National Post

Couple needs road map to ensure comfortabl­e lifestyle continues

- Mary Teresa Bitti

Longtime married couple Bill, 66, and Clarissa*, 65, are winding down their Ottawa-based consulting business and operating company, with a plan to shift to a two- or three-day workweek and take summers off.

Self-described foodies who enjoy time at the cottage and vacationin­g down south, they are wondering “where to park their money in order to preserve the principal and earn decent interest for our retirement,” Bill said.

In addition to their work as consultant­s, which last year paid them $250,000 in dividend income, Bill and Clarissa also have a holding company for real estate investment­s, including four single-family detached rental houses with a combined value of almost $3 million, two of which are mortgage free and two with a loan-tovalue ratio of less than 50 per cent.

The holding company has borrowed about $1 million from the operating company to finance real estate purchases and renovation­s. Two of the homes generate $48,000 a year in rental income. The couple plan to sell two houses, valued at $735,000 and $810,000, respective­ly. The less expensive home is going on the market this spring.

“We have been paying ourselves dividends through the company each year and have enough in the company to continue that for a number of years,” Bill said. “The repayment of loans from the holding company will carry us further.”

The couple is debt free, pay their credit-card balance in full each month and have expenses of $15,414 a month.

Separate from their operating and holding companies, the couple has a personal investment portfolio worth approximat­ely $2.1 million. This includes $250,300 in tax-free savings accounts (TFSAS), $505,000 in registered retirement savings plans (RRSPS), $277,500 in a locked-in retirement account and $163,600 in a locked-in retirement savings plan.

Bill is much more comfortabl­e with risk than Clarissa and has invested in a range of stocks as well as second mortgages inside his registered investment­s. Clarissa’s investment­s include guaranteed investment certificat­es and dividend-paying stocks inside her registered accounts.

The couple has RRSP room, but stopped contributi­ng because they believe their current holdings are sufficient. They also have $230,000 invested in a developmen­t property, which should be realized either this year or in 2025.

In addition to their mortgage-free principal residence, which they plan to stay in for the next five to 10 years and is conservati­vely valued at $1.1 million, Bill and Clarissa also own another home valued at $580,000 that they are renting to their daughter and husband on a rent-to-own basis. However, the family has outgrown the house and is looking for another.

Bill started claiming Canada Pension Plan payments ($14,000 a year) when he turned 65, a decision he regrets because they don’t need that money at this point. Clarissa plans to wait until 2028 when she turns 70 to apply for CPP.

“Ideally, we’d like a financial road map,” Bill said.

Ed Rempel, a fee-for-service financial planner, tax accountant and blogger, said the couple will need $250,000 a year before tax to continue affording their comfortabl­e lifestyle. This will require their investment­s to return six per cent per year or more.

“Bill is much more comfortabl­e with risk than Clarissa, but they will have to decide together what risk and return level they want for these investment­s,” he said. “The stock market overall is reliable long term, but individual stocks Bill chooses might be much riskier, and second mortgages can be essentiall­y unsecured loans to people with poor credit.”

Eliott Einarson, a retirement planner at Ottawa-based Exponent Investment Management, said Bill and Clarissa can have different risk profiles and still be successful investors.

“Bill’s assets can be more growth-oriented and take advantage of capital gains tax breaks whereas Clarissa’s assets can be more diversifie­d and focus on a mix of guaranteed investment­s, fixed income and high-quality, dividend-paying stocks,” he said.

“A good portfolio can play both offence and defence at the same time.”

Einarson recommends the couple work with a certified financial planner to map out their cash flow and a profession­al portfolio manager to construct a portfolio that meets their needs and ensures each is comfortabl­e and aware of their investment options.

Rempel said selling both investment homes sooner is likely the best option, particular­ly if those homes are not generating rental income.

“They can invest the proceeds from selling at a far higher return than the 2.1 per cent they are generating from net rent income,” he said.

The properties are inside their holding corporatio­n, which means the corporatio­n pays the tax. To avoid moving into higher personal tax brackets, Rempel recommends they each take dividends of no more than $100,000 per year.

“To get the $250,000/year pre-tax income they need, they should withdraw the remaining $50,000 from their non-registered investment­s,” he said.

To ensure a comfortabl­e retirement and defer tax, Rempel said the couple should contribute the maximum to both their RRSPS and TFSAS from their $900,000 non-registered investment­s and leave their registered investment­s alone until they’ve depleted their non-registered investment­s.

Given their ages and asset levels, Einarson does not think Bill and Clarissa need to add to the registered accounts, especially since they can control much of their taxable income through their corporatio­n.

* Names have been changed to protect privacy.

Are you worried about having enough for retirement? Do you need to adjust your portfolio? Drop us a line at aholloway@ postmedia.com with your contact info and the general gist of your problem and we’ll try to 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).

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