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Showing posts from July, 2020

I am buying my first house, what should I do?

When buying a house, many people have a list of professionals that they go and see. They find a realtor and a real estate lawyer. They find a mortgage broker or a banker to secure the mortgage. From that point, there is a search for a home inspector, a property insurer and sometimes a designer or architect. Buying a house is an important and time consuming endeavour. In all of that confusion, it is understandable that many new homeowners forget to phone their life insurance agent. For when their banking officer or mortgage broker asks them one question - "Would you like to have mortgage life insurance?" – they often say yes. It is another box ticked and something else has been removed from their plate. However, with over ten years in the financial industry, I know that that decision can be a costly one. I first read about the costs of Creditor Insurance or bank-provided Mortgage Life Insurance from Bob Aaron. He is a Toronto area lawyer. In an article in the Toronto Star, dat...

What is your most valuable asset?

What is your most valuable asset? You might say it is your car, an antique piece of furniture or a piece of jewellery. I would say that you are mistaken. Let’s start with jewellery. The most expensive piece of jewellery for most people would most likely be an engagement or a wedding ring. While some engagement rings can cost as much as $30,000; one comparison website ( RateSupermarket.ca ) pegged the average cost of one at about $4,000.  Now, a car is more expensive than an engagement ring. If we use DesRosiers Automotive Consultants or autoTrader as our source, both have indicated that the average passenger vehicle in 2019 was just over $40,000: $40, 941 and 40,900, respectively. However, we can do better than that. As an example, think of a person’s house. Given that the average house price in Calgary is between $448,000 and $457,000, one could argue that that is the most expensive or valuable asset. For, it is more costly and beneficial than anything previously mentioned. How...

Proper Financial Planning can require more than one professional

So almost a decade ago, I was handed a file. I was asked to work with a person who had recently moved from Quebec to Calgary. She had some assets with the firm I was working for and she was really in a horrible state.  Having moved from Quebec to Calgary - to leave an abusive relationship - she had very few assets. At that point, she was just a single mother trying to make ends meet and she had very few ends. One of the assets she had was a RRIF. I found this curious because the lady was only a few years older than me. At the time, I was in my late thirties and she was in her early to mid 40s.  For those who don’t know, a RRIF is a Registered Retirement Income Fund. It is not normally the financial structure that anyone under the age of 60 uses, let alone someone who is still employed. Given my confusion, I asked her a question: Why did she have a RRIF? Her answer was simple: she needed the money to make ends meet. Another advisor, at my same firm, had recommended the action a...