds (track the PSEi, offering diversification); individual PSE Index stocks or Dividend Yield Index stocks (high risk, concentrated exposure); and REITs (dividend-focused, sensitive to interest rates and property markets).

Always conduct personal research to fully understand the products, risks, and fees before proceeding.

Liittyvät artikkelit

BEI headquarters with digital screens showing new shareholder transparency data, executives celebrating reforms to boost investor confidence.
AI:n luoma kuva

Bei prepares to disclose shareholders below 5 percent to boost transparency

Raportoinut AI AI:n luoma kuva

PT Bursa Efek Indonesia (BEI) plans to publish share ownership data below 5 percent starting early February 2026, as part of capital market reforms to enhance investor confidence. This move is spurred by Morgan Stanley Capital International (MSCI) evaluation and the correction in the Composite Stock Price Index (IHSG), backed by government support through various transparency and governance initiatives.

The Personal Equity and Retirement Account (PERA) is a framework offering tax incentives to encourage Filipinos to save for retirement. Modeled after the US 401(k), it stems from the 2008 PERA Act. Despite existing for nearly two decades, PERA products and digital access continue to expand.

Raportoinut AI

For young professionals starting their careers without employer retirement funds, financial experts recommend investing 15% to 20% of gross monthly income in simple, automated vehicles like retirement annuities and tax-free investments.

Buying stocks on the Philippine Stock Exchange usually means paying another investor in a secondary trade, not the company directly. Companies receive public money only during initial public offerings or follow-on offerings. Trades influence share prices but do not directly fund corporate accounts.

Raportoinut AI

Two experts diverge on PEC 38/2025, a proposed administrative reform under consideration in Brazil's Chamber of Deputies. One supports it for promoting efficiency and cost reduction, while the other warns of risks to public service precarization and loss of server rights.

For the first time, the Cuban government allows private individuals to hold foreign currency accounts and conduct transactions with them. This measure, part of a legislative package, imposes an 80% retention coefficient for certain foreign currency incomes, which must be delivered to the Central Bank. The goal is to boost foreign currency revenues and enable legal imports.

Raportoinut AI

Mónica Higuera Garzón, former director of the Financial Regulation Unit (URF), resigned due to her opposition to the government's proposal to repatriate pension savings invested abroad. Finance Minister Germán Ávila announced the measure on December 31, 2025, to raise funds and address the fiscal deficit. President Gustavo Petro defended the initiative, citing economic benefits, sparking a public debate with the ex-official.

 

 

 

Tämä verkkosivusto käyttää evästeitä

Käytämme evästeitä analyysiä varten parantaaksemme sivustoamme. Lue tietosuojakäytäntömme tietosuojakäytäntö lisätietoja varten.
Hylkää