Tag: financial planning
Remembering RRSP Contribution During the Holidays
By: Elias KellendonkThe final date by which you can contribute to your RRSP for the 2010 tax year is March 1, 2011.
Including Segregated Funds in Your RRSP Portfolio
By: Elias KellendonkRRSP funds can be attributed to, or to a combination of, mutual funds, guaranteed investment certificates, bonds, stocks, deposit accounts or segregated funds.
Online Course Aids Canadians in ‘Realizing the Dream of Home Ownership’
By: Elias KellendonkThe Home Ownership course is free, and the payoff of the advice it lends could be exponential.
Canadians: Start Making Use of the Tax-Free Savings Account!
By: Elias KellendonkTax-Free Savings Accounts have been available to Canadians for two years, yet only one third of Canadians have opted to open one for themselves.
Big Bank Launches Collateral Mortgage to Spur Market; Takers Will Be Bound
By: Elias KellendonkWhat is TD’s strategy to stay afloat in a competitive mortgage market which has seen the Canadian home buyer’s business increasingly shifted towards mortgage brokers?
Diversification Fosters Satisfaction in Investment Portfolio
By: Elias KellendonkYou portfolio will benefit greatly from a blend of investments that remain liquid and accessible in addition to others that build slowly, locked-in, over the long-term.
Utilizing the Reverse Mortgage to its Maximum Wealth Management Potential
By: The Super BrokerA reverse mortgage frees the equity you have built in your home with very little out of pocket expense – as little as $300 to $600 so long as no title issues are attributed to your property.
Are Mutual Funds Underperforming?
By: The Super Broker78 per cent of actively managed mutual funds under-perform the general stock market index.
Is the security afforded by a long-term mortgage worth the added cost?
By: Elias Kellendonk12 per cent of Canadian mortgage holders opt to lock in to terms longer than five years; is the stability worth the added cost?
Debate on the ‘No Money Down’ Mortgage
By: Elias KellendonkThe purchaser will be paying interest on every dollar of the home’s value, as opposed to nicking off a good chunk, interest free, with a down payment.