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Retirement Income and Rock Music Trivia

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People don't need same income all the way through ... Tax free zone - top up to bracket. Meet income goal while keeping taxable income low ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Retirement Income and Rock Music Trivia


1
Retirement Incomeand Rock Music Trivia
Daryl Diamond CFP CLU CHFC
2
The Four Planning Channels
Structural Plan
Investment Portfolio
Health Risk Management
Wealth Transfer
3
The Structural Plan
4
Planning Considerations
  • Point of
  • Consolidation
  • Optimum Health
  • People dont need same income all the way through
  • The difference between life expectancy and years
    of good health
  • Lets go on a vacation

5
The Prime Approach? To Your Retirement Years
  • That period of time between
  • when you commence retirement
  • and

the moment that one of you needs care or passes
away
6
Time Hub Priorities
  • Love
  • Purpose/fulfillment
  • Recreation
  • Security
  • Health
  • Accommodation

7
Money Hub Priorities
Rank the following in terms of their importance
to you
  • Income security
  • Highest possible income today
  • Coping with inflation
  • Wealth transfer
  • Using capital assets
  • Health risk management
  • Tax Reduction

8
Stages In Retirement
  • Initial retirement age
  • The years of prime health
  • Change in health of family or friends
  • Children leave - house or move away
  • Arrival of grandchildren
  • Loss or disability of a partner
  • Accommodating adult children
  • Dealing with aging parents
  • Becoming a caregiver
  • Losing your own health

9
Varying Attitudes
  • Parents
  • Respect authority/conform
  • You go when you are called
  • Loyalty to the company
  • Modesty, avoid debt
  • This ones good enough
  • Reluctant to spend
  • Afraid of loss
  • Boomers
  • Change the world
  • Never die/never grow old
  • Many jobs and employers
  • Possessions, credit, debt
  • Enjoy now, pay later
  • Reluctant to save
  • Afraid of not keeping up

Time
Money
10
The Limbo Bar on Net Income
  • Net income over the first Federal Bracket
    35,595
  • Being sensitive to the Age Credit (3,979)
  • 29,619 - 56,146
  • Keeping below OAS repayment
  • 60,806 - 98,660

11
Keeping Below The Limbo Bar
  • Make use of non-registered income streams
  • Use of cash value insurance
  • Unrealized capital gains
  • Mutual fund corporations
  • Prescribed annuity contracts
  • Gifting strategies
  • Income splitting strategies

12
Using Spousal Loans
  • Documentation needed
  • Agreement for demand loan
  • Payment
  • Prescribed rate stays intact
  • No time limit on term of loan
  • Interest payment taxable to lender, deductible by
    borrower (ie effectively receive OAS on a
    non-taxable basis)

13
Order Of Income Structure
  • Government Benefits
  • Pension / Locked-In Assets
  • Taxable Non-RRSP Distributions
  • RRSP / RRIF Income
  • Tax-favored Income
  • Non - Registered Capital

14
Investment Portfolio
15
Accumulation vs Withdrawal
300,000 _at_ - 7 for three consecutive
years Positive returns of 7 from then on
  • Withdrawal
  • At 7 21,000 / year (1,750/m)
  • 182,614
  • Breakeven - never
  • Capital exhausts 14.5 yrs
  • Target return 11.5
  • Adjust income - 12,091 (1,007/m)
  • Per month - 743 less!
  • Accumulation
  • No contributions
  • 241,307
  • Breakeven - 3 yrs 3 mths

16
Investment Dilemma For Retirees
  • Capital preservation is critical
  • From paycheque to drawing from assets
  • Interest rates at 50 year lows
  • High taxation rates
  • Seeing losses in current assets
  • Recently, the worst markets since the 30s

17
Exploring the Efficient Frontier
You are not here !
High Volatility
18
Wants and Needs
  • What the investor profile tells us and what the
    plan actually needs
  • If the plan requires 7.5 rate of return and
    profile suggests 6 result what needs to change?
  • Profiles created during accumulation period need
    to be redone to match new profile
  • Late 90s vs today??
  • Incredibly aggressive vs incredibly timid

19
Loss Of Capital 300,000 and Income _at_ 7
21,000 / Annual Income
  • Full 7 -.50 -.75
    -1.00 -1.25
  • 5 300,000 283,688 279,827 275,986
    272,293
  • 10 300,000 261,338 252,488 243,850
    235,418
  • 15 300,000 230,718 215,483 200,844
    186,783
  • 20 300,000 188,765 165,374 143,293
    122,461
  • 25 300,000 131,287 97,523
    66,277 37,395

20
Variable Investment Math
  • 1 2 3 4 5 6 7
    8 9 10 Ann Ret

7
7 7 7 7 7 7 7
7 7 7
9.4 14 13 23 -4 10 -1 21
-4 -7
7
7
-7 -4 21 -1 10 -4 23 13
14 9.4
21
Accumulation Math100,000 Deposit
  • 1 2 3 4 5 6
    7 8 9 10 Value

7 7 7 7 7 7 7
7 7 7
196,715
9.4 14 13 23 -4 10 -1 21
-4 -7
196,715
-7 -4 21 -1 10 -4 23 13
14 9.4
196,715
22
Withdrawal Math100,000 Deposit 7,000
Withdrawn Annually
  • 1 2 3 4 5 6
    7 8 9 10 Value

7 7 7 7 7 7 7
7 7 7
100,000
9.4 14 13 23 -4 10 -1 21
-4 -7
117,986
-7 -4 21 -1 10 -4 23 13
14 9.4
83,150
34,836
42
23
Investment SelectionTHE CASH WEDGE
Fund A
Fund B
60,000
60,500
Fund G
60,000
Money Market
18,000
1 Yr GIC
Fund F
17,500
2 Yr GIC
60,000
Fund E
60,000
17,000
Initial Value 352,000
24
An Income Delivery Process
  • Allocate to profile / meet plan objectives
  • Expect certain positions to be flat or negative
  • Replenish cash wedge / pool with profits
  • Direct other profits to lagging positions
  • Facilitate this through IPS

Hold and Buy
25
What You Keep On Your InvestmentsFor each
1,000 taxable
  • Taxable Income lt35,595 gt35,594
  • Interest 745 690
  • Dividends 917 841
  • Capital Gains 874 844

Ontario marginal rates
26
The Difficulty With Dividends
  • Advantageous if there is no other income
  • Gross up occurs before calculation of net income
  • Credit is applied after calculation of net income

27
Tax Credits 2005
  • Personal Exemption 8,148
  • The Age Amount 3,979 12,127
  • The Spousal Amount 6,803
  • Pension Credit 1,000
  • Disability Credit 6,596
  • The Caregiver Amount 3,848
  • Infirm Dependents 18 3,848

28
Clawback Zones 2005
  • Personal Exemption N / A
  • The Age Amount 29,619 56,146
  • The Spousal Amount 692 7,611
  • The Caregiver Amount 12,921 16,705
  • Infirm Dependents 18 5,368 9,152
  • dependent's net income
  • OAS 60,806 98,660

29
Getting The Next 1.00 After Tax
  • Withdrawals Required In Ontario
  • RRSP or Capital
  • Bracket Rate Interest Dividends Gains
  • Low 22 1.28 1.09 1.14
  • Middle 31 1.45 1.19 1.18
  • High 43 1.76 1.38 1.28
  • Highest 46 1.86 1.46 1.30
  • For this calculation we are using the marginal
    rate that applies at the top of this bracket.

30
What Is The Most Efficient Way To Create The
Next 1.00 to spend?
  • Income split
  • Tax free zone - top up to bracket
  • Meet income goal while keeping taxable income low
  • Mix of taxable, tax favored and non-taxed
  • Results in less stress on assets

31
Health Risk Management
32
Years Of Good Health At Age 65
  • Male Female
  • Life Expectancy 16.1 20.0
  • Good Health 12.9 13.8
  • Difference 3.2 6.2

Source Statistics Canada 1996
33
We Need To Communicate
  • What is and what is not covered by government
    programs
  • Health risk issues do not only involve dying. It
    applies to the living and their caregivers.
  • The costs of coverage are far less than the cost
    of care - annual tax-free vs. daily benefit
  • These tools provide choice and independence
  • Remember the health care system 15 years ago

34
Wealth Transfer
35
Benefits of Consolidating
  • Better planning, no conflicting advice, less
    confusion
  • More control over amounts and sources of income
  • More efficient asset allocation / better
    portfolios
  • More opportunity for tax-efficiency / savings
  • Less administration - reporting, number of
    cheques
  • More orderly, expedient and less costly wealth
    transfer easier for beneficiaries and estate
  • More efficiency, better control, simplified

36
Comprehensive Income Planning
  • Define their objectives
  • Establish an income and investment process
  • Cover off health-risk contingencies
  • Plan and implement wealth transfer strategies
  • Create freedom by creating structure
  • Help them to get the most out of their best
    retirement years - The Prime Approach
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