Building Wealth

For the first 30 or so years of working, saving and investing, you’ll be first in the mode of getting out of the hole (paying down debt), and then building your net worth (that’s wealth accumulation.). But don’t forget, wealth accumulation isn’t the ultimate goal. Decumulation is! (a separate category here at the Hub).

5 Pitfalls to Avoid on the Road to Retirement

MattArdrey
Matt Ardrey

By Matthew Ardrey

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

One of the greatest things I can do for my clients is to reassure them that they’ll be financially independent when they’re ready to retire. Unfortunately, not everyone meets their financial retirement goals. When they don’t, it’s often because they’ve made one or more of the five following mistakes:

1.) Not understanding your spending habits

Most people know what they earn and what they save, but have no idea what they spend. As you approach retirement and your ability to earn income is more limited, understanding what you spend and where you spend it becomes crucial.

Not knowing what you spend can lead to living beyond your means. Spending more than you earn can result in debt accumulation and, ultimately, reduced savings. Think of savings as fuel for your retirement; if you don’t have enough in the tank, you might not make it to your final destination.

2.) Carrying debt into retirement

A cornerstone of financial independence is being debt free. Continue Reading…

Weekly Wrap: High-flying tech stocks, dividends as contrarian play, best careers for Early Retirement

Map of the Silicon Valley area of CaliforniaGood cover story in the current issue of the Economist on the technology boom and the Nasdaq composite index surpassing its previous all-time high early in the year 2000.

The magazine argues that while the tech boom may get bumpy, “it will not end in a repeat of the dot com crash.” Certainly, the past week was mostly positive for growth stocks like the four that make up the so-called “FANG” acronym: Facebook, Amazon, Netflix and Google.  Amazon turning a profit: who knew?

True, none of the FANG stocks  pay dividends but the older tech giants that do,  like Apple, IBM and Microsoft, experienced haircuts this week.

Dividends now a contrarian play?

Continue Reading…

How pairing fee-only planners and robo-advisers can save you money

Woman meeting financial adviser in officeCute Robot

By Robb Engen, Boomer & Echo

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

The financial services industry would have you believe that individual investors don’t want to pay upfront for investment advice – in fact, the industry claims that investors prefer to pay for financial advice through fees that are part of their mutual funds.

But we all know mutual funds in Canada cost too much and the relationship between investors and financial advisors is mostly transactional in nature. Embedded commissions and trailer fees might make sense for investors who are just starting out, but over the long term this conflict of interest will be expensive and lead to poorer outcomes for investors.

An unconventional pairing

With the relatively new arrival of fee-only financial planners – advisors who don’t sell products but offer unbiased and objective financial advice for a set fee – and the emergence of robo-advisors – online investment management services – there is an opportunity for Canadians to access a better form of financial advice that costs less than the traditional bank advisor-mutual fund model.

That’s right, pairing a fee-only financial advisor with a robo-advisor (or DIY, if that’s your thing) can actually save you money and lead to better investor outcomes.

Here’s an example Continue Reading…

Expanded CPP may not increase retirement income: Fraser Institute

cpp_image2As the Globe & Mail and Financial Post both  reported Tuesday, a new study by the Fraser Institute finds that an expansion of the Canada Pension Plan (CPP) may not raise incomes of retirees because people will save less on their own.

The report, which is to be released today, found that private savings fell as CPP contribution levels rose between 1986 and 2008. CPP contribution rates were 3.6% of earnings in 1986 (half from employers, half from employees) and rose to the current combined level of 9.9% by 2003.

Impact varies with income and age

The study found the impact of higher CPP contribution rates varies with income and age. So for households with annual income under $34,140, a one percentage-point increase in contribution rate resulted in a 1.56-percentage-point fall in private savings. But middle-income households earning up to $59,920 cut their savings by 0.72 percentage points: less than the full amount of the CPP increase. And high-income earners making over $59,920 were found to have almost no change in their saving rates as CPP rates rose.

The report’s co-author, Charles Lamman told the Globe that relatively few Canadians are under saving for retirement: mostly the elderly, widows and singles, and those without a work history that makes them eligible fort the CPP. So for those people, a CPP expansion would not be helpful.

The Financial Post version of the story can be found here. The Post also ran a piece by the report’s authors on its FP Comment page: Shifting Retirement Savings. You can also view a video commentary on the report on the Fraser Institute’s website, here.

Weekly Wrap: Horrendous market timers, Big Mac Index, NHLers defrauded by advisers

Collage with flying euro clock in a hand on a background of sky and grass.A piece on market timing is a “must read” for anyone who takes market-timing gurus and newsletters overly seriously. Read A Visual History of Market Crash Predictions. (Note the reference embedded in the URL to “the clowns of Wall Street.”)

Yes, all the big fear-monger names are there, including Harry Dent Jr., Robert Prechter, Marc Faber and even a few Marketwatch columnists and the generally respected Mark Hulbert.

As the piece says, you need to remember that almost everyone has something to sell, and the pundits mentioned generally are in the business of selling newsletters, books, market-timing services or related items. And since Fear is a more visceral emotion than Greed, the scarier the headlines these prognostications generate, the more publicity the market prognosticators are likely to reap, and with that more sales of their products or services. As they say in the newspaper business, “If it bleeds, it leads.”

And admit it, would YOU buy a book bearing the calm and sensible title “Markets will fluctuate, stay diversified for the long run and have a sensible asset allocation?” A better title might be “Ignore these idiots.”

Reader reaction to Eternal Truths series

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