General

Survey finds financial security beats milestones like buying a home and a car

wuxiznbo
Laurie Campbell, Credit Canada Debt Solutions

In one of my books I’ve argued that young people should adopt the slogan “Freedom, Not Stuff” as a way to remind themselves that financial independence beats accumulating possessions via debt.

Now a survey being released by Credit Canada Debt Solutions and Capital One Canada has released a survey saying Canadians think financial security beats milestones like buying a home or a car. The two organizations are celebrating ten years of building financial literacy through Credit Education Week, which runs this week (Nov 7 to 11th).

The survey of 600 in four major regions of Canada asked consumers to share insights into their financial wins. While there’s a perception that Canadians hold the goal of home ownership above all else, the survey found that in reality, they rank milestones like buying a home (12 per cent) or car (8 per cent) as less important financial wins than feeling financially secure in their daily lives (25 per cent).

“There is so much to learn from the positive, everyday financial experiences of our friends and family,” says Brent Reynolds, Managing Vice President of Capital One Canada. “Milestone moments like a new home or car may garner more ‘likes’, but it’s the experiences not easily shared in 140 characters that are most impactful – like how we took charge of our finances or recovered from a financial stumble.”

80% reported a financial win this year

Continue Reading…

LIRAs — the RRSP’s less flexible cousin

depositphotos_73608599_s-2015
Locked-in Retirement Accounts (LIRAs) differ from RRSPs in that you usually can’t “unlock” the funds in them before age 55.

I guess the annual RRSP season is just around the corner, based on some of my most recent writing assignments. Earlier in the week, for MoneySense.ca, I made the case for semi-retirees in their Sixties (like me!) for starting the process of withdrawing money from RRSPs early. Click on the headline Retirement Tax Tips. The Hub summary ran here under the headline The case for Early RRSP withdrawals.

Then at the end of the week, the Financial Post ran my column titled The RRSP’s less flexible cousin: Everything you need to know about the LIRA, which is also available in the Saturday print edition.

As TriDelta Financial wealth advisor Matthew Ardrey told me for the FP article, you’re going to see a lot more about LIRAs in the coming years. Whether you’re leaving a classic Defined Benefit pension plan or a more market-tied Defined Contribution pension plan, the job market these days is in such flux that a lot of people are going to have to start learning about what happens when you leave an employer pension plan earlier than you might once have envisaged.

LIRAs will multiply as Boomers reach Findependence

Continue Reading…

FindependenceHub.com turns 2 today

depositphotos_114420670_s-2015It’s hard to believe, but the Financial Independence Hub (aka FindependenceHub.com) is now  two years old, a veritable toddler!

We launched the evening of Nov. 3, 2014, several months after I declared my Findependence Day on May 20, 2014.

This is post number 802, which means we have more than exceeded our original goal of providing fresh content every day (Sundays excepted). While I try to write one or two blogs a week myself, this wouldn’t have been possible without the many guest contributors who have lent their time, energy and names to the project.

Thanks also to the early supporters of the Hub: you know who they are from the banner ads that provide a little operating cash and a lot of moral support.

Thanks too to the many individuals who registered on the site and subscribed to our daily news email. There is no charge for this service (that’s why we need some banners to defray costs): all that’s needed is to supply a valid email address.

What’s next? 

Continue Reading…

The case for early RRSP withdrawals

hqdefault
Fram Oil Filters: “Pay me now or pay me later.” (YouTube.com)

My latest MoneySense Retired Money column was published earlier today: click on the headline Retirement Tax Tips for full version.

As I say at the end of the column, after decades of the RRSP contribution habit, I admit it goes against the grain to start decumulating.  And even more so, it’s counterintuitive to pay taxes on investment funds before you HAVE to.

However, to paraphrase the famous Fram Oil Filters TV commercial, you can pay me now or you can pay me more later — much more later. (For the famous 1972 “Pay me now or pay me later” Fram Filter ad, click on this YouTube link.)

Since tax is one of the biggest, if not THE biggest expense in retirement, I’d rather pay a little tax now prematurely than a lot of tax later.

Live on early RRSP withdrawals and defer CPP benefits

dougdahmer
Emeritus’s Doug Dammer

So what has this got to do with RRSPs and taxes? As the column points out in detail, citing Emeritus Retirement Solutions’ Doug Dahmer, at some point those great tax refunds from decades of RRSP contributions eventually come back to haunt you. Usually that’s when you turn 71 and are forced to start making annual, and taxable, withdrawals from Registered Retirement Income Funds or RRIFs. (you can opt instead to annuitize or to cash out and pay a ton of tax upfront).

In practice, most will choose to take RRIF withdrawals starting at the end of the year you turn 71, but if you also have a good employer pension, the usual government pensions and other income sources, there’s a good chance some of those withdrawals will be at or near the top marginal tax rate, which these days ranges from 46% to more than 50%, depending on your income and the province in which you reside. And as the MoneySense column mentions, if you’re in the OAS clawback zone, you may have to add a further 15% to the government’s haul.

But if you’re semi-retired and “basking” in a relatively low tax bracket in your Sixties, you may be able to start withdrawing RRSP funds earlier than necessary, which may make sense if it’s only being taxed at 20 or 30%. Plus, as Dahmer suggests, by living on some of this relatively low taxed early RRSP funds you can defer the receipt of Canada Pension Plan (CPP) benefits and possibly Old Age Security benefits to as late as 70.

Every year you can defer taking CPP by living instead on early RRSP withdrawals, the CPP benefit will be 8.4% higher. Dahmer poses the rhetorical question whether your RRSP can generate an annual return of 8.4%. These days you certainly can’t generate that return with fixed-income and after all, we’re talking about people who by now should have a good percentage (perhaps 50%) in fixed-income. You may or may not get 8.4% from stocks but if you do, you’re also subjecting your portfolio to possible capital losses.

For one of Dahmer’s decumulation blogs published here at the Hub, click on Timing of CPP Benefits: Get both a bird in the hand and two in the bush.

Banks repaid Millions to overcharged investors, which got me thinking

Colorful vector infographic financial flowchart for money transfer and transactions from hand to hand as it circulates through the economy and banks

CIBC agreed to repay $73 million to more than 80,000 customers who were overcharged for their investments since 2002. The majority of those affected were in fee-based accounts and were found to have paid double fees on some investments that had embedded commissions. Meanwhile, some 24,000 CIBC clients were not told they qualified for lower-cost mutual funds because of the size of their investments, and were instead sold similar funds with higher management expense ratios.

Incredible, yet not surprising when you consider this is the same bank that makes its senior clients apply for free banking rather than granting it automatically when clients turns 60.

It should be noted that CIBC self-reported the fee problems to the Ontario Securities Commission when it uncovered the issues during an internal review. The OSC has settled similar voluntary cases with three Bank of Nova Scotia divisions, three subsidiaries of TD Bank, and with mutual fund giant CI Funds, which repaid $156 million to 360,000 clients who bought mutual funds over a five-year period.

How many other ways will Canadian investors get fleeced by an industry that cares more about protecting its compensation model than it does about looking out for the best interest of its clients?

When will the Canadian Securities Administrators (securities regulators) finally get around to banning trailer fees – the embedded commissions that puts advisors in a clear conflict of interest and which a mountain of evidence suggest influences fund recommendations?

Since we’re talking about overcharging investors, here’s a thought:

The banks are suddenly feeling so ethical and generous by volunteering to repay fees that were overcharged. So let’s have some fun (or maybe cry a little) and apply that to the more than $1.32 trillion (!) that Canadians have invested in mutual funds.

We already know that Canadians pay some of the highest mutual fund fees in the world – the Investment Funds Institute of Canada estimates the average total cost of ownership of mutual funds for clients is 2.2%.

We also know, thanks to Professor Douglas Cumming’s research on mutual fund fees, that the average trailer fee on a fund is 0.3%.

Let’s say Canadians demand that the average mutual fund fees be reduced to 1.5%. That’s lower than many other countries, but still higher than fees in Australia and the U.S. (according to Morningstar).

To get there we’d have to ban trailer fees (saving 0.3%) and maybe by doing so we’d miraculously find that dealers no longer have the incentive to sell higher fee funds and so the average comes down to 1.5%.

How much will Canadian investors save if this hypothetical scenario came to pass?

  • $1.32 trillion x 2.2% MER = $29,040,000,000 ($29.04 billion) in fees paid by Canadian mutual fund investors.
  • $1.32 trillion x 1.5% MER = $19,800,000,000 ($19.8 billion) in fees paid after lowering the average MER by 0.7%.

That’s a savings of nearly $10 billion. Now the IFIC says that 4.9 million Canadian households invest in mutual funds, so if we divide the amount saved by the number of households then each household should receive a nice $1,885 rebate.

Final thoughts

Mutual fund assets continue to grow because for the Canadians who want to save and invest, the easiest way for them to do so is by visiting a bank advisor or mutual fund salesperson. But those advisors have a conflict of interest, selling their firm’s funds that may be suitable but not in the best interest of their client because of high product fees and incentives that reward the seller.

Lower cost products such as ETFs exist, but investors have to do their research and go it alone (or use a robo-advisor service) to realize the savings. That’s why, despite widespread attention over the last 5-10 years, the total Canadian listed ETF assets is only $107 billion, or just one-tenth of the mutual fund market.

So while investors patiently wait for securities regulators to ban trailer fees, I think Canadians should demand to be repaid the $10 billion that they’re being overcharged each year from mutual fund fees.

 RobbEngenIn addition to running the Boomer & Echo website, Robb Engen is a fee-only financial planner. This article originally ran on his site on October 30th and is republished here with his permission.
Powered by the Financial Independence Hub.
© 2013-2026 All Rights Reserved.
Financial Independence Hub Logo

Sign up for our Daily Digest E-Mail!

Get daily updates from the FindependenceHub.com straight to your inbox.