Posts Tagged ‘Retirement’
When To Take CPP: Early, Late or Somewhere In-Between
One of the biggest decisions as you edge closer to retirement is when to take CPP. The standard age to take your Canada Pension Plan benefits is when you turn 65; but you can take a reduced CPP retirement pension as early as 60, or you can get an increased benefit by delaying CPP up to…
Read MoreUnderstanding Your Retirement Benefits: Part 3 – Private Pension Plans
According to Statistics Canada, in 2012 38.4 percent of employees were enrolled in a Registered Pension Plan. The most common types of pension plans are defined benefit (DB) and defined contribution (DC). Of those employees, 71.5 percent were in a defined benefit plan. Defined contribution plans accounted for 16.7 percent. (The remainder belong to some…
Read MoreUnderstanding Your Retirement Benefits: Part 2 – OAS
Canadian seniors have two national income support payments – Old Age Security (OAS) and the Guaranteed Income Supplement (GIS). These are not pension plans as such because they are non-contributory and financed out of general revenues. Employment history is not a factor in determining eligibility. You can receive OAS pension and benefits even if you…
Read MoreIntroducing The Travelling Boomer
This is a guest post from Paul Marshman, author of The Travelling Boomer, as part of our retirement series. I’m one of the baby boomers who saw their careers cut short by the recent recession. But luckily, I was one of the few who was prepared for that fateful day. And since then, I’ve been…
Read MoreUnderstanding Your Retirement Benefits: Part 1 – CPP
Imagine celebrating at your retirement party without a clue as to how much you can expect to receive in pension income. It sounds incredible, but many people who will end their career in a few years are in just that situation. When you work for an employer you receive your salary, but once retired your…
Read MoreI’d Rather Be Fishing: My Early Retirement Story
This is a guest post from reader Jamie, who shares his early retirement story as part of our retirement series. I lived and worked in Port Hardy, B.C. since 1984. On January 13th of this year I came to work on a midnight shift to find that it was my turn to pick holiday time. Vacations were…
Read MoreAre Your Elderly Parents Easy Targets For Financial Scammers?
I was visiting my parents at the retirement home and prominently displayed on the elevator was a sign warning the residents not to give out personal information on the phone to people claiming to be from the bank, credit card company, or the government. I find it bizarre that the same old scams keep cropping…
Read MoreProjecting Investment Returns And Inflation
Earlier this year, the Financial Planning Standards Council (FPSC) updated the numbers it uses for projected investment returns and inflation. Financial planners use these numbers as guidelines when projecting retirement needs and income for their clients. The FPSC’s latest guidelines for 2015 peg annual inflation at 2 percent and make the following assumptions for investments…
Read MoreA Well-Endowed Retirement Fund
College Athletics is a world of haves and have-nots. At the pinnacle of intercollegiate sport is the University of Texas, which boasts annual revenues in excess of $165 million and aims to have a $200 million operating budget by 2020. Texas is one of just a handful of self-funded athletics programs in the country. Money…
Read MoreProtecting Your Nest Egg In Retirement
Investors who are in, or near, retirement are in a difficult position. They need their investments to provide them with steady cash flow to live on, but they also need their wealth to last for a potentially long life. Retirees who are caught in a bear market don’t have the time to wait out temporary…
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