Personal Finance
From The Boomer & Echo Mailbag: Help! I Overspent My Christmas Budget
Q. Once again, I spent way over my Christmas budget. How can I prevent that from happening next year? The financial hangover left by Christmas spending is all too familiar. Every year you resolve to stick to your holiday budget and every year you find yourself caught up in a marathon of spontaneous and extravagant…
Read MoreThe Steady March Of Inflation
What were you doing in 2006? Maybe you were humming the latest Beyonce hit Check on It, or standing in line with your kids to see Ice Age: The Meltdown. Or, maybe you were discovering the newest social media craze and opening a Facebook account. Conservative Stephen Harper became our new Prime Minister, defeating Liberal…
Read MoreI Want To Buy A House In 3 Years. Should I Invest My Down Payment?
Interest rates on savings accounts and GICs are abysmal these days, so it can be tempting to put your hard earned savings into the stock market for a chance to juice your returns. But how and where you save and invest depends a lot on your time horizon – when do you need the money?…
Read MoreWhy Are Canadians So Loyal To Their Bank?
I have been dealing with my bank for decades and most of my financial products are held there. Yes, I know that I could get a higher interest rate on my savings account, or a lower trading fee on my discount brokerage if I switched. I think about it for a minute or two, and…
Read MoreSharing My Top Financial Wins
Talking about money can often feel a lot like the movie Fight Club. You know, the first rule of money is: You do not talk about money. The second rule of money is: You do not talk about money. Indeed, money is a taboo topic in many households and cultures. As a financial blogger, my…
Read MoreWhen Do You Stop Helping Your Adult Children?
Rodney and Carol retired in their early sixties. A few years later their youngest child, Greg, lost his graphic arts job and decided to start a small manufacturing business. To start the company, he got his parents to invest $50,000. They wanted to help their son succeed in his dream, so they made the investment.…
Read MoreA Big List Of Behavioural Biases
There’s a fascinating link between psychology and money that tries to explain how we think and behave when it comes to saving, spending, and investing. It was Meir Statman’s book, What Investors Really Want, that first opened my eyes to behavioural biases and how to make smarter financial decisions. Later, it was Carl Richards’ The Behavior Gap that showed the…
Read MoreWhat Is Your Credit Score? (Should You Know It?)
One way to determine your financial creditworthiness is to know your credit score and how it is calculated. You can get free credit reports from Canadian credit reporting agencies such as Equifax and TransUnion once a year, but they do not include a credit score. Until recently, you either had to pay for this information…
Read MoreDo You Live Next Door To A Millionaire? Or Is It You?
Two decades ago, Thomas Stanley and William Danko set out to interview wealthy people for their best-selling book The Millionaire Next Door. They started out in the affluent neighbourhoods on streets dotted with extravagant homes with luxury vehicles parked out front and in-ground swimming pools in the backyards. They were shocked to find out that the…
Read MoreA Twist On The RRSP vs. Mortgage Debate
It’s an age-old financial dilemma. Should you use your extra savings to pay down the mortgage or contribute to your RRSP? A simple answer is to compare the expected return from your investments to the interest rate on your mortgage. In today’s low rate environment, where mortgage rates sit well below 3 percent, many assume…
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