General

Do you really need Dental Insurance?

By Wally Thompson

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

April was Oral Health Month in Canada and while we should take care of our oral hygiene year-round, past studies show that a whopping 6 million Canadians avoid the dentist because they simply can’t afford it.

When it comes to dental insurance, a new survey from Manulife revealed:

  • More than one third of Canadians do not have access to private health and/or dental insurance coverage
  • When choosing coverage, 42% said the most determining factor is the cost of premiums, followed by companies offering a variety of coverage options (36%)
  • While 30% of Canadians make sure they visit the dentist for regular check-ups, 29% hate having to do it
  • For those who have visited the dentist, 52% admit to feeling guilty about their oral care habits

A visit to the dentist may not be everyone’s idea of fun but regular visits are beneficial for our overall health. Getting dental insurance for you and your loved ones helps make sure the right care is available on a regular basis and when there is an emergency.

Here are four common misconceptions and what to look for when purchasing dental insurance in Canada:

I’m healthy so there’s no need for dental insurance

If you don’t have dental insurance, don’t wait until you need to deal with a tooth infection, a chipped tooth or to be in serious need of cleaning to start looking into your coverage options. Individuals and their families should consider a plan when they are healthy in order to protect themselves from conditions that may arise in the future. Individuals will need to do a complete assessment on their needs to determine their overall supplemental health insurance coverage. Health status, affordability and the types of coverage are a few key factors that would be part of your overall needs assessments.

If you work with a financial advisor, he or she can also help you and your family complete your overall needs assessment and complete the purchase. You should also ask your advisor how these premiums can be treated as a business expense for your annual tax returns.

I can’t afford insurance

Continue Reading…

Is it wise to sell in May and go away?

“Sometimes it’s necessary to go a long distance out of the way in order to come back a short distance correctly.” — Edward Albee (1928–2016), American playwright

Investing plans that pursue flavours of “sell in May and go away” are not vanishing anytime soon. Simply said, the catchy tune is about to ignite the annual rounds once again. Strategies that believe stock investing from November to April have better prospects than other months.

Keen followers of this practice typically sell their equities around May, such as stocks, mutual funds and ETFs. They then repurchase equity investments near November.

“I don’t recommend clearing the deck willy-nilly. Drastic actions are seldom wise replacements for long-term strategy.”

I’m fully on board with the excitement of getting away to a variety of travel destinations. That is the “go away” part. On the other hand, I just don’t buy into the questionable wisdom of selling the nest egg. For me, the “sell in May” part needs much closer scrutiny. Particularly, outlays of disposition and acquisition. Income tax implications also play a part.

Let’s be clear about the strategy. An investor unloads the entire portfolio, then acquires the new version a few months later. This process is repeated year after year, after year. Sounds like quite a heap of cash to shell out for transactions and tax implications.

Potential pitfalls

If only investing were that simple! Examining these pointers helps assess the prudence of wholesale selling: Continue Reading…

Are you financially ready to buy your first home?

By Allan Tran

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Buying a home is usually the biggest investment you’ll make. Can you afford it?

Recent surveys show that potential buyers are concerned about interest rate increases and new federal lending guidelines. Many people are delaying their home purchases. It can be hard to know when to take the plunge or hit pause. Try these exercises:

Simulate the total expense

When talking to mortgage brokers and real estate agents, you can get preoccupied with rates, what you can get approved for, and listing prices. Those matter, but figure out the bottom line. Can you swing the total costs and still live your life?

Calculate your expected fixed home ownership costs: mortgage payment, property tax, home insurance, utilities, etc. Take that total and compare it to what you’re paying now for rent. The difference is what you’ll need to be able to cover.

Now, set that amount aside every month for a year. That’s long enough to experience all the ups and downs of your annual expenses. See whether you can handlethe monthly savings for the home you want for a sustained period

Take a hard look at your spending

Saving for a home, then managing the ongoing expense, can require a shift in spending habits. You can’t do that without a handle on where you actually spend your money.

Review the last three months of your credit-card statements and other bills. Look at wants versus needs. Think about what costs you could have avoided and how those add up. For instance, many costs that we tap a card for are variable. You can likely avoid some. Try and park that money into savings.

Another strategy is to force savings by tying it into spending. Say you spend $20 a week on coffee. Yes, you can save $1,000 a year by foregoing that. But you want coffee. Well, you also want a home. How about putting the equivalent towards it? It’s just a way of disciplining yourself to save for a bigger dream.

Force accountability

If you’re buying a home with a partner or spouse, get a joint account where you can’t pull out money without both signing off. This will help you think twice about spending and hold each other accountable.

Many couples have different spending and savings habits. The point is to train you to have honest conversations about finances. If you’re going to own a home together, you need to be on the same financial page before, during and after the purchase.

Stress test yourself

The Office of the Superintendent of Financial Institutions has new rules around mortgage underwriting. Potential home buyers must be able to handle a minimum qualifying rate: the greater of the five-year Bank of Canada benchmark rate, or the contracted mortgage rate plus two percentage points. Continue Reading…

What’s your real Risk Tolerance? Chinese Face Reading tells us Listen to your Ears

By Jane Hawley Edward

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

My Google search for “choosing a financial advisor” yielded more than 30 million hits. It appears to be a popular topic. The recommendations over the first 20 pages were variations on:

Education and Experience

Compensation and potential conflicts of interest

Investment suitability to the client

Yet I propose another characteristic for consideration; one that can quickly help assess one’s risk tolerance and show whether a client and advisor are compatible.

It comes from the ancient Chinese science of Face Reading, where ears are the physical feature that shows how much innate courage and risk-taking ability a person has. The larger the ear, the more comfortable they are gambling physically, in their choice of work or taking risks with money.

To understand the kind of risk-taking you can naturally handle, all you have to do is measure the size of your ear.  Measure it by holding your thumb and index finger in a “C” up to your ear. If it matches in size, you have a small ear.  A large ear is the size of your thumb and middle finger formed into a “C”. A medium ear is between those two sizes.

The broader your ear is across the top, the more comfortable you are with financial and emotional risk.  Chances are that you would be the type who would be more willing to try aggressive growth stocks or volatile markets for potentially larger gains.

In contrast, if your ear is narrow across the top, you’d tend to be a conservative and cautious investor. Your preference would be to invest in safer low-risk vehicles because your main goal is to preserve savings because you feel the pain of losses more intensely than the comfort of gains.

Matching to your financial advisor’s

That’s where matchmaking our ears to our financial advisor’s gets interesting.  A client with cautious, narrow ears may be most comfortable with a similarly narrow-eared, like-minded advisor.  But there’s merit in matching opposite traits; a wide-eared advisor could construct a portfolio that offers protection plus opportunity for moderate growth.  Or a narrow-eared advisor could help curb a high-risk tolerant client from gambling on a poorly diversified portfolio or too speculative an investment.  In either case, together they could temper each other’s risk taking appetite.   The main point is to know what each brings to the equation. Continue Reading…

How Finance Apps & Online Tools will revolutionize Millennial Financial Planning

By Drew Hayles 

Special to the Financial Independendence Hub

When you’re young, you feel like nothing can stop you. You’re in charge of your own destiny.

Things might look different in hindsight, but don’t worry about that now. The most important thing you can do right now is set in motion a plan to achieve financial independence as soon as possible. With the means to do what you want, when you want, you’ll open doors you never even knew existed.

Before you begin in earnest, make sure you have the right digital tools and apps in your corner. These user-friendly resources all have their place in a coherent, comprehensive financial independence plan, provided you use them properly and consistently.

Perhaps you’re using a few already.

 Digital Budgeting Tools: All Your Money in One Place

 This list of the “best simple and free budgeting tools” doesn’t get to actual digital solutions until the third entry, when it calls out the trusty old Excel spreadsheet.

If you’re in the market for something a bit more robust and hands-off than a wall of spreadsheet cells, consider later entries like Mint or PearBudget (which, to be fair, began life as an Excel tool).

These aren’t professional-grade tools by any means, but they’re nevertheless robust enough to accommodate basic household budgeting and ensure that you spend well less than you earn. Remember to download mobile versions and link your bank accounts for automated cash flow tracking.

 Automated Savings Apps: Ditch the Reminders

 Tired of remembering (or forgetting) to make regular savings deposits? Take the uncertainty out of the process with automated savings apps that quietly transfer small sums to your savings accounts without any input on your end.

Tools like Digit exist wholly for this purpose. More robust online banking solutions like Chime Bank typically have built-in automated savings features that round up every debit transaction to the nearest dollar and sock away the difference

 Educational Videos: DIY, But for Money

 Are you a DIYer at heart? You can learn a lot from high-quality investing and financial education videos. After all, there’s no need to pay for entry-level information and strategic advice when you’ve got a YouTube account to your name. If you need help or want to learn more about specific topics, you can always go straight to the source with questions.

Lightweight Accounting Platforms for Entrepreneurs   Continue Reading…