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.

Americans worried about Retirement, unlikely to save more in 2017

While 70% of Americans say they saved for retirement in 2016, many are anxious about the level of their savings and the need to direct money towards other goals and expenses, says a Harris Poll of 2,000 American adults conducted by the personal finance site NerdWallet. You can find the full results here.

Other major financial concerns include lack of emergency funds (cited by 35%), health care expenses (also 35%)and credit-card debt (27%). Retirement remains the most commonly cited savings priority (mentioned by 28% surveyed) but only 29% feel confident they saved enough in 2016, while one in three aren’t saving for retirement at all (including 43% of Millennials aged 18 to 24). Lesser forms of financial anxiety in 2016 include making mortgage or rent payments (19%), stock market volatility (17%), student debt (14%), and paying income taxes (13%).

Next year may not be much better: of those with workplace pensions, only 32% plan to increase their contributions in 2017. Older Americans aged 45 to 54 are most likely to report concern about lack of retirement savings (40% surveyed), while only 20% are confident they saved enough this year.

Savers should favour tax-advantage accounts over savings accounts

Continue Reading…

How to be wealthy & healthy, starting this Holiday Season

Piggy bank balancing on seesaw over a bottle of pills
You can balance Health & Wealth with advisors on both

By Sandy Cardy

Special the Financial Independence Hub

The Holiday season is a very personal balancing act.  Every year we experience the same thing – multiple events featuring gut-bloating menus and Boxing Day blow outs followed by crash dieting for both your waist-line and your bottom line. How do you find that sweet spot between making the season joyful and memorable while avoiding the perils of two to three weeks of over-eating and spending followed by a blizzard of credit card debt?

It’s no secret that Canadians, particularly Baby Boomers in their sixties, are doing a poor job of managing their retirement savings, falling well short of amassing enough retirement funds. Canadians still find it difficult to apply one of the simplest financial planning principles: pay yourself before you pay for anything else.

If, like many boomers, your retirement plan is increasingly looking like harnessing yourself to a full-time job as long as possible, what happens if you fall sick? And when you gaze with furrowed brow at your bloated credit card balances in January, not only are you even further from any savings goals, the sheer shock of the amount owing can add an unwelcome dollop of stress to already overtaxed minds and bodies.  Never knowing when enough is enough, there aren’t any checks and balances on our impulse to over-consume.

Here are some tips to get re-balanced for 2017:

Every money decision you make, even the little ones, will have an impact on your retirement. Perhaps what you need now is a qualified advisor to help you achieve your goals: someone you trust wholeheartedly. A good advisor will ensure you are realizing all cost savings, and applying tax minimization strategies to build your net worth. Put it this way: it’s much more difficult to neglect simple investment principles when a financial planner is looking over your shoulder.

Healthcare advisors as important as financial advisors

Similarly, having one or more health care advisors available is essential. Whether you encounter a health crisis or want to pursue preventative health,  it’s key to find  nurturing and optimistic healers, either conventional or alternative, ones that involve you in your health care discussion.

Continue Reading…

ChangeRangers’ Mark Venning interviews Victory Lap Retirement co-authors

Mark Venning, ChangeRangers.com

By Mark Venning, ChangeRangers.com

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

“We’re on a bit of a crusade to change the way our society thinks about retirement.” — Jonathan Chevreau & Mike Drak

Mike Drak and Jonathan Chevreau, co-authors of Victory Lap Retirement (published, October 2016) are not the first to head out on this crusade. Apart from the material on the larger subject of aging and longevity, in my library I must have at least 19 books, in addition to the stacks of reports, studies and new models on the subject of Retirement.

Over the twenty years in the career services industry, where I worked directly with business executives in their later life transitions – leaving the corporate crow’s nest, as I call it, I can appreciate where Mike and Jonathan are coming from in their take on this. I have produced three retirement programs since 2001, and in the process suffered from metaphor madness, developing novel ways of reframing the concept of retirement and our later life journey.

However, this Drak & Chevreau volume is a welcomed new addition to this crusade. The book, by way of its novelty, weaves the conversation from the threads of a concept called Findependence, as the cornerstone of a Victory Lap Retirement.  So here we go. Rather than a traditional book review, here in this blog post, I present views of the authors as shared through interview questions with them in late October.

Authors Interview

Mark’s Q: Your co-authored book, early on, takes a shot across the bow at the “financial media & financial services industries” in the way they persist to push “Retirement” as if it were some final destination. (There seems little shift between the 1970’s London Life’s Freedom 55, to Prudential’s 2016 Race for Retirement campaigns for example.) What one new key message should marketers take from reading Victory Lap that could become a differentiator in their marketing?

Mike: The industry is using the same commercials that they used 40 years ago. The only difference is that they are now in color. The world of retirement has changed significantly over the years and most people cannot afford nor do they want to live the lifestyle portrayed in their commercials.

Banks assume more money equals better retirement, which is wrong thinking. Banks are good with the investment piece but they need to become more involved with the lifestyle piece. How can you ever know if you have enough if you do not have a firm handle on what type of retirement lifestyle you want in retirement and what that lifestyle will cost?

Mark’s Q: At one point in Chapter 3, you make the point that: “Compounding the problem is the lack of financial education our children receive in school.” You also say in Chapter 4 that the importance of financial independence is a prerequisite to the new stage of life you call “Victory Lap Retirement.”  Let’s play here. What do you think about an opportunity for you to design/deliver a “Findependence” course relatable to high school teenagers that didn’t use the word Retirement? What then would the main message sound like to them?

Jon: We’d say there is an opportunity there. Continue Reading…

What happens to your TFSA upon death?

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Human mortality seems to be the Hub’s theme today. This morning we posted Lorne Marr’s 20 tips on getting life insurance without having to take a medical exam first.

Subsequent to that, my latest MoneySense Retired Money blog looks at the topic of estate planning as it related to Tax-free Savings Accounts (TFSAs). To access the full blog, click on the highlighted text here: Why your TFSA needs a Successor Holder.

We had mentioned in an earlier blog that TFSAs were excellent vehicles for estate planning and minimizing tax of families as a whole. See How TFSAs can aid your Victory Lap.

We also said that it’s by far preferable for couples to name each other Successor Holders on their respective TFSAs. Otherwise, things get pretty complex, which is what the MoneySense blog goes into in some depth.

TFSA succession planning often not well understood 

Sandy Cardy

The blog is based largely on input from Mackenzie Investments and a brochure it published entitled What happens to your TFSA at the time of death?, which you can access in full by clicking on the link. It also quotes regular Hub contributor Sandy Cardy, who was the head of tax and estate planning at Mackenzie when that brochure was published. In that role, she was responsible for educating the financial advisors who sell mutual funds on estate planning, including its role in TFSAs. As she notes in the MoneySense blog, this topic of TFSAs at death is not well understood even by some financial professionals.

These days, following her own brush with cancer in 2012 (she’s fine now) Cardy blogs as much on health as she does on Wealth. See for example, a recent Hub blog titled The Mind-Body Connection: How Stress Affects Your Health. Her website can be found here, and you can find her estate planning “novel” by clicking on this  highlighted title: The Cottage The Spider Brooch and The Second Wife

20 tips for getting Life Insurance without a medical

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Lorne Marr

By Lorne Marr, LSM Insurance

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

The No-Medical Life Insurance market in Canada is exploding. More and more people are opting for the convenience of obtaining life insurance without a medical.

No-Medical Life Insurance policies fall into two categories: Guaranteed Issue (no health questions) and Simplified Issue (anywhere from a 2 to 25 + health questions).  No-Med policies are available as Term policies — where the cost starts off low and increases as you get older or Permanent policies — the premiums start off higher but never increase.

There’s a plan for everyone, bu these plans can be an especially good deal for customers that may otherwise be considered hard-to-insure.

Here are 20 points to consider:

1.) Understand the difference between different types of life Insurance.

Simplified issue life insurance: Doesn’t require a medical exam but there are still a number of health-related questions. Typically, the more questions, the lower the premiums. The maximum limit on this type of policy is usually $150,000. You might not qualify for this policy if you have been denied life insurance in the past two years.

Guaranteed issue life insurance: Doesn’t require a medical exam and there are no health-related questions. It is available to everyone, even if you have been declined life insurance within the last 2 years. The coverage limit is typically $25,000 and some payout restrictions may apply during the first two years of coverage. Continue Reading…