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Sr. Member
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Aug 30th, 2002
Location: Woodstock, Ontario
Posts: 893
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I'm 37. I'm a provincial civil servant in a job with 100% job security. No strikes, no layoffs.
I have a defined benefit pension plan. 70% of my best 5 years when I retire. My wife has the same employer, same type of job (security, no strike etc.) but with a slightly better pension plan. We live well within our means. So, when it comes down to our RRSP accounts, I've planned it to have no fixed income at all. No cash, no bonds. Nothing but equities-in pooled money. The pension plans are secure (Provincial Government run). The RRSP is just play money when we retire. Each of our RRSP accounts should be in the 400K + range at age 60. In the next 5 years I'll buy some actual strip bonds to hold on to. Anyone else doing this kind of 'high-risk' investment? Does it sound crazy? |
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#2 (permalink) | ||
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Moderator
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Oct 21st, 2001
Location: Mrs. Agha
Posts: 18,643
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Food for thought for you:
http://www.advisor.ca/images/other/a...eoroutside.pdf And within this, pay attention to the comments on OAS clawbacks: http://www.phn.com/pdfs/retirement_savings_debate.pdf Last edited by Rehan; Apr 1st, 2005 at 11:16 PM.. |
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#3 (permalink) | ||
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Sr. Member
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Aug 30th, 2002
Location: Woodstock, Ontario
Posts: 893
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Rehan:
Thanks for the links. The 1st one was of interest, but the OAS clawback one wasn't. I'll probably make too much to even qualify for OAS/CPP when I retire. Regardless, I do appreciate it. |
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#5 (permalink) | ||
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Deal Addict
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Jan 22nd, 2003
Location: Cambridge
Posts: 1,919
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You seem to have sort of a care free attitude about it, which is a little bit scary... but that said, being in 100% equities may not be a bad thing for you, becuase you will also draw on a fixed pension, so your investment income is really not going to come all from equities, but maybe half and half.
Plans like where I work, where you get to manage your pension $ too, you have to be careful about over investing in equities. |
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#6 (permalink) | ||
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Sr. Member
Join Date: Mar 30th, 2003
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 712
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Isn't it true that if you even go with 20% bonds and 80% equity, you increase your returns because you reduce the variation in your portfolio? A little bit of bonds aren't going to kill you, even if interest rates do begin to rise (which they haven't yet - remember last year when people thought interest rates were going to begin rising at rapid rates?). Bonds make even more sense in an RRSP where interest and capital gains are essentially taxed at the same amount when you withdraw it.
Even if your RRSP is just "play money"... why not try to maximize your return on it, and leave the money to charity, kids, relatives, etc? |
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Sr. Member
Join Date: Mar 30th, 2003
Location: Ottawa
Posts: 712
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Deal Fanatic
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Jul 19th, 2003
Location: Mississauga, ON
Posts: 7,677
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Quote:
I know this seriously impacts liquidity. But this is retirement money (don't need it for many many years) and I have a pretty good pension plan like the other poster. So I look at it as play money too. Last edited by eelfliw; Apr 2nd, 2005 at 01:08 PM.. |
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#9 (permalink) | ||
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Newbie
![]() Join Date: Nov 27th, 2003
Posts: 56
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From a strictly tax-reduction point of view, if you have some savings inside your RRSP and some outside, the most tax-efficient split is to have GIC/fixed income inside the RRSP and equities/mutual funds/stocks outside. This division ensures that the favourable tax treatment of capital gains and dividends isn't lost - keeping equities in an RRSP effectively doubles the tax rate on your gains.
Given the expected large value of your RRSP, you may want to quit/retire a few years before collecting your pension, and cash in the RRSP during those years of "zero income" in order to further reduce the tax grab on those funds (that decision depends a lot on how much you enjoy working). There is likely also an option to "cash in" your (or your spouse's) pension credit for a big pile of money if you quit before age 50 .... Given the big amounts of money involved, I'm surprised you're asking our opinion rather than paying a few hundred to get an independent professional opinion (not from your bank staff!) 8-) Maybe you should check out http://www.cfp-ca.org/index.asp ? Just my $0.02 ($0.04 in 12 years if I can get a 6% per year return after taxes!). Quote:
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#10 (permalink) | ||
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Deal Addict
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: Apr 27th, 2001
Location: rural eastern Ontario
Posts: 2,838
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You can call your govt pensions the fixed income portion of your investments so I dont see the problem with going all equities.
With a 23 year window you should be able to ride the ups and downs.
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Deal Fanatic
![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() ![]() Join Date: May 2nd, 2003
Location: Edmonton
Posts: 5,946
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I switched all my RSP holdings to a self directed RSP this year and invested it all in stocks. I have at least 25 years before I retire and have a company pension too. Mutual funds have sucked for the last several years. I know I can do better than some fund.
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Deal Addict
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Deal Fanatic
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Deal Addict
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Location: Cambridge
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Deal Fanatic
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