Decumulate & Downsize

Most of your investing life you and your adviser (if you have one) are focused on wealth accumulation. But, we tend to forget, eventually the whole idea of this long process of delayed gratification is to actually spend this money! That’s decumulation as opposed to wealth accumulation. This stage may also involve downsizing from larger homes to smaller ones or condos, moving to the country or otherwise simplifying your life and jettisoning possessions that may tie you down.

Slap Shot: How pro athletes can (legally) “skate by” high tax rates

Cartoon-style illustration: a shooting hockey player Uniform similar to Montreal's oneBy Trevor R. Parry,  M.A., LL.B,LL.M (Tax), TEP

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

For many Canadians, the state of our beloved national game reached a nadir when none of the seven NHL franchises qualified for last year’s playoffs. This wholesale failure has given rise to the over-analysis and questioning that only a nation of amateur general managers could produce.

What’s the armchair consensus about the source of Canada’s poor performance? Some would-be GMs decry economic maladies they believe are unique to the Canadian franchises, while others bemoan the current lacklustre state of the Canadian dollar — while still others point to punitive rates of taxation introduced by federal and provincial governments in recent years.

While the first two factors may be the likely cause in the delay in awarding an expansion franchise to Québec City — which, as a Habs fan, I am particularly distressed by as we await the return of our primordial enemy — the latter factor, whilst a reality, can largely be eliminated through recourse to a financial strategy that has now existed for fully 30 years.

Introducing the RCA

In 1986 the federal government amended the Income Tax Act to include the Retirement Compensation Arrangement rules. Better known as an “RCA,” this is the only structure available in Canada that allows supplemental retirement benefits to be funded on a tax-deductible basis. Continue Reading…

Financial planning for Retirement: uncertainty is certain

Sandi-Casual-Small
Sandi Martin

By Sandi Martin

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

If you’re planning for retirement and make the mistake of scrolling through any finance section in a slow news week, you have to ask yourself: what kind of questions are they asking to produce breathless headlines like these?

  • Half of Canadians don’t think they’ll be able to retire comfortably: poll
  • Many Canadians believe they will run out of money 10 years into retirement, poll finds
  • Retiring Canadians will see ‘steep decline in living standards’: CIBC

If a friendly pollster called you in the middle of dinner and asked “Have you saved enough for retirement?,” how would you answer if you were only given the choice between “yes,” “no,” and “I don’t know” and wanted to get off the phone and back to your family?

I doubt that the statisticians or infographic designers would be happy if “it depends on what you mean by ‘enough’” were added as a fourth option, but I’d bet a lot of money that it would be the single most frequent response if were presented as an option.

Leaving aside that most of these studies and polls are commissioned by banks and mutual fund shops whenever their managed asset levels get lower than they’d like, let’s talk about how silly it is to frame retirement planning around the concept of “enough,” as if “enough” was something we could universally, quantitatively measure.

What people mean when they talk about “having enough for retirement”

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Working part-time in Semi-Retirement a boon to finances

Man Hand writing Work Part Time with black marker on visual screen. Isolated on sky. Business, technology, internet concept. Stock PhotoI predict that many aging Baby Boomers will — either by preference or financial necessity — delay traditional full-stop Retirement and instead embrace Semi-Retirement.

My latest Retired Money column, which has just been published at MoneySense.ca, explores the positive effect on retirement nest eggs of working at least part-time after the traditional retirement age of 65. For full article and chart, click on Should you work part-time in retirement?

It’s based on an analysis by ETF Capital Management, which showed the powerful impact of earning just $1,000 in part-time income each month between the age of 65 and 75; or in the case of couples $2,000 a month between them.

Not working at all after the traditional retirement age of 65 has financial implications, never mind boredom and lack of social interaction. In the case of a retiree with lifestyle expenses of $60,000 who undertakes a full-stop retirement at 65, and earns no extra income, there is a sharp fall in a $500,000 (combined registered and non-registered) portfolio starting at age 65. By the time they reach their early 80s, the nest egg is depleted to zero.

But a couple earning just $2,000 a month between them part-time after 65 and going until 75 will find the extra income delays the portfolio’s drop below zero beyond their early 90s. Not only does the nest egg not decline the first ten years, but it actually rises! By the time you reach 75 and finally stop working even part-time, the portfolio declines from a higher level and much more gradually.

Of course, the more you work, the better: for a couple earning $3,000 a month between them, the portfolio still has more than $200,000 by their 90s!  Similarly, the analysis also shows what happens if you work extra hard, which many might argue wouldn’t even qualify as retirement. At $4,000 a month the portfolio is barely depleted at all by the time they reach 100!

Isn’t this really Semi-Retirement?

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Canada ranks 10th in global Retirement Security

Global investments and international finance business symbol with four blue eggs with the maps of the world in a nest as a concept of savings and money management in many regions as Asia North America Europe and Latin America.While it ranks ahead of the United States and the United Kingdom, Canada ranks in tenth place in a global retirement security survey being released today (Tuesday).

Several countries in northern Europe and Scandinavia rank higher in the study by Natixis Global Asset Management. Norway is number one, followed by Switzerland and Iceland. However, because of a revised methodology, Canada’s 2015 ranking is two spots higher than under the 12th place spot it had under the survey’s older methodology. The Natixis Global Retirement Index was introduced in 2013, and bases its overall retirement security scores on four factors affecting the lives of retirees.

A central component is of course finances but three sub-indices measure well being, health and quality of life, providing a more holistic view of retirement than mere financial considerations.

Low interest rates a drawback for Canadian retirees

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Why would anyone hold a bond with a negative yield?

graham-bodel
Graham Bodel

By Graham Bodel, CFA, Chalten Advisors

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

We recently highlighted that now more than $10 trillion of government debt was trading at a negative yield.  We mentioned it again in the Chalten Q2 Investment Review and have received a number of questions asking why anyone would ever hold a bond that would pay them back less than they invested.  Why not just hold cash instead?

While it does seem bizarre at first there are both risk-related and practical reasons why investors might hold negative-yielding bonds instead of cash and some other reasons negative yielding bonds might still have value for investors.

Risk related / practical reasons for holding negative yielding bonds over cash

  1. Just to get this one off the table right away, it is simply not practical or safe to hold cash physically, in a safe, under the mattress or buried in the back yard in mason jars!
  2. Fortunately, the above options aren’t necessary as we have banks. However, there are definitely times where the safety and security of specific banks or the banking system in general is called into question.  We can’t really relate here in Canada but living in Hong Kong in 1997/1998 and in the UK in 2008/2009, the topic came up quite regularly; by the end of the most recent financial crisis a lot of the UK banking system was effectively nationalized (nobody lost any deposits).  For large depositors like institutional investors, keeping money in the form of bank deposits simply isn’t practical or prudent.
  3. Certain institutions, such as insurance companies, are required to hold specific asset classes.  So some may not have a choice but to hold certain government bonds with negative yields.

Other reasons why negative yielding bonds might still have value for investors

  1. While certain governments’ bonds might currently be posting negative yields, an investor might still want bond exposure in that particular currency.  For example, some global investors often think of the Swiss franc or Japanese yen as “safe haven” currencies.  10-year government bonds from those two countries currently have a negative yield.  Perhaps the premium reflects current demand levels for safe haven currencies.
  2. If an investor feels yields are going to fall even further, they might be expecting to receive further gains from bonds, even if current yields are negative.
  3. In a deflationary environment, a bond with a negative nominal yield, could still give you a positive real (inflation adjusted) return.  Ultimately investors care about real returns.
  4. Perhaps most importantly, bonds are not just return generators – their principal role in an investor’s portfolio should be to act as an uncorrelated shock-absorber when stock returns turn negative.  According to Vanguard, current correlations between stocks and bonds are at records lows (see: By this metric, bonds have never been more valuable).

I’m sure there are more reasons.  Yes, it still seems strange; however, investors have gotten a little too used to thinking of bonds being return-generators or growth assets.  Taken for what they really are, an investor’s safety net, bonds still hold a very valuable place in a diversified portfolio, even at negative yields. And of course there are still plenty of bonds, bond funds and ETFs offering yields well above those being offered for cash in the bank.

Graham Bodel is the founder and director of a new fee-only financial planning and portfolio management firm based in Vancouver, BC., Chalten Fee-Only Advisors Ltd. This blog is republished with permission: the original can be found on Bodel’s blog here.