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Subscribe to Comments

You might have noticed that we have added a “Subscribe to Comments” box under the comments box. This feature is so that you can get email updates of any subsequent comments. Keep in mind that you don’t have to leave a comment to subscribe – simply enter the email and check the box. It’s also very easy to unsubscribe in case you don’t want to get any more email comments – just click on the ‘unsubscribe’ link at the bottom of the email.

Money Matters for All Ages Group Project

If you haven’t check out this series then either click on the links below or check out My Dollar Plan’s excellent series outline. The series covers money management for different age groups from birth to retirement.

The Complete Guide My Dollar Plan

Introduction at My Dollar Plan
Preschoolers at I’ve Paid for This Twice Already
Personal Finance for Children and Pre-Teens at Being Frugal
Teenagers at Gather Little by Little AND Money Advice to My Teenage Son at DebtFREE-Revolution
College Age at Finance Freelance Life
The Twenties at Remodeling This Life and more Twenties at Cash Money Life
The Thirties at Moolanomy and more Thirties at My Two Dollars
The Forties at Credit Withdrawal
The Fifties at Millionaire Money Habits and more Fifties at Credit Withdrawal
The Sixties and beyond at Chance Favors
Retirement at Plonkee Money and right here!

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Announcements

Saturday Weigh In and LinkStuff

Weight

Weight was 179.5 pounds today which is down 0.5 pounds from last week. A quick recap – I started the weight loss goal at 192 pounds – hit my goal of 182 pounds about a month ago and I’m now going for 175 pounds.

Canadian Financial DIY is one of the best investment blogs around – extremely well written and researched. This week he came up with a gem of a post where he compares the current stock market decline (crash?) to multi-vehicle accidents, one of which he was involved with in the past.

ThickenMyWallet, a lawyer turned entrepreneur who blogs on the side, is writing a very interesting series regarding legal issues surrounding blogging such as liability for advice given. Part I deals with intellectual property rights (ie no copying), defamation of character (names CAN hurt you). Part II deals with the potential ramifications of giving advice to readers among other issues.

Moolanomy had an interesting point on Socially Responsible Investing (SRI) which had some great comments (and I’m not talking about mine!).

This article on rewards programs which I discovered through the Canadian Capitalist could have been written by me since I had the same problems with my Visa Aerogold which I just got rid of.

Million Dollar Journey had a couple of posts which I really enjoyed where he talks about Shopping for a Newborn and part II is here.

Carnivals

Green Panda hosted the Carnival of Personal Finance and included Do You Really Earn Your Investment Income?.

Plonkee Money hosted the Carnival of Money Stories and included Cheap’s post Low Level Venture Capital.

On Financial Success hosted the Festival of Frugality and included Mr. Cheap’s post You Deserve It.

The Skilled Investor hosted the Carnival of Financial Planning which featured “My New Asset Allocation (Part XIV)”.

Categories
Personal Finance

Safe Withdrawal Rule for Retirement Funds

Yesterday I posted part one of this topic Why Retirees Should Have Equities In Their Portfolio.

One of the biggest concerns for retirees is the fear of running out of money. If you are retired and living off a pension which is indexed for inflation then you don’t have much to worry about since the pension should keep going until you expire. What happens if you have no pension or only a little bit of pension income from a source like a government pension plan? Then you need to live off income from your investments.

How much can I safely withdraw from my retirement funds?

Simple – use the 4% rule. This will give you a great chance of not running out of your money and it’s valid for 25+ year periods. If you are at an advanced life stage where 25 years is a dream then the 4% can be adjusted upwards.

The way the 4% rule works is that you start by taking 4% out of your portfolio in the first year – this includes dividends, interest, withdrawals. The next year you take out the same figure you took out the first year plus inflation. So if you start by taking $40,000 out and then inflation is 3% then the second year you take out $40,000 + 3% ($1200) = $41,200. Every year after that you adjust the previous year’s withdrawal amount by the inflation rate.

Keep in mind that this amount only covers the withdrawals from your investments. Any other income you have, such as pensions, will be in addition to the withdrawals. If you find the 4% rule doesn’t give you enough income then you can either cut back your spending or increase the withdrawal amount (which will increase the chance you will run out of money later on).

The 4% rule is really a guideline rather than a hard and fast rule – If your equities perform better than expected then you can spend a bit more than the 4% rule amount however the opposite is also true, if you encounter a bear market and the value of your portfolio drops then you should be prepared to cut back on the withdrawals.

 

Categories
Investing

Why Retirees Need Equity In Their Portfolios

One of the standard pieces of advice for retirees is that they have to have a very conservative portfolio since they are too old to take any chances with equities. There are “rules” around what percentage of fixed income (ie bonds) a retiree should have. “90 minus your age” is one that I’ve heard a lot.

These rules were probably pretty good guidance at a time when your average retiree finished work at 65 and could reasonably be expected to live for another ten years or so. With a short term investment horizon it didn’t make sense to invest a lot of money in equities because the retiree wouldn’t live long enough to recover from any major losses. Inflation was also not a major concern since the time line was fairly short.

Fast forward to now and there are two major differences in retirees – first of all they are retiring earlier which lengthens the retirement time and they are living longer which of course also increases the retirement time which in turn means that they have a longer investment time horizon so a higher allocation of equities is appropriate. Typically most financial planners will assume an estimate lifetime of around 90, so if an investor retired at aged 60 and lived until age 90 – that’s a 30 year time horizon.

You might be asking – who cares how long the retirement lasts for? Shouldn’t you just be conservative and buy guaranteed fixed income products or annuities and live off the payments? One problem is that while retirees might be living longer once retired, they aren’t working longer, in fact they might even have slightly shorter careers on average so current retirees might not have any more money saved (adjusted for inflation) than someone who retired a generation or two ago and they are less likely to have any kind of company pension plan to help fund the retirement.

The reality is that historically equities have outperformed bonds by a long shot. According to William Bernstein – author of “The Four Pillars of Investing”, two reasons to invest in equities are for the higher expected return and because equities can keep up to rising inflation. If you are retired and your portfolio is entirely fixed income (or annuity) you might run into the problem of a steadily lower standard of living if inflation increases.

Other reasons to invest in equities are that interest is taxed at a higher rate than dividends and capital gains (in Canada and USA) so you will probably be better off if you can only pay dividend and capital gains taxes rather than income tax on interest payments.

What to do?

The answer is two fold. First of all, retirees should have a significant equity holding in their portfolio. Bernstein recommends anywhere between 50% to 75% equities depending on your tolerance for risk. One of the key points that Bernstein emphasizes is that whatever asset allocation you choose, you have to stick with it so pick an allocation that you can handle in rough times. If you choose a higher percentage of equities and then sell when the equities drop and then buy back in when they go up, then you will be further behind compared to if you had just picked a more conservative portfolio and stuck with it. Even if you choose to have an equity allocation of less than 50% then stick with that allocation.

Tomorrow we’re going to discuss the 4% withdrawal rule which will help determine when you can retire.

Categories
Personal Finance

Fed Cuts To Prop Up Markets?

Today’s surprise Fed cut of 0.75% to the federal funds rate was a bit of a shocker considering that it was a very large cut. Normal changes to the this rate are usually 0.25% or 0.5%. While there is certainly a risk of recession in the US, it doesn’t seem so inevitable that a large cut is all that necessary. Given the timing of the reduction and the dropping markets overseas while the US markets were closed yesterday, it’s hard not to think that maybe the Fed was managing the markets rather than the economy. To a lesser extent, the same argument applies to the Bank of Canada which lowered its rate by 0.25%.

And now a related reader question! (no pun intended)

I got an email today from a faithful reader (my wife no less) asking what the relationship between the government lending rate and the markets. Not being an economist or having much economic training of any type I thought this would be an interesting one to tackle.

My answer

The government lending rates are used to try to control the economy and inflation (not the stock market).

The idea is that if lending rates go higher, that will put a damper on economic activity ie business spending, expansion etc. So if the economy was going “too well” and inflation was creeping up then the government will raise lending rates to slow the economy down and keep inflation in check.

The opposite is also true – if the economy is slowing down and a recession looks like it might occur then the government will lower rates to try to stimulate the economy by encouraging businesses to spend more.

How this affects the stock market is sometimes not all that clear, but generally speaking if lending rates get lowered then that provides an upward push on the markets because the risk of a recession is less (in theory). An increase in the lending rate should create a downward pressure on the market for the opposite reason.

The stock market is supposed to be valued according to the future earnings of the companies in said market, so if there is a recession then future earnings will be lower and the market will go down. If the economy is ‘hot’ then future earnings should be good so the market will go up.

Categories
Announcements

The RRSP Book Winner

Preet Banerjee from WhereDoesAllMyMoneyGo recently wrote a great book for Canadians called “The RRSP Book” which I reviewed recently. This book includes a lot of rules and strategies which most investors will find useful. If you want to buy this book directly from Preet then you can easily do so by visiting the secure book purchase site he has set up. Note – the only compensation we are getting is a free book for the review.

We had a total of 81 comments on the post and the random number generator came up with 62 – so Nathan is the winner. I’ll be sending him an email to let him know.

Other reviews of this book:

Canadian Capitalist

The Financial Blogger

Once again, if you want to order this book then visit the secure book purchase site.

Categories
Real Estate

For Sale By Owner – The Wrong Way

sign.jpgAs everyone who has sold a house knows, real estate commissions are a rip-off. Real estate agents charge a commission for their services so it doesn’t matter what value the house is or how easy it is to sell, they get their 5% (approximately).

To counter this fee, the for-sale-by-owner movement has been gathering momentum. Larry MacDonald wrote some interesting posts on his successful efforts to sell his house and CNN had a post about an innovative strategy to not only sell your house without an agent, but sell it in five days.

If you are going to sell your house on your own to save money, don’t expect to save the entire amount that would have gone to an agent. You still have to spend money on marketing and that marketing budget should include some professional signs. I don’t know how many times I’ve seen FSBO signs that looked like they were made by three year olds. I was in fact inspired to write this post by a FSBO house on a nearby street which had quite possibly the worst signs I’ve ever seen. Your typical kid’s “Lemonade 5 cents” sign would put these FSBO signs to shame.

Unfortunately by the time I went to take a photo they had taken their open house sign off the porch and I couldn’t get a good picture of the sign in the window. But to describe – in the window they had a piece of cardboard (normal box colour) with ripped edges – that’s right – no time to cut properly, gotta sell that house! Written with black marker in letters too small to see from the street, was presumably the details of the house sale – I could only read the “For Sale” portion of the sign. Attached to their front porch was an “Open House” sign – this was made out of very unevenly ripped cardboard (they must have been quite angry at this point), written in marker, possibly with the hand of a seven year old and had the news that they were having an open house on Sunday, 2-5 pm.

The thing that amazes me the most is that this house is probably selling for around $400,000, so we’re not talking about an abandoned grow house. How on earth could that homeowner possibly expect that a reasonable buyer is going to enter into a legal transaction worth $400k with a owner that looks like they went out of their way to have the most unprofessional signs possible?

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Announcements

Sat Weigh-In and LinkStuff

Weight

Weight was 180 pounds today so no change from last week. I managed to go jogging twice this week which makes me feel really good because exercise is one area that I haven’t kept up with over the last month or so. This is mainly because of a never-ending cold but I’m back on track now and I hope to run twice a week.

New Baby

A big congrats goes over to Keith at The Money Gardener who just had a little baby boy a couple of days ago!

Book giveaway

Don’t forget to enter the “RRSP Book” book giveaway – contest ends Monday at midnight!

Carnivals

Plonkee hosted the Carnival of Personal Finance this week and listed our submission “The Myth of Weekly Mortgage Payments”

MoneyMyths hosted the Carnival of Money Stories and included my post called 2007 Investment Returns (hey you gotta enter something!).

Group writing project

On Friday I’m going to be participating in a group writing project – “The Money Matters for All Ages” series. This is a pretty neat set of posts which deals with money matters for different ages from tiny tots all the way up to retirees. The posts which have been published this week have lots of great advice about how to teach kids (of different ages) about money.

January 15 – Introduction at My Dollar Plan
January 16 – Preschoolers at I’ve Paid for This Twice Already
January 17 – Personal Finance for Children and Pre-Teens at Being Frugal
January 18 – Teenagers at Gather Little by Little AND Money Advice to My Teenage Son at DebtFREE-Revolution
January 19 – College Age at Finance Freelance Life
January 20 – The Twenties at Remodeling This Life and more Twenties at Cash Money Life
January 21 – The Thirties at Moolanomy and more Thirties at My Two Dollars
January 22 – The Forties at Credit Withdrawal
January 23 – The Fifties at Millionaire Money Habits and more Fifties at Credit Withdrawal
January 24 – The Sixties and beyond at Chance Favors
January 25 – Retirement at Quest For Four Pillars and Plonkee Money
January 26 – Wrap up and highlights at My Dollar Plan