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.

Retired Money: How the financial industry may use ALDAs and VLPAs as Longevity Insurance

Finance professor Moshe Milevsky welcomes industry’s implementation of academic longevity insurance theories

My latest MoneySense Retired Money column looks at two longevity-related financial products that the industry may develop after the road to them was paved in the March 2019 federal budget. You can access the full column by clicking on the highlighted headline: A new kind of annuity designed to help Canadian retirees live well, for longer.

Once they are created by the industry, hopefully in the next year, these new products will introduce an element of what finance professor Moshe Milevsky has described as “tontine thinking.” In the most extreme example, a tontine — often depicted in fictional work like the film The Wrong Box — features a pool of money that ultimately goes to the person who outlives everyone else. In other words, everyone chips in some money and the person who outlives the rest gets most of the pot. As you can imagine at its most extreme, this can lead to some nefarious scenarios and skulduggery, which is why you occasionally see tontines dramatized in film, as in The Wrong Box, and also TV, as in at least one episode of the Agatha Christie TV adaption of Miss Marple.

Fortunately, the Budget doesn’t propose something quite as dramatic as classic tontines but get used to the following two acronyms if and when the insurance and pension industries start to develop them: ALDA is an acronym for Advanced Life Deferred Annuity.  As of 2020, ALDAs could become an investment option for those currently with money invested in registered plans like RRSPs or RRIFs,  Defined Contribution (DC) Registered Pension Plans and Pooled Registered Pension Plans (PRPPs).

The other type of annuity proposed are Variable Payment Life Annuities (VPLAs), for DC RPPs and PRPPs, which would pool investment risk in groups of at least 10 people. Not quite tontines in the classic academic sense but with the pooling of risk VPLAs certainly have an element of “tontine thinking.”

The budget says a VLPA “will provide payments that vary based on the investment performance of the underlying annuities fund and on the mortality experience of VLPA annuitants.” That means – unlike traditional Defined Benefit pensions – payments could fluctuate year over year.

There is precedent for pooled-risk DC pensions: The University of British Columbia’s faculty pension plan has run such an option for its DC plan members since 1967.

The budget said Ottawa will consult on potential changes to federal pension benefits legislation to accommodate VPLAs for federally regulated PRPPs and DC RPPs, and may need to amend provincial legislation. But it’s ALDAs that initially captured the attention of retirement experts, in part because of its ability to push off taxable minimum RRIF payments.

Up to $150,000 of registered funds can go into an ALDA

An ALDA lets you put up to 25% of qualified registered funds into the purchase of an annuity. The lifetime maximum is $150,000, indexed to inflation after 2020. Beyond that limit you are subject to a penalty tax of 1% per month on the excess portion. Continue Reading…

The best Savings Accounts: based on what you’re saving for

Image from unsplash

By Zack Fenech

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Saving can be one of the most time-consuming methods of acquiring personal wealth, but if you choose the right account for the right goal, you can make the most out of this lengthy process.

The best way to make your money work over time is by choosing the best savings account based on what you’re saving for.

Picking the best savings account in Canada can maximize your interest return and (in some cases) minimize the amount of taxes you’ll end up having to pay.

How to choose a Savings Account

Generally speaking, there are three main types of savings accounts available: a Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP), a Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA), and a High-Interest Savings Account (HISA). Considering this, it’s important to establish what exactly it is that you’re saving for, and how much time you’re willing to invest with your money.

While this might seem obvious, it’s a crucial step in the financial planning process. By finding the best savings accounts based on what you’re saving for, you’ll be able to achieve your financial goals much more quickly.

The other side of the coin shows that not choosing the right account can cause roadblocks down the line and sometimes cost you money in early withdrawal fees and taxes.

For example, if your aim is saving on a down payment for your first house, but you have all of your money wrapped up in, let’s say, GICs, you won’t be able to withdraw funds early without a penalty.

But that’s not to say that savings accounts are only propped up for massive investments like homes or your retirement.

Saving up for a car, your wedding, or even a trip can have significant benefits on your interest return, but only if you pick the best savings accounts for your financial goals.

Base choice of Savings Account on what you’re saving for

If you’re unsure what it is you need to save for, consider these two questions before making any firm decisions:

  1. What is my financial situation like right now?
  2. Will I need to access the money I’m investing soon?

Here are a few suggestions why a TFSA, RRSP, and HISA are best suited for your short-term and long-term goals, whatever they may be.

Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA)

A Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) isn’t exactly a savings account. Think of TFSAs as tax shelters. You can put cash, mutual funds, stocks, bonds, or GICs in a TFSA and shelter them from taxes, as long as you remain under your yearly TFSA contribution limit [currently $6,000.]

The contribution limit on your TFSAs depends on how much you contribute each year and the yearly contribution limit allotted by the Canadian Revenue Agency (CRA).

If you exceed your yearly TFSA contribution limit by $2,000, you will not be able to deduct the exceeded amount. Contributions that exceed the $2,000 threshold are subject to a 1% fee for every month the amount remains in your RRSPs.

[Editor’s Note: see reader comment below and refer to this explanation at the Canada.ca website.]

Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)

A Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) might seem like a savings account exclusively for retirement planning. However, it’s also one of the best savings accounts for saving for your first home.

An RRSP is somewhat similar to a TFSA. Both shelter your contributions from tax: so long as you remain below your yearly contribution limit. Unlike a TFSA, however, an RRSP does not allow you to withdraw money tax-free. Continue Reading…

Just how steep is housing affordability in Toronto and Vancouver?

By Penelope Graham, Zoocasa

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

It’s no secret that in order to purchase a house in Toronto or Vancouver, you’ll need to have considerable financial assets; however, a new study from Zoocasa reveals just how elite income earners need to be in order to afford the benchmark single-family home in these cities.

According to the data, which is based on benchmark home prices sourced from the Canadian Real Estate Association as well as income tax filings from Statistics Canada, a Torontonian buyer must be within the top 10% of earners to afford a house priced at $873,100, while only Vancouverites within the top 2.5% could do so for a home priced at $1,441,000.

The numbers also show that prices for entry-level housing, such as condos, remain out of reach for many; buyers must be within the top 25% of income earners to afford the benchmark unit, which costs $656,900 in Vancouver and $522,300 in Toronto, respectively.

Affordability is greater in Southern Ontario, Prairies

However, the study also highlights the comparative affordability in other cities; several of the secondary markets in Ontario, as well as in the Prairie provinces, are much more accessible in terms of housing prices.

For example, those interested in markets within proximity of the GTA, such as Waterloo real estate, need only be within the top 50% to purchase a condo priced at $320,857, though houses are still only in reach for those within the top 25%, at a benchmark of $523,720.

London is also a reasonable alternative for first-time buyers; those looking to purchase a house priced at $426,236 must be within the top 25%, though condos for sale in London are accessible to the top 50%, at $307,359.

Regina takes top spot for affordable Real Estate

Continue Reading…

Vanguard Canada advisor event focuses on its actively managed mutual funds

While indexing giant Vanguard Group and its Canadian unit are best known for their pioneering work in passive investing, both through index mutual funds and ETFs, they are also significant players in active fund management.

On Monday, it educated Canadian financial advisors at its 2019 Investment Symposium in Toronto, with the focus on two of the four actively managed mutual funds it first announced last summer.

Vanguard Investments Canada Inc. head Kathy Bock, who took over the position on January 1st, reminded the (mostly fee-based) financial advisors in attendance that Vanguard actually started life as an active manager over 40 years ago, and the firm now actively manages more than US$1.6 trillion globally, which is about a quarter of the firm’s total assets under management of more than US$5.3 trillion. That makes Vanguard the third largest active fund manager in the world. See also this Hub blog on this from last September: Vanguard, the Hidden $1.3 Trillion player in active management. (As you can see, the figure has risen with the markets since then).

Vanguard Canada head Kathy Bock

These mutual funds do not pay advisors trailer commissions: they are F series funds, which means fee-based advisors are free to set whatever additional fee they negotiate with their clients, just as they do with ETFs. They can also be purchased at some, but not yet all, discount brokerages

The management fees on these actively managed mutual funds are a maximum 0.5%; but in the first year, the fee ranged from 0.34% to 0.4%, which makes them only marginally more costly than Vanguard’s popular asset allocation ETFs that were unveiled just over a year ago (and which spawned several imitators). This is partly achieved through a management fee waiver that can apply, depending on manager performance, as explained at the bottom of this blog.

These mutual funds are managed for Canadians, although the actively managed subadvisors are global active giants, as outlined below. Because they are new funds, they have not disclosed the Management Expense Ratios (MERs).

True, at least one advisor in the question period seemed ambivalent about how fee-based advisors can reconcile such an approach to the indexing gospel that Vanguard has so thoroughly dispensed over the years. The answer, according to one of the sub advisors featured, is that the two approaches can complement each other, potentially reducing overall volatility. Buying exclusively ETFs means that over the coming ten years you’re “dooming yourself to a lot of failing businesses,” said Nick Thomas, partner with Baillie Gifford, one of two sub advisors to the Vanguard International Growth Fund, together with Schroder Investment Management North America Inc.

The advisor who posed the question was understandably perplexed by the many studies indexing proponents often cite about how most actively managed funds fail to beat the indexes net of their own additional costs. But the Vanguard managers replied that there are cases where active management can outperform, at least outside the highly liquid U.S. market. Portfolios will be more concentrated than the broad indexes and if an investing thesis pans out, there is an opportunity to “pick” winners at the outset of major trends like A.I. and the cloud, and avoid losers.  Presumably managers with  skills in combination with good financial advisors can add the kind of “Advisor’s Alpha” to client returns that Vanguard has pioneered.

And if active management makes a good complement to equity portfolios, that should also go for balanced mandates. Indeed, the other highlighted fund was Vanguard Global Balanced Fund, with a 65%/35% equity/fixed-income split  managed by Wellington Management Canada ULC, headquartered in Boston. The proportion can move to 60/40 or 70/30, depending on market view.   It was launched with the other three mutual funds on June 20, 2018.

China tech big focus of Vanguard International Growth Fund

Baillie Gifford’s Nick Thomas

Most of the discussion centered on the Chinese holdings of Vanguard International Growth Fund: China accounts for 20% of the fund’s geographic allocation. The top ten holdings include three Chinese web giants: Alibaba Group Holding Ltd., Tencent Holdings Ltd and Baidu Inc. It also holds Amazon.com Inc. and MercadoLibre Inc. among its top holdings.

Schroders manager John Chisholm is slightly underweight Emerging Markets and market weight China. Baillie Gifford’s Thomas is slightly more enthusiastic, being overweight both Emerging Markets and China.  But both see promising long-term growth prospects for  the major Chinese web giants. Asked about the current Trump trade war and accusations of theft of American intellectual property, the managers downplayed this as a U.S. interpretation of the facts. Thomas said he views both Tencent and Alibaba as “superior to Facebook or Amazon.”

Continue Reading…

“Overwhelmed” investors say they’re anxious investing on their own

A TD survey finds many would-be do-it-yourself investors are intimidated by online investing

By Tony Ierullo

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

We live in a digital world, but according to a recent TD survey, many Canadians are reluctant to engage in online, do-it-yourself (DIY) investing. Only one in 10 people feel very comfortable investing on their own, and just one fifth of Canadians are currently DIY investors, even though half said they would like to be able to do it themselves online.

The survey also found that many Canadians feel a high level of anxiety about investing, saying the idea makes them nervous, overwhelmed and intimidated. There is also a widespread lack of knowledge about how to invest or trade online, or where to find educational resources to help them.

Most people have financial goals and are interested in investing, but very few seem to have a high degree of confidence in their ability to do so. The research found that almost 40 per cent of people who don’t feel confident have never sought out resources to learn about personal finance or investing.

Goal setting is an important first step for individuals to gain the confidence needed to invest online. It ties financial success to real-life personal and lifestyle aspirations, and guides clients to adjust their investment approach so that they can reach the goals they’re trying to achieve. Many investors lack this clarity, and therefore feel uncertain about their financial future.

In order to help Canadians establish a more confident approach to saving and investing, TD Direct Investing created GoalAssist™: a free, online, interactive financial planning tool. The tool is embedded within WebBroker, and helps clients build financial confidence by providing a goal setting and tracking option, alongside other relevant, educational tools.

Direct Investing GoalAssist’s innovative design is highly accessible and easy to use, and it can help investors of all levels to become more confident when managing finances and planning for the future. Plus, it’s a tool that allows them to evolve their plan over time, as their financial situation and needs change.

Regardless of your financial knowledge, TD offers the following tips to help you become a more confident investor:

1.) Set goals

Investing makes sense for a variety of reasons, either short-term (such as a vacation, furniture for your home or a new car) or long-term (such as for education and training, starting a business or a comfortable retirement). As your finances and needs change, your goals may change, too.

2.) Choose your timeline

Set this along with your goals. If you think about when you’d like to use the money you’ve invested, it will help you establish a plan for how much to invest, and what types of investments you’ll need to get you there. Continue Reading…