5 keys to a great Retirement

By Fritz Gilbert, RetirementManifesto.com

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Can you imagine having the opportunity to study two decades worth of retirement research, and gleaning the keys to a great retirement from the experts?  I recently had that opportunity when I took the time to read a 90-page study titled “The Experience Of The Transition To Retirement,” a study that filtered through 1,800 research papers!

Today, I’m summarizing the results from that study and presenting to you 5 Keys To A Great Retirement, along with additional findings from this extensive research.

Using Research To Improve Retirement

The goal of this research project was to understand what led to successful retirement transitions and to “better understand how best to help individuals navigate this transition”, as well as “how to improve the quality of post-retirement life”.   Valuable information from which you, the reader, can benefit.

Before I present The 5 Keys To A Great Retirement, there are some findings in the study which I found interesting.  For the sake of brevity, below is a list in bullet form.  Note that the study did focus on gender/socioeconomic/ethnic/cultural differences, so it’s best to read the findings with that in mind:

  • 25% of retirees experience difficulties in the transition to retirement.
  • Men tend to have more positive attitudes toward retirement and be more engaged in planning for retirement than women.
  • Based on the studies, women appear to have greater difficulty in adjusting to retirement than men.
  • Those in higher Socioeconomic positions tend to work longer than those in lower positions.
  • Being married is associated with greater preparedness and a more proactive approach to planning for retirement.
  • Where work is important to an individual’s identity, retirement causes more conflict and anxiety.
  • Nearly half of those aged 50 and over said that they expect to retire later than they had thought they would.
  • Governments from around the world have enacted policies that seek to reverse an ‘early exit culture’ and extend the length of people’s working lives, maintaining economic productivity and reducing social spending.

Yes, there was a lot of interesting information in those 90 pages (trust me, I read every page). Boiling it all down, below are my takeaways on what comprises the 5 Keys To A Great Retirement.

1.) Control Your Destiny

The first finding was that those who felt they had the most control over their retirement decision were also those who most enjoyed their transition into retirement.  To quote the study:

“One of the most consistent and convincing findings in this review is that a sense of control is associated with positive retirement outcomes.”

While you may feel that you don’t control your retirement as much as you’d like, the reality is that there are a lot of areas in your retirement planning where you can influence the results.  Simply taking the time to prepare for your transition into retirement (See Key #2) is, in itself, exerting some control over your destiny.

Don’t leave your retirement to chance.

Given that you’re reading a blog on retirement, you’re likely ahead of your peers in tackling the first of these Keys To A Great Retirement.  You’re taking control of your retirement, and your retirement will be better as a result.

2.) Imagine What Your Retirement Will Be

The second of the 5 Keys To A Great Retirement was the finding that those who took time before retirement to imagine what their retirement would be were also those most likely to have a good retirement.  Think beyond finances. Finances play a small role post-retirement, and yet most folks think most about the financial implications of retirement when preparing for the transition.

Broaden your scope, and spend time thinking about what you want your retirement to be.  Dedicate some time, while you’re still working, to take a Test Run At Retirement, like my wife and I did.  Take some time to think about:

  • What will your life look like when work is no longer mandatory?
  • How will you spend your time?
  • What will give you Purpose?
  • Where will you live?

The research indicates that retirement planning “has potentially important consequences,” not just for financial security in retirement, but also ” in promoting satisfaction with, and adjustment to, the retirement lifestyle.”

It’s been proven by the research that planning for retirement while you’re still working is one of the best things you can do to ensure that you’ll have a great retirement.  Make it a priority, it’s one of the keys to a great retirement.

3.) Develop Retirement Goals

Retirement is a luxury.

For the first time since you started school, you’re free to do whatever you want with your life.  It’s also the first time that you’re 100% responsible for deciding how you’re going to spend your time.

Are you going to Die While You’re Living, Or Live While You’re Dead?  Decide what retirement means to you, and develop some goals to help you prioritize the things which are most important to you.  Focus on what matters to you, and create a plan to do the things you want to do, and avoid doing the things you don’t.

Create an action plan to move your retirement From Good To Great.  Create your own 10 Commandments of Retirement, and outline what really matters for your life in retirement.  Recognize that your role and identity will change from when you were a worker with employer-defined goals.  You’re now Independent, and you should define your own identity, supported by your own goals. Continue Reading…

Mini Retirements: Why Waiting until 65 is a Mistake

Gemini-generated image courtesy AlainGuillot.com

 

by Alain Guillot

Special to Financial Independence Hub

Mini retirements challenge one of society’s most accepted ideas: work nonstop for 40 years, then finally start living at age 65.

But there’s one major flaw in that plan.

Your money may still be there at 65, but your body may not.

You probably won’t be surfing in Portugal, climbing mountains in Peru, scuba diving in the Caribbean, or salsa dancing until 2:00 a.m. in Iceland with the same energy and physical capacity you had in your 30s or 40s.

Life experiences have an expiration date.

That’s why more people are embracing the idea of mini retirements: taking intentional breaks throughout life to travel, recharge, learn, and experience the world while they are still physically capable of fully enjoying it.

What are Mini Retirements?

Mini retirements are extended breaks from work taken throughout your career instead of postponing all freedom until old age.

They can last:

  • Three months
  • Six months
  • One year
  • Even several years

Unlike traditional retirement, mini retirements are not about stopping work forever.

They are about redistributing leisure and adventure across your lifetime.

Instead of saving all your freedom for the end, you enjoy pieces of it along the way.

Why Mini Retirements make sense

Your Health Is Temporary

Money compounds over time.

But physical ability declines over time.

There are experiences that simply feel different when you are young enough to fully enjoy them.

Walking through the steep hills of Lisbon at age 35 is not the same experience at age 75.

Sleeping in hostels, hiking volcanoes, learning to scuba dive, backpacking through Southeast Asia, or dancing all night requires energy, mobility, and stamina.

Those things are not guaranteed forever.

The Compounding of Life

Financial advisors often talk about the compounding of money.

But there is another kind of compounding that matters just as much: the compounding of experiences.

In his book Die with Zero, Bill Perkins introduces the idea of “memory dividends.”

When you have an incredible experience while you are young, you continue receiving emotional returns from that memory for decades.

A six-month adventure at age 30 may give you:

  • Stories you tell forever
  • Friendships that last decades
  • Confidence and personal growth
  • Memories that enrich your entire life

That experience continues paying dividends emotionally long after it ends.

An incredible trip at age 65 may still be meaningful, but it produces fewer years of memory dividends.

A Career Break is not Career Suicide

For decades, workers feared gaps in their résumés.

Today, that mindset is changing.

Modern work is increasingly digital and sedentary. Millions of people now earn income from laptops, consulting, remote work, freelancing, or flexible schedules.

Many people in their 60s and 70s can continue working comfortably from home long after physically demanding jobs would have forced retirement in previous generations.

That changes the equation completely.

A mini retirement in your 30s or 40s is no longer necessarily a setback.

It can be:

  • A strategic reset
  • A mental health investment
  • A creative recharge
  • A period for reinvention
  • A chance to reconnect with life

Ironically, many people return from mini retirements more energized, focused, and productive than before.

Is it Okay to use Retirement Savings?

For many people, the answer is yes: within reason.

Of course, withdrawing money early means sacrificing some financial compounding.

But life is not only about maximizing spreadsheets.

Time is a non-renewable resource.

Money can be earned back. Continue Reading…

Myths about Dividend Stocks in RRSP vs TFSA: Busted

TSInetwork.ca

Dividend investors love rules of thumb. Rules are comforting, like a warm blanket. Unfortunately, some of the most popular rules around dividend stocks in RRSP vs TFSA are only partly true.

The cost is usually quiet. You rarely see a dramatic mistake on a single statement. Instead, you get small leaks that compound: a bit of withholding tax you cannot recover, a little extra taxable income later than you expected, and a placement decision that is hard to unwind without triggering tax.

Here is a myth-by-myth cleanup, with practical takeaways you can apply without needing a spreadsheet the size of Manitoba.

Myth #1: TFSA is Always Best for Dividends

Why it sticks: a TFSA is tax-free in Canada, so it sounds like the obvious place for any income.

The reality is more nuanced. A TFSA is often an excellent home for dividend income, but not every dividend behaves the same way once cross-border tax rules enter the room.

What’s true (and what’s not):

A TFSA is great for many dividend investors, especially when flexibility matters. The part that breaks is the word “always.”

The key exception: U.S. dividends in a TFSA

U.S. dividends paid into a TFSA commonly face 15% U.S. withholding tax, and the TFSA usually does not let you recover that amount. The Canada U.S. tax treaty generally treats RRSP and RRIF type plans differently than a TFSA for this purpose.

This is the classic U.S. dividend withholding tax TFSA vs RRSP issue. It is not theoretical. It shows up as less cash hitting your account.

When a TFSA is often best for dividends

A TFSA is often a strong home for:

  • Canadian dividend payers (TSX stocks and many Canadian-listed dividend ETFs), since there is no U.S. withholding problem on Canadian dividends
  • investors who value tax-free withdrawals and flexibility later
  • people who want retirement income planning that does not add to taxable income

Takeaway: A TFSA is fantastic, but it is not automatically best for every dividend source.

Myth #2: U.S. Withholding gets Refunded in a TFSA

Why it persists: investors remember that in a taxable account, foreign withholding can sometimes be offset with a foreign tax credit, so they assume the TFSA works the same way.

Reality: inside a TFSA, the U.S. withholding is generally not recoverable because you cannot claim the foreign tax credit there.

RRSP vs TFSA: the simple $100 dividend example

Using round numbers:

  • U.S. dividend in TFSA: $100 declared, $85 received (15% withheld, typically unrecoverable)
  • U.S. dividend in RRSP: $100 declared, $100 received (treaty relief commonly applies when held properly)

That 15% gap is not a one-time annoyance. If you reinvest and hold for years, it compounds.

Takeaway: if you hold U.S. dividend payers inside a TFSA, plan for some permanent leakage.

Myth #3: DRIPs are Taxed inside RRSP/TFSA

Why people think this: in non-registered accounts, reinvested dividends are still taxable each year, so it feels like reinvestment must create a tax event everywhere.

Reality: registered accounts are designed so you do not report income annually.

  • TFSA: investment income and growth in the account are tax-free
  • RRSP/RRIF: investment income is tax-deferred, and withdrawals are taxed as income later

So a DRIP inside an RRSP or TFSA does not trigger annual Canadian tax reporting.

One practical record-keeping note

In taxable accounts, adjusted cost base tracking matters, especially with DRIPs.
Inside RRSP and TFSA accounts, adjusted cost base tracking is generally not required for Canadian tax reporting because you are not reporting gains each year.

Takeaway: DRIP taxes are a taxable-account headache, not a registered-account one.

Myth #4: RRSP Withdrawals are “Lightly Taxed,” just like TFSA

Why it trips people up: the RRSP deduction at contribution time is memorable, so people assume the withdrawal has special treatment too.

Reality, stated plainly: RRSP withdrawals are taxed as ordinary income. They do not come out as dividends, and you do not get the dividend tax credit on the way out.

This matters for dividend-focused RRSP portfolios because the income can stack on top of CPP, OAS, and other retirement income sources.

Two income-planning issues that surprise dividend investors 

  1. RRIF minimum withdrawals can force taxable income once you convert, and the minimum usually rises with age.
  2. Higher taxable income can increase OAS recovery tax risk. TFSA withdrawals do not add to taxable income, but RRSP and RRIF withdrawals do.

Bottom line for dividend investors:

  • RRSP: tax-deferred growth now, taxable income later.
  • TFSA: tax-free growth and tax-free withdrawals.

Takeaway: the account wrapper changes the after-tax experience, even if the underlying holdings look the same.

Myth #5: All Dividend ETFs face the same Withholding

Why it sounds reasonable: an ETF is “just a wrapper,” so withholding must be the same everywhere.

Reality: withholding can vary based on: Continue Reading…

Why does the Stock Market Rise when the News looks Bad?

Lowrie Financial: Custom Creation with Claude

By Steve Lowrie, CFA

Special to Financial Independence Hub

Short answer: stock prices reflect what investors expect to happen in the future, not what the headlines are reporting today. Markets rise when outcomes turn out better than investors feared, even if conditions still look bad.

By the time a story feels alarming enough to act on, the market has usually already priced it in. That’s why reacting to headlines rarely works, and why discipline tends to beat prediction.

Every market cycle seems to produce the same question. The headlines are negative. Investors are worried. Economists are warning about risks. Yet the stock market keeps climbing a wall of worry. How can both things be true?

It’s one of the most common investing questions I hear, and it usually sounds something like this:

“I don’t understand it. There’s a war in the Middle East. Governments are running massive deficits and have accumulated huge amounts of debt. Economists keep warning about recessions. Every day the news seems filled with uncertainty and risk. So why is the stock market near record highs?”

It’s a fair question, and if you’re asking it, you’re not alone. The answer comes down to one of the most important concepts in investing:

Markets Live in the Future

That may sound like a strange statement at first. After all, investors own businesses that operate in the real world today. Shouldn’t stock prices reflect what’s happening right now?

To a degree, they do. But the value of any business depends far more on the profits it’s expected to earn in the future than on the profits it earned last quarter. Every day, investors around the world are trying to answer the same question: what are those future profits worth today?

To answer it, they evaluate interest rates, inflation, economic growth, corporate earnings, government policy, geopolitical risks, and thousands of other pieces of information. As those expectations change, stock prices change. That’s why stock prices often seem disconnected from the headlines, and it’s where many investors get tripped up.

We naturally assume stock prices should move in response to what’s happening in the economy today. If growth slows, unemployment rises, or geopolitical tensions increase, it seems reasonable to expect stock prices to fall. But there’s an important distinction.

Most financial news and economic data tell us what has already happened. In many cases, that information is weeks or even months old by the time it’s reported. The stock market, on the other hand, is constantly trying to estimate what happens next.

I often think of financial news and economic data as a rearview mirror. They help us understand where we’ve been.

The stock market is the windshield. Investors are looking ahead, trying to estimate what businesses, profits, interest rates, and economic conditions might look like in the future.

Once you understand that difference, it becomes much easier to see why headlines and market performance so often seem disconnected.

Why does the Stock Market Rise when the News Looks Bad?

One of the biggest misconceptions in investing is that markets move based on whether news is good or bad. In reality, markets tend to move based on whether outcomes are better or worse than expected. That may sound like a subtle distinction, but it’s an important one.

Imagine investors become convinced a severe recession is coming. Businesses prepare for it. Economists forecast it. Investors position their portfolios for it. If the economy ultimately experiences only a mild slowdown, stock prices may rise even though conditions look bad. The outcome wasn’t necessarily good; it was simply better than investors feared.

The opposite happens all the time too. A company can report record profits and still see its stock price fall, because investors expected even better results. Markets are constantly comparing reality against expectations.

That may sound abstract, but history gives us a powerful example. During the global financial crisis, stock markets reached their lowest point in March 2009. At the time, the news was still overwhelmingly negative. Unemployment continued rising. The economy remained weak. Many investors were convinced conditions would deteriorate further, yet the market began recovering.

Investors who waited for reassuring headlines missed a significant portion of that recovery, because the market wasn’t waiting for conditions to improve. It was already looking ahead to a future in which they eventually would.

Investors who wait for good news often discover that the stock market has moved higher long before the headlines improved.

That’s what I mean when I say markets live in the future.

What does “It’s Already Priced In” mean in Investing?

This idea also explains one of the most misunderstood phrases in investing. You’ll often hear investors say something is “already priced in.” What they mean is that the market has already incorporated known information into stock prices.

By the time most of us hear a major news story and start wondering what it means for our investments, millions of investors around the world have already evaluated that information and built their views into prices.

That doesn’t mean markets are always right. Far from it. Markets can be overly optimistic. They can be overly pessimistic. Prices can move too far in either direction. But current prices generally reflect the collective expectations of investors based on everything they know today. Put another way, they give the best available estimate of what a company is worth right now.

For prices to move significantly, something usually has to happen that differs from those expectations. That’s why major headlines often have less impact on markets than people expect. Investors aren’t reacting to the news itself. They’re reacting to whether the news is better or worse than anticipated.

Why is Market Timing so Difficult?

Once you understand how markets work, it becomes easier to see why market timing is so challenging. To successfully move in and out of the market, you have to do more than predict what will happen next. You also have to predict what millions of other investors expect to happen and then determine whether reality will turn out better or worse than those expectations. That’s an extraordinarily difficult task.

It’s one of the reasons decades of academic research have found that consistently outperforming the broad stock market is so difficult. Whenever someone tells me they believe the market has it completely wrong, I think it’s worth asking a simple question: who exactly are they betting against?

At any given moment, stock prices reflect the collective judgment of massive pension funds, sovereign wealth funds, hedge funds, insurance companies, analysts, economists, business leaders, professional investors, and millions of individual investors around the world. Could the market be wrong? Of course. But consistently identifying mispricing and systematically profiting from it before everyone else is remarkably difficult. Decades of evidence suggest very few investors do it successfully over long periods.

What is the Practical Lesson for Investors?

The practical lesson isn’t that markets are perfect. It’s that reacting to headlines is usually not a successful investment strategy. By the time a story feels important enough to make you want to change your portfolio, the market has often already processed that information and adjusted accordingly.

This is worth saying clearly, because it’s easy to take the idea too far. “It’s already priced in” is a reason to ignore the daily news cycle. It is not a reason to ignore your own plan. Rebalancing back to your target mix, adjusting your portfolio as your goals and time horizon change, and managing risk, taxes, and costs are all decisions driven by your circumstances, not by the headlines. Discipline doesn’t mean doing nothing. It means acting on your plan rather than on the news.

So this doesn’t mean investors should ignore the news. It means they should be careful about making investment decisions based on it. Successful investing is rarely about predicting the next headline. It’s about building a sensible portfolio, staying disciplined during periods of uncertainty, and focusing on your long-term plan rather than the daily news cycle.

The next time you find yourself wondering why the stock market is rising despite negative headlines, remember that investors aren’t just evaluating what’s happening today. They’re trying to estimate what happens next, and more often than not, the market begins looking ahead long before the rest of us do.

That’s why markets can reach new highs during periods that feel uncertain, uncomfortable, or even frightening. And it’s why some of the best investment decisions are often the ones that feel hardest in the moment: staying disciplined, ignoring the noise, and sticking to a well-thought-out plan when the future feels least certain.

Frequently Asked Questions Continue Reading…

Retired Money: How to use AI to get to Retirement and to enjoy it once there

Image Freepik, courtesy MoneySense.ca

My latest MoneySense Retired Money column went live on Friday. You can read it by clicking on the hypertext link: Is AI the ultimate Retirement Hack? 

The column was initially sparked by reading I am not a Robot, which is subtitled “My year of using AI to do almost everything.” While while author Joanna Stern’s focus is on using AI to enhance her worklife and personal and family life, my primary interest is on AI and retirees.

I was interested in what the experts might say about, first, how AI can be used by those hoping to retire to speed up the process and the planning; and second, once achieved, how AI can be used to help new retirees spend all that abundant leisure time.

Here on Findependence Hub, we once again reached out to almost 20 financial experts and business owners through Linked In and Featured.com. You can find the link to the full 6,000 word (or so) blog here, which presents the entire responses of 18 experts chosen from more than 50 submitted. The Retired Money column is shorter, touching on the highlights and my impression of the book and its implications for new retirees.

As more than one of the contributors noted, it’s ironic that getting up to speed on AI in all its aspects can itself become a full-time job; fortunately time is one commodity retirees should have plenty of! If pressed for time, you can skim the 18 topline headlines in the long blog, skipping to the content that interests you.

Stern’s book came to my attention via an interview with her by Jim Cramer in his Mad Money podcast. Cramer himself appears to be immersed in every AI tool from Claude to Google’s Gemini. The book quickly made it on to the NYT bestseller list.

As I confess in the MoneySense column, while my family members play around with some of these tools, I’ve not yet immersed myself in them, although I find AI to be an interesting theme as an investment, if only through an ETF like AIS , the VistaShares Artificial Intelligence Supercycle ETF.

JoannaStern.com

Indeed, Stern’s book reveals the daunting task of coming up to speed on AI, assuming you wish to try it in every aspect of your daily life, as the author did, if only for a year. Fortunately, our contributing experts have several ideas for focusing and making the task more approachable, even if you have the luxury of leisure time afforded by full-time Retirement or even, as in my case, Semi-Retirement.

Stern closes her book with 6 Rules for living in an AI world, starting with “working with AI, not for it. “Use it to move faster, spark ideas, automate the boring parts. But keep your weird, wonderful human judgement in the loop.”

 Retirement is the ultimate unlock for AI

Most respondents on Featured.com mentioned Health, Finances, Travel, Senior Dating and Creative pursuits facilitated by AI. Wayne Lowry, CEO of  Scale By SEO, put it well: “Retirees finally have something working folks don’t: time to actually learn the tool instead of just bolting it onto a busy day. That’s the unlock. AI rewards curiosity and iteration, and retirement is the perfect runway for both.”

Continue Reading…