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.

2016 planning priorities for business owners

AdrianBy Adrian Mastracci, KCM Wealth

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Today’s business owners are preoccupied with the day-to-day operations for 2016. They need plenty of encouragement in planning their tomorrows.

Owners know that curve balls can suddenly appear practically every day. A continuous challenge for many is trying to improve their business prospects.

Business plans can easily veer off course, often beyond one’s control. A refresh of your business elements is good value.

First, mull over what you would like to achieve with your business.
Then brainstorm with some solid ideas.

Assess, Analyze & Adopt

Continue Reading…

Closure of Hulbert Financial Digest a loss for all investors

Mark_J._Hulbert_cropHere’s my latest Financial Post blog, which puts a Canadian spin on the announcement late last week that after 36 years, the influential investment newsletter ranking service is shutting down. Click on this headline: ‘A loss for all investors’: The Hulbert Financial Digest says goodbye.

As the blog notes, there aren’t too many Canadian investment newsletters but two of the majors had one or two newsletters that often did well in the Digest.

Here is Hulbert’s Wikipedia entry.

The good news is that Hulbert continues to be a columnist at MarketWatch.com. Check out his recent opinion piece, entitled Don’t be fooled by a bear-market rally in stocks.

Paper-heavy financial industry will go from 10 to 50% digital in 3 or 4 years

Financial Independence Hub.photoBy Anthony Boright

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

We live at a time when electronic communications is making rapid advances in many walks of life, but surprisingly, the financial-services industry still has a long way to go.

Incredible as it may sound, less than 10 per cent of documents in the industry are delivered electronically today. I refer to client statements, trade confirmations, bills, and a variety of other disclosure documents needed for regulatory requirements. Indeed, the industry and those who work in it are drowning in paper.

From my vantage point, three prominent trends in the industry right now are:

  • The migration from paper to electronic communications
  • An ever-increasing environment of regulation
  • A growing need for technology innovation and the cost savings that brings.

I have worked in the technology side of financial services for 20 years and been involved in lots of innovations. This includes providing Internet and custom web solutions for the industry, developing products that address what were then new Point of Sale (POS) regulations, and in the late 1990s creating the Fund Library, which was Canada’s online mutual fund resource centre, and also f/A Connect,  the Internet workplace for financial advisors.

The benefits of digital

Continue Reading…

Exploring the ExPat Lifestyle in Mexico’s San Miguel de Allende

FullSizeRender(1)
View of San Miguel from top of the Rosewood Hotel (Photo J. Chevreau)

Last week, my wife Ruth and I enjoyed a week’s vacation in San Miguel de Allende, which is located in central (and landlocked) Mexico. We’d been to Mexico several times over the years but never this particular community, which is not handy to a major airport.

It was also our first trip to Latin America in about five years, since we had been taking our February breaks in Florida in more recent years.

Ironically, San Miguel was prominently featured in the old magazine I published around the year 2000: The Wealthy Boomer. At the time, I remember being impressed by the fact the cost of living for semi-retired American and Canadian baby boomers was roughly half what it was in our home countries. This theme was also applied to various Asia locations in a Hub blog last year featuring the book Planet Boomer. See also my post, titled 5 Asian locations where retirement is more affordable than North America.

Trading high taxes for crime?

Back during the days of the tax-and-spend Jean Chretien Liberals, I found the Mexican expatriate fantasy quite compelling, so much so that I listened to Spanish instructional tapes on my long commutes to the National Post’s bunker then located in Don Mills. But the fantasy of becoming a tax exile/early retiree faded once the Conservative Party achieved power and seemed to offer at least the hope of more reasonable levels of taxation (the Tax-free Savings Account being a major positive example.)

Meanwhile, the unremitting press over drug-cartel-related crime in Mexico reached a crescendo in the last few years so we stopped visiting for a spell.  Continue Reading…

Sensible Investing TV: How to Win the Loser’s Game, Part 9

Screen Shot 2016-03-09 at 1.44.02 PMSensible Investing TV has posted part 9 of its How to Win the Loser’s Game series of videos, which you can view by clicking here. This 9-minute segment is the second-last episode of the ten-part series.

You can also find it here at Findependence.TV, where all the earlier episodes, plus those of FWB TV, are housed.

David Booth, co-founder of Dimensional Fund Advisors (pictured), says this:

“One of the big difficulties is getting people to stay the course when results are disappointing. It should come as no surprise to people that markets go up and they go down. When they go down, there’s a tendency for people to go, ‘Gosh, Are we on the edge of an abyss? Will things really get bad from here?’

In 2008-2009, it was difficult to get people to stay the course. My heart goes out to these people that were invested in equities, lost half their money then got out and missed the rebound. It may take quite a while for them to get back even again.”

We need to stay the course, and this video shows why …. the culprits will be familiar to many investors: buying low and selling high, panicking at the worst possible time, listening to media noise. There’s also a good segment featuring Vanguard founder John Bogle and the long-term returns that come from dividend yield and earnings growth, as opposed to speculation.  Continue Reading…