Hub Blogs

Hub Blogs contains fresh contributions written by Financial Independence Hub staff or contributors that have not appeared elsewhere first, or have been modified or customized for the Hub by the original blogger. In contrast, Top Blogs shows links to the best external financial blogs around the world.

If you must speculate in penny stocks, find those with these common characteristics

Penny stocks do sometimes pay off, but there are many pitfalls to avoid. As you’ve heard us say often, a lot of penny stocks are little more than very well executed marketing campaigns.

Take a look at the penny stocks in your portfolio. If you’re a penny stock investor you likely have a number of them. The top 10 penny stocks in your portfolio should follow these guidelines:

Tips for analyzing your top 10 penny stocks

  • Look for strong management: Look for an experienced management team with a proven ability to develop and finance a mine, product or service.
  • Look for a strong balance sheet: High-quality penny stocks should have strong balance sheets with low debt. It’s even better if they have a major financing partner.
  • Look for well-financed companies: To profit in penny stocks, you should look for well-financed companies with no immediate need to sell shares at low prices, since that would dilute existing investors’ interests.
  • Look past the hype: Avoid stocks that are trading at unsustainably high prices as a result of broker hype or investor mania.
  • Look for stocks trading on a well-regulated exchange: We think you should avoid stocks trading “over-the-counter”, where such things as regulatory reporting are lax. Stick to penny stocks trading on regulated exchanges like the Toronto and New York stock exchanges.
  • Look for a results-focused company: Automatically rule out investing in companies that promote themselves too aggressively, or do so misleadingly. Success is more likely if the managers focus on developing a saleable product or service, rather than hyping their story.
  • Look for reasonable share prices: Compare the market caps (the total dollar value of all of a company’s outstanding shares) of the stocks with the estimated value of their assets or future earnings streams. Only a few penny stocks will successfully launch a product with enough success to justify the current share price and avoid collapse.

Your top 10 penny stocks will not be marketing ploys

Many penny stocks are little more than very well executed marketing campaigns. Your top 10 penny stocks won’t fall into this category. Many penny stock promoters will do anything in their power to get their penny stock noticed. These extensive marketing campaigns include emails, TV interviews, podcasts, newsletters and paid sponsorships.

There are also some so-called news sites that will sell sponsorships to penny stock promoters. These are great opportunities for penny stock promoters but bad for investors looking for an unbiased opinion on a stock. Continue Reading…

The hard truth about the FIRE movement [Financial Independence, Retire Early]

By Maria Weyman, creditcardGenius

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Retirement, whether near or far, is a pretty big milestone in a person’s life.

We start saving for it as early as possible and put as much towards it as we can in order to be better prepared.

Whether we want to spend it travelling, immersing ourselves in our favourite hobbies, or spending some quality time with loved ones, most of us look forward to our retirement but don’t see it happening in the near future.

The average age of retirement in Canada is 64 years old, but the popularized FIRE movement – which stands for “Financial Independence, Retire Early” – is the lifestyle concept that proposes an alternative scenario.

By living as frugally as possible and saving every bit possible while maximizing income and revenue, FIRE-devotees plan on retiring much earlier than the Canadian average.

Although we all want to retire early, and being financially independent enough to retire at a young age is possible, it might not be attainable for everyone.

We can all dream, but it’s important to look at the concept without those rose-colored, heart-shaped glasses we all get when thinking about early retirement. Realistically, the FIRE movement can be quite extreme.

Reasonable income

Living from paycheque to paycheque is still the sad reality for many Canadians, some not even being able to set aside money for normal retirement. Living as frugally as possible is just a means of survival rather than a means to a bigger end.

Stagnant wages and the ever-increasing cost of living has made it harder than ever to be financially stable, let alone financially independent, especially for lower or middle-income brackets.

Not to mention getting higher-income jobs in the first place requires many years of education and consequently entails large amounts of student loans, which in itself can take decades to pay off.

Investment risks

Even if you have an income that allows some wiggle room, saving alone probably isn’t enough. To be successful in the FIRE movement requires some savvy investing.

And since we’re taking away the option of long-term, stable, compounded interest savings, the timeframe is much shorter.

But with higher rewards usually come higher risks.

It’s up to you to decide if the risk is worth the potential payout.

Retirement timeframe

Another glitch in the FIRE movement lifestyle is retirement timeframe: how long you’ll actually be retired for.

Savings breakdown

Let’s crunch some numbers just to get a general idea. The most complicated part of this calculation is compounding interest. Thankfully, we can summarize the effects of compound interest using a multiplier.

Let’s say you’re 23 years old and you plan on retiring early at 40 years old. The average life expectancy in Canada is 82 years old, meaning your retirement fund will have to be sufficient enough to carry on for over 42 years.

Compound interest allows our savings to “go further” than they otherwise would. If we are looking at a compound interest of 3.5% (moderate yield rate) we can calculate how much further savings would go for a period of 42 years:

Savings Multiplier = (1 + Annual Interest Rate)^42 = 1.035^42
Savings Multiplier = 4.241

Where the “^” indicates an exponential power (that is 2^3 =  2x2x2). This means that over a period of 42 years, your savings will essentially be multiplied by a factor of 4.2, which shows you how powerful a force compounding interest really is.

While it’s nice that our savings can grow exponentially with compound interest, taking money out of our savings results in losses that grow with compound interest. As such, if we take money out of our savings at the beginning of that 42 year period, that money is also multiplied by a factor of 4.241. Taking the money out one month after would have a slightly lower multiplier and so on. By summing the total effect of each monthly withdrawal we can also obtain a monthly expense multiplier. The first step is to find the monthly interest rate. This can be obtained as follows:

Monthly Interest Rate = (1+Annual Interest Rate)^(1/12) – 1 = (1+0.035)^(1/12) – 1
Monthly Interest Rate = 0.28708987%

Note that calculating a power x^(1/12) is a 12th root and will require a scientific calculator. After obtaining the monthly interest rate, you need to do a recursive sum representing the multipliers for all monthly withdrawals: Continue Reading…

An innovative way to solve your family cottage dilemma

By Jason Kinnear, CPA, CA, CBV

(Sponsored Content)

Sipping your morning coffee on the dock with your spouse; teaching your children to waterski; and roasting marshmallows with your grandchildren. These are just some of the treasured memories you’ve created at your family cottage. But times change and those memories can sometimes be replaced with concerns about how to deal with your family cottage dilemma:

You enjoy spending time at the family cottage, but the time, cost and stress associated with it are turning a pleasant summer pastime into an ongoing headache.

To illustrate this dilemma, let’s consider Doug and Barb’s situation. Barb inherited their cottage from her mother just after they got married. They now have three adult children and six grandchildren, and are recently retired. While they’re looking forward to spending more time at the family cottage, they see a number of issues on the horizon:

  • Two of Doug and Barb’s adult children are professionals, while the third owns her own growing company. These time demands mean none of the children are able to visit the family cottage as often as they’d like.
  • There are several steep sections of stairs between the family cottage and the dock on the lake below. While Doug and Barb can navigate these stairs now, they’re concerned they won’t be able to as they get older.
  • Doug and Barb do not know who they will leave the family cottage to.

Time commitment

The most pressing issue for Doug and Barb is the time commitment for maintaining the cottage. They’re the only family members with the time to open and close the property, and maintain it throughout the summer months. While they’re both healthy enough to do this now, they’re concerned that they may no longer be able to as they grow older and their physical health declines.

Costs

There’s also the issue of costs related to maintaining the cottage. The cost of repairs and improvements to host their growing family and their friends means the simple family cottage they inherited from Barb’s mother a generation ago has morphed into a monster home on a lake!

Additionally, there’s the question of how these capital improvements and the maintenance costs will be shared amongst family members. Should Doug and Barb continue to pay for the upkeep? Or should that be split amongst the adult members of the family? How would they split these costs: evenly, or based on actual cottage usage?

Succession planning

Finally, there are the succession and estate planning issues to consider. Which of the adult children will get the cottage? Do any of them really want it? What about the personal taxes triggered when the cottage is transferred, or the probate fees (Estate Administration Tax in Ontario) if they both should pass away unexpectedly?

As you can see, Doug and Barb have a number of issues to contend with. They continue to enjoy the family cottage experience, but need a solution to address these issues.

Consider establishing a Family Vacation Trust

One solution for Doug and Barb to consider is establishing a Family Vacation Trust to pay for their family’s future summer vacations. A Family Vacation Trust would allow their family to continue to enjoy the annual cottage experience without the responsibility and costs of maintaining one.

Here’s an example of how their Family Vacation Trust might work:

1.) Let’s assume the value of the cottage when Barb took possession was $100,000 and it’s currently worth $800,000. Selling expenses will be 5% of the sale price and the resulting capital gain will be taxed at the highest personal marginal tax rate in Ontario*. This situation would result in Doug and Barb receiving approximately $580,000 on the sale of their cottage. Continue Reading…

”Lucky 5” ways to prepare for a post-Divorce financial future

By Meggie Nahatakyan

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Divorce is not the end of the world. Well, not for you. Being newly divorced signals the beginning of a brand new life and the opportunity for you to redesign and fine tune your life, now as a single person, living under your own terms: the way you want it.

Studies show that many newly divorced women are often left off facing worse financial issues right after divorce. Many are struggling to cope with the demands of being able to provide for themselves and their families, single parenthood, and suffering low self-esteem as well as feeling emotionally battered.

Take stock of your life

Instead of focusing on all the negativity a divorce brings, it is crucial that you take stock of your entire life and place yourself in a positive frame of mind by being grateful for all the great things in your life: like your career, health, family, children, friends, and other support systems you have. After that, make a firm decision to make today the very ‘first’ day of a brand new and better life, looking forward to the future and achieve your fullest potentials in a way that fortifies your core values and beliefs.

Take your time

Take the time out of your usual routine and set your mind free. Relax. Think about how you want your life to look 3 to 5 years from now and what you really need in your life. What if you no longer have to work? What will financial freedom, abundance, wealth, and stability really mean to you?

To bounce back from your past broken relationship and face the future with confidence, you need to be financially stable. You can do this by starting a business that you can juggle while working at home and tending to the kids.

Here are 5 business ideas you can start post-divorce to start empowering yourself:

1.) Start Freelancing

There are websites like People Per Hour or Fiverr that allow you to sell your services for a price. If you are a good writer, bookkeeper, transcriber, or you have specific skill sets that can be outsourced, you can always telecommute and work online. The positive side of freelancing is the work time flexibility; you can work in the given timeframe but the exact hours of work will be up to you.

2.) Start a YouTube Channel

With videos booming these days, people are glued to YouTube and social media. There’s no denying that the future is video. Why not start your own YouTube video channel? Are you a good cook? Start a cooking channel. Are you an expert home DIY hobbyist? Then, let the world know through your very own video channel. There are no limits to what you can do so as long as your channel offers interesting and useful content, you are sure to get viewers and subscribers. Join the bandwagon! Continue Reading…

How Behavioural Economics can help Advisors and Investors meet their goals

By Bernard Letendre 

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Emotions play a very big part in how we live our lives and have an impact on the decisions we make every day:  including how and when we each choose to invest for our future.

As financial markets move up and down, investors’ emotions follow suit. Emotions and behavioural biases play a role in people’s investment decisions, and often, emotionally-driven investing can leave them with poor returns in the long run. Add a volatile market to the mix and it can make it even harder to reach important investment goals.

Financial advisors know that staying invested during market downturns makes sense. While this recommendation is typically passed on to clients, panic sets in and some clients insist on selling to avoid a loss, despite sound logic and statistics. We all need to be taking a closer look at people’s behaviours and biases and finding ways to counteract them, for the benefit of our investors.

A new Behavioural Economics program for Canadian advisors

With that in mind, Manulife Investment Management wants to help change the investment game for our clients. Through a new partnership with BEworks, a behavioural consulting firm and research institute,we launched a Canadian Behavioural Economics (BE) program to help advisors understand and manage human emotions in volatile markets. The program will be rolled out to advisors over the course of this year with more to come in 2020.

With the help of Dr. David R. Lewis at BEworks, our advisors have access to:

• Scientific-led research and actionable tools to help them and their clients understand the biases in investment decision making Continue Reading…