Should a B.C. couple, both 45, sell their GICs to buy a bigger house?

Should a B.C. couple, both 45, sell their GICs to buy a bigger house?
Article content
Using their GICs to help purchase a larger house makes sense, Egan said. “Even if they have to take on a small mortgage, the rental suite and income they hope to have in their new house will help offset mortgage payments and their surplus income from their rental property provides a cash-flow cushion if it takes a while to find a tenant.”
Article content
When it comes to their investment portfolio, their focus at this stage of their planning should be on capital appreciation, not generating dividend income while they are still working and don’t need the income, Egan said.
Article content
“If Alina and Alex continue to self-manage their investments, ETFs are the right choice to build a globally diversified equity portfolio and they should look at replacing all of their retail mutual funds with similar ETFs, which have lower management expense ratios (MERs) and are liquid. If they have not already done so, they might have to open self-directed RRSPs and TFSAs at a discount broker of their choice; all the big banks own a discount brokerage arm. A few discount brokers even offer no commissions on ETF purchases as an incentive to open an account.”
Article content
Article content
Given their long runway to retirement — at least 17 years of investing if Alex retires at 62 — Egan believes their current overall asset mix seems a bit conservative. He recommended at least 70 per cent equities and 30 per cent fixed income, reducing to 60 per cent equities at age 55, with further reductions in equity holdings as they age.
Article content
“Their TFSAs should hold 100 per cent equity ETFs, given the tax advantage of completely sheltering long-term capital gains. Any fixed income (bond ETFs) should be invested in their RRSPs.”
Article content
In terms of geographic focus, Egan suggested 20 per cent of their equity ETFs be invested in Canada, 25 per cent in the U.S. (including large- and small-cap as well as Nasdaq exposure) and 25 per cent international (including five per cent directed to emerging markets for “higher octane exposure”).
Article content
“If they do not want to continually rebalance and monitor their portfolio, there are all-in-one asset allocation ETFs … with various asset mix allocations to suit different investors which are rebalanced occasionally according to the ETF sponsor’s pre-set rules,” said Egan.
Article content
Article content
“If Alina and Alex want to build their own ETF portfolio and they are not interested in researching bond ETFs, they can consider using an aggregate bond ETF that contains a range of short- to long-term government and corporate bonds. No bond management is required by the investor, MERs are lower compared with a bond mutual fund and they pay interest monthly into your account.”
Article content
Egan recommended Alina and Alex continue to maximize annual RESP contributions to obtain government grant money and then focus on investing in RRSPs and use their annual tax refunds to contribute to their TFSAs and invest in equities each year.
Article content
“The good news is Alex’s defined benefit pension will likely be indexed at age 62 and beyond. Equity investments tend to keep up with inflation so only their fixed income portion is not indexed,” he said.
Article content
“Once their current real estate situation is settled, they should consider engaging the services of a fee-for-service financial planner to do some long-term projections for them to calculate what they should save annually in RRSPs and TFSAs in conjunction with Alex’s known pension so they can both be financially independent at Alina’s age 65.”
Article content
*Names have been changed to protect privacy.
Article content
Are you worried about having enough for retirement? Do you need to adjust your portfolio? Are you starting out or making a change and wondering how to build wealth? Are you trying to make ends meet? Drop us a line at wealth@postmedia.com with your contact info and the gist of your problem and we’ll find some experts to help you out while writing a Family Finance story about it (we’ll keep your name out of it, of course).
Article content