Canadian Retirement Survey (the numbers may shock you!)

  Рет қаралды 58,369

Well Built Wealth

Well Built Wealth

Күн бұрын

Business Inquiries: info@wellbuiltwealth.ca
Well Built Wealth: www.wellbuiltwealth.ca/
Links:
OSC “Profiles of Retirement”: www.osc.ca/sites/default/file...
------
Intro (0:00)
Financial Vulnerability (1:06)
Top Financial Concerns (2:39)
Challenges for Pre-Retirees (3:23)
Household Income (4:48)
Investment Portfolio Sizes (5:40)
Non-Mortgage Debt (7:50)
Retirement Plans vs Reality (8:09)
Standard of Living (9:31)
Retirement Savings Strategies (10:20)
Amount of Annual Savings (12:08)
On Track? (12:29)
Ages of Retirement (13:10)
------
DISCLAIMER: All videos on this channel (including this one) are for educational or entertainment purposes only. They are not (and are not intended to be) financial, investment or legal advice. It is our firm position that everyone has a unique situation and should seek professional advice on how best to navigate it. Rhys Martell is a Chartered Investment Manager (CIM), a Fellow of the Canadian Securities Industry (FCSI), a Qualified Associate Financial Planner (QAFP) and more. However, he is not registered to provide investment advice and, therefore, does not provide specific investment recommendations. Those looking for specific investment advice should seek out a registered professional.

Пікірлер: 219
@billhawke9312
@billhawke9312 Ай бұрын
Another point that doesn’t get mentioned is when people have kids. My parents had kids in their early 20s and were empty nesters by mid their 40s. They had 15 years to pay off debt and save and retired before 60. I’m 52 and was 40 when our 2nd son was born. I don’t regret my choices, but it does change things. Lots of my friends are in a similar situation, which means retiring in our 50s is unlikely. Great video. Keep them coming.
@Redneckboy991
@Redneckboy991 Ай бұрын
We waited a bit longer to have kids also. We wanted a nice house and a good neighborhood to raise them. Our last kid was born when we were both 37. We're now 59. My 27 year old son is moving out at the end of this month and our 22 year old is still with us. My plan had always been to downsize and retire at 55 but the reality is more like 61 or 62. So keeping the bigger house because of our adult kids obviously costs more money with the ever increasing costs of property taxes, utilities and insurance. Then there's the food. Kids do put retirement into perspective as we made a choice to have my wife stay home with the kids and live off my income. It looks like my daughter will be part of my retirement plans until she can afford to be on her own. I'll still downsize but not go as small as we had planned.
@macker0077
@macker0077 Ай бұрын
Seems to be the norm now....having kids later in life.....if at all.
@RockyMountainGardener
@RockyMountainGardener 27 күн бұрын
It also gives you more opportunities to plot money into saving when you’re young and take advantage of compounding interest. If I had had kids in my early twenties, I’d be in a much worse financial place now. I lived with roommates until my mid thirties, bought a house at 35 and now at 37, I’m in a great financial position to have a kid (although biologically it might be more challenging!).
@lexusls4305
@lexusls4305 26 күн бұрын
First kid at 45, 2nd and last at 54 (same spouse). I’ll be 72 when the last one graduates high school, 76 if they take the college route. I enjoyed my young adulthood and regret zero (Eat dessert first is my motto). Retirement will likely be when no one wants to employ me. I saved a third of my income pre-kids, and am now fortunate to do that percentage again. My spouse, obviously younger, has 20 to 25 years worth of working before retirement. Hopefully it all balances out.
@North-of-the-49th
@North-of-the-49th 21 күн бұрын
Becoming fiscally aware(and responsible) should be taught in high schools. Thanks for the video, Rhys. 😊
@macdaddymgiarc
@macdaddymgiarc Ай бұрын
At some point in your 50s you finally wake up and see your life passing you by. You may have thought "I have to work, I love work, I love my money" and then you change your mind and say "to heck with that, I want to appreciate my health, my life, my family/friends" etc. and you just pull the trigger and learn to live on less. And you look at your life a few years in and realize, I should have done this a few years ago. I started looking at retirement in Fall of 2020, during the height of Covid. I am now less than a year away from retirement at age 54. So many of my contemporaries are making the same move I am making (In their brains) and are going to spend a year or two getting the details worked out. I am ready and can't wait!
@andrewf2225
@andrewf2225 24 күн бұрын
Absolutely
@johnwillock6787
@johnwillock6787 Ай бұрын
The 8th wonder of the world. The power of compound interest. Start early!!
@vlado3304
@vlado3304 Ай бұрын
My partner at work can't afford to rent a room, he is renting a bed. What savings for retirement? Job no longer provides living.
@StevenCovey-ct3sx
@StevenCovey-ct3sx Ай бұрын
People have 45 working years to save. My friends with no savings have no one to blame but themselves. The moment they have cash it’s going to vacations, cars, and bars.
@j.frankparnell3087
@j.frankparnell3087 Ай бұрын
Unfortunately, that's true for many. Then they reach retirement age and complain they can't live on CPP.
@samspade1841
@samspade1841 24 күн бұрын
You big meany. That’s why we have the NDP to help those unfortunate people who chose to spend their savings. Redistribute wealth is the way say the Libs and NDP. Work hard and save and you will be punished. Relax and spend money and you will be rewarded. Don’t forget to vote for Trudeau and Singh to make the country so much better
@zomgoose
@zomgoose 21 күн бұрын
Many Canadians are totally screwed because the government pumped the housing market to the moon. The government has created a total mess.
@Brau93
@Brau93 20 күн бұрын
Yes, but if you have a dead beat husband and end up raising two kids on your own, it is hard to save for the future. Can not colour people with the same crayon.
@geftiler2112
@geftiler2112 19 күн бұрын
@@Brau93 You totally missed the point.
@russwigle9447
@russwigle9447 23 күн бұрын
I enjoyed that. Thanks. I think all the inflation and higher interest rates have waken up the pre-retirees to the new cost of a good retirement.
@Andy_Thomas
@Andy_Thomas Ай бұрын
One reason for the difference between expected and actual retirement ages is that in many cases, retirement is something that people find happens to them unexpectedly. One reason is ill health (self or dependent). Also, I have heard about people (especially post Covid) who were close to retirement age and who were made redundant and could not find equivalent work.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
US data showed the same trend. That’s why it’s important to reach financial independent in your 50’s, hopefully early 50’s. So you have the flexibility to work or not.
@capnkirk5528
@capnkirk5528 26 күн бұрын
As Covid-forced retiree, it wasn't that my job went away but Covid in early 2020 followed by Long Covid made me unable to continue working. Many people get a buy-out or retirement opportunity and just decide to "go for it".
@Bobbygma
@Bobbygma Ай бұрын
Well done. Thank you. My wife just retired at 57. I’m 60 and I’m energized by the people I work with and clients I get to work with. As we’ve discussed the moment that passion goes then I will retire
@stanleber9645
@stanleber9645 Ай бұрын
My assumption is that there is a strong correlation between people feeling they need to work longer: and the decline in employer sponsored pension plans, the current interest rate environment increasing fear and uncertainty and the general decline in the better paying jobs such as manufacturing. BTW - great video. Really appreciate your research summary and analysis.
@StevenCovey-ct3sx
@StevenCovey-ct3sx Ай бұрын
While few retirees earn more than 100k, when you have no mortgage then life is good! My parents were in that no mortgage zone for decades.
@johnnieblades
@johnnieblades Ай бұрын
Man oh man. I've been ignoring this reality. I'm 51. I didn't even want to watch this video but I forced myself to do it. I need to start planning and stop hiding 😞
@wayneandrews1022
@wayneandrews1022 Ай бұрын
Yes, do it, the time is now and it’s so worth it!
@AlexMacallister-fl1vl
@AlexMacallister-fl1vl 16 күн бұрын
It’s always good to have a fin-plan, I work with a professional planner, multi-market and fixed-income strategist.
@glenlynch1
@glenlynch1 22 күн бұрын
Single, started my pension contrutions at 25. Lived modestly, paid off my condo at 57 and the same year I retired in 2018. Sold my condo in the high priced Toronto market in 2021, and reinvested. Sold condo when I got a steal of a deal, in rent, still living in today. Maxed out my TFSA with condo sale, reinvesting interest in TFSA account, and maximizing my TFSA yearly top-up contributions. Will melt down my (non-registered) RSP (35K yearly) from 65 to 70. As I lose Bridge benefit at 65. Will of course continue to contribute yearly max to TFSA Delaying my CPP & OAS till 70. I so enjoy living modestly. Frugal? Can afford to live like a modest king LoL. The money I save(d) giving up the high cost of "Low living." The real fun I then experienced in life. Quitting drinking at 32 years old *30 years ago. And quit smoking shortly after!!! To think affording to *live modestly... I want to live in a self-contained "Van down by the River," with a Nationwide gym membership. Following the North American moderate Sun. 4 - 5 months each year in RV haven, sunny Arizona!!!
@andylowell7405
@andylowell7405 Ай бұрын
I will retire in the next 2 to 3 years, but will work 1 to 2 days a week in my profession and my husband as well as a buffer for delaying cpp. We are both fortunate to have small pensions which many don't and we feel so lucky to have.
@user-cn4or8iq4t
@user-cn4or8iq4t 26 күн бұрын
We live in southwestern Ontario. Both in our early 70's. Our combined income is almost 30.000. We own our house and we put all of our savings into this house. It is all ready to go for re-sale if we had to. We have 50.000 invested in safe stocks. Thats it. We have a very good quality of life. A lot of people are stubborn and think they can have it all until the end. We chose to down size and it paid off in spades. We don't owe a dime. 🙂🙃🙂🙃🙂🙃🙂🙃🙂
@bl1592
@bl1592 Ай бұрын
The set it and forget it mantra really does work well. I’ve been doing that since my twenties. Makes me more confident about our retirement going forward at 56.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
Same here. Really don’t understand how people don’t plan for retirement and saving for it, then expect they can just retire well.
@Redneckboy991
@Redneckboy991 Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 Education and informing themselves is key. They probably believe the government will look after them.
@gpage5469
@gpage5469 Ай бұрын
Depending when the stats are from...Covid. Many just retired. Don't want to go back to the office. Didn't spend any money for two years so more for retirement. Life is too short, get out when you can. Don't delay.
@marisapavan8615
@marisapavan8615 Ай бұрын
I’m 59.7 years old and I can’t wait to retire. Watching this video helped me understand that I am in good shape. Thank you !
@ronmaunder8662
@ronmaunder8662 Ай бұрын
My guess about that 5.6 year difference between when people think they will retire and when they actually retire. I’m thinking about my colleagues, relatives and friends that are between ages 52 and 62. (1) Assumptions ! People don’t have a Financial Plan. (2) Very little idea of how CPP/OAS functions. It’s truly wonderful that you are educating Canadians!!
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Actually, there is a section in this survey that speaks to the lack of financial plans. So yeah, that’s definitely got something to do with it!
@tedebayer1
@tedebayer1 Ай бұрын
Retired two years, I could have kept at it, but as you get older you start seeing a lot more people, friends and relatives not ever make it to retirement, If you love working that's one thing, but most of us as we age don't. Do what it takes to get some sort of income by 60 to 65, keeping in mind old age pensions will add to it. Also keep in mind, the lower your income the less tax you'll pay, and you no longer have all those deductions you once had... the money will stretch farther.
@brassj67
@brassj67 Ай бұрын
Well this is interesting, I thought I was doing about average and happy that I think I should be able to retire in 6 years when I an 63 without a mortgage. Looks like I am doing much better than I thought compared to the rest of the population
@joes6143
@joes6143 Ай бұрын
Great video and very informative
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Thank you!
@debbiemartell8100
@debbiemartell8100 Ай бұрын
Another great video! So interesting. Thanks for reading those 94 pages so I didn’t have to 😊
@whaler3232
@whaler3232 Ай бұрын
Great information again Reese. I think the difference between the average retirement age and the pre-retirement groups expectations of when they'll retire is due to the fact that pensions are becoming harder to come by and that saving for retirement is getting harder to do (high housing costs might be a big factor). I think the average retirement age of 59 will be going up in the next decade.
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Thank you! And I think you’re definitely onto a couple of the big factors.
@Redneckboy991
@Redneckboy991 Ай бұрын
@@1966johnnywayne Over taxation can definitely put a damper on saving for retirement and also for those already retired. . Inflation is also the killer for those in the private sector that don't belong to unions who can extort more from taxpayers for big pensions and big pay.
@whaler3232
@whaler3232 Ай бұрын
Your self austerity can be applauded and I agree that consumerism is a major factor in saving for the future. But look at it this way. I bought my home in 2013 for 320000. 5% down. I am mortgage free in 48 months. My home today is worth around 700000. I couldn't afford to by my own home in today's prices. Something is wrong here.
@Redneckboy991
@Redneckboy991 Ай бұрын
@@1966johnnywayne Not sure where you've been, but the younger generation doesn't stand a chance to save while trying to pay their bills. I'm not overly wealthy but know when we're being screwed. I took my kids to Disneyworld every other year when they were young and now take at least 2 cruises a year. We also eat out once a week. Guess who I mostly see on the cruise ships? Retired government workers. They seem to be the only people who can afford it. It's not that they've scrimped and saved, it's because they have huge publicly funded pensions for life. I met an ex fireman from Ontario. His gov't pension is over $80 grand/yr. It's no wonder governments are broke. I have been focusing on retirement since the age of 18 while the present government would prefer me to keep working. I'll be retiring in 2 years at the age of 61 and most likely move to a more tax friendly country. Under the present regime, this country is fast becoming unlivable..
@ryanpoulter6286
@ryanpoulter6286 Ай бұрын
@@Redneckboy991 I mean everyone likes to gripe about taxation, but don't forget corporate profits are at an all time high, and that income growth has largely been reserved for the top 10% over the last 40 years. It is especially prominent in the 1%. Unionized workers getting a fair shake are not the problem here. Lack of private sector unions is. Remember that Canada's overall tax rate is at the OECD average. For the record I am a government worker (hospital lab) with a DB pension, maxed both my TFSA and RRSP. I work 50+ hour weeks in northern MB. My house will be paid off in 3 years (I've owned it for 3).
@user-br6vp3ey1v
@user-br6vp3ey1v 17 күн бұрын
Well…currently in the go go go phase of our retirement. Have been in Spain for a month. Leaving next week for Portugal…also a month. Then on to Switzerland for the same. Have to leave Europe after that (stupid 90 day Schengen Zone rules) and haven’t decided where we’re going but England for September and Montenegro/Albania/Turkey October/November sounds good. Christmas in the Philippines and then January in Thailand and February in Vietnam. We met a Kiwi couple doing something similar to us and they invited us to NZ for March and I think we’ll take them up on it. Maybe head home in April to check up on our kids and check in with our friends. Wife is already saying she doesn’t want to stay home too long as we won’t have seen Morocco or Kenya or Italy or Greece or Sri Lanka or Argentina or Cambodia or… The funny thing is I was the one pushing for the World travel but she told me the other day that she’s having the time of her life. I’ve created a monster. 😂
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth 17 күн бұрын
So awesome.
@alanj9978
@alanj9978 12 күн бұрын
Reasons expected retirement age doesn't match reality: Many people don't get to choose when they retire; either health problems or ageism in the workplace decide for them.
@user-ey2te5vs3z
@user-ey2te5vs3z Ай бұрын
Interesting point that most don’t take into account including myself is that I won’t be trying to save so much in the next couple years but instead, spending it. I keep thinking I will need to have the same income in retirement or maybe close to the same but in reality, I may need much less to do the same things I do now. My close friend who is retired told me that they don’t even need 50% of their pre retirement income and do well. So I don’t know where this 70 to 80% comes from. He said he would be living like a king if he was needing that much income. Guess I will jump into retirement and test out the water. Hope it’s warm. Thanks for the great video again!
@doughooper9918
@doughooper9918 14 күн бұрын
How can you retire with debt? Maybe if you have a defined benefit pension but even then you will not be getting as much. Rule number one in retirement. Pay off debt first and then live within your means.
@kman0074
@kman0074 Ай бұрын
All the complaining about high interest rates is strange if you’re on track to be able to retire you should have paid most if not all debt and should be making more on safe investments with the higher rates. Interest rates bad for the spender not the saver.
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
Of the way people save for retirement, I used 6 of them at one time or another. I think that is an important metric not measured. I retired when I calculated that working longer would not make me any better off. I retired at 58 and should have retired at 55. The drop in cash flow at retirement was less than the drop in expenses making me better off. Not mentioned was when people first understood how investing worked and when they actually started investing.
@annashulman4717
@annashulman4717 Ай бұрын
Many canadians are immigrants like myself. Their income is lower, and they have less if any retirement investments, along with fewer years of contributions to CPP. I'm not sure if survey addressed that.
@brassj67
@brassj67 Ай бұрын
I am an immigrant and my income is much higher than average. I have 2 DB pensions from my home country and will be entitled to a full state pension and a healthy RRSP and TFSA. My CPP and OAS will be about average but then I am not relying on them
@annashulman4717
@annashulman4717 Ай бұрын
@brassj67 lucky you. Our family income is higher than overage, but only one has a pension plan from work. We are supporting 2 university children, so I can only minimally contribute to RRSP. My CPP+OAS will be between 900-1000 $ only 😭, i was in shock when I've found it out. We will downsize and even move to another province, but I am very concerned about my quality of life during retirement.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
@@annashulman4717how about having kids supporting their own high education? We all did when we went through university, learned many life lessons along the way.
@annashulman4717
@annashulman4717 Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 they do partially, both work part time, but we give them a substantial buster. Son is in medical school and was denied a loan... we had to take a line of credit. He is our investment 🫠🙃.
@tinayoga8844
@tinayoga8844 Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 My parents did support me, living at home and paying for my food. But all else I paid for. University was out of reach for me. Two years of community college, graduated during the recession of the early 80s. A year later I did get a job and worked continuously since then, retiring two years ago. And while my pay was not great, I still saved what I could and I now have more than I need.
@cirodirosa6752
@cirodirosa6752 Ай бұрын
Great Summary! What do you feel will break this time?
@lauramaillie3745
@lauramaillie3745 8 күн бұрын
One thing to keep in mind is the difference between a regular worker and a government worker in how the pension works when retiring. Also too for government workers, i think you had to have started working betore 2013 to qualify for the pension bridge at 60. We started to practice financially living like we are retired since 2 years ago. I think we will be fine. Hubby still anxious.😅 Love the video.
@stephaniejschlosser
@stephaniejschlosser Ай бұрын
2:56 - top 4 biggest risks! So true, the next generation are often missing on defined benefit pension plans and that’s sad.
@davecarpenter4917
@davecarpenter4917 Ай бұрын
Imho, the whole "down with unions" movement was good for investors and bad for workers. Sure, a company could dovetail a db pension into wages without the need for pressure , but why would they.
@mikey-gee3156
@mikey-gee3156 Ай бұрын
$100k for retiree..? I can only dream. Most of us have spent our way out of retirement . 😢
@LeadYourLiving
@LeadYourLiving 22 күн бұрын
Love this video. Thank you for posting. I have just started a very small KZfaq channel and doing a few videos on my retirement journey. Will add a link to this video for folks. Such great info! My channel is definitely not about financial planning LOL. I rely on the experts for that! However, I reference the importance of financial planning as an essential part of the process and this video is a great resource!
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth 22 күн бұрын
Best of luck!
@nicolehull1220
@nicolehull1220 Ай бұрын
Thanks for this and other videos. People are retiring later as the population is healthy, not having defined benefits plans, thus saving more for themselves and living longer and due to the increased cost of living. I would appreciate info about single people regarding investing and retirement.
@KiwiGreenCheeks
@KiwiGreenCheeks Ай бұрын
A lot of people probably retire earlier than planned because :1. Health issues 2. They might lose their job, and don’t want to start over after they’re 50+ 3. Maybe a significant sum of money is received through inheritance (I bet this doesn’t happen often) or 4. (mine and husband’s) burn out and tired of the soul sucking corporate world, and we can retire if we do less, freedom is better than more money
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Point 4 all the way!!!
@EKH8evil777
@EKH8evil777 Ай бұрын
Number 2 and number 4 here. Tuning 60 this year. Have saved a life time, but looking to see if I need to leave this country and it's "leadership". He has said in clear terms we don't deserve what we worked for all our lives. Since he has proven it over and over. He hates this born and bread Canuck.
@petewick8627
@petewick8627 Ай бұрын
@@EKH8evil777that’s why there has been the highest number of emigrants in the countries history in the last few years. One of the reasons we sold up and left.
@user-uq3dj4fg6y
@user-uq3dj4fg6y Ай бұрын
Personal experience is not finding work. I naively believed I had more value to offer with wisdom gained, but reality knocked me off Maybe some of it had to do with younger decision-makers with no comprehension of how much “older” people bring.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
Also elder workers usually demand higher pay than the young inexperienced workers.
@stingraykeeper2102
@stingraykeeper2102 Ай бұрын
You make the best videos on KZfaq! Been binge watching your content for some time and have to say thank you so much! I’m 36, based on info you’ve shared in this video I’m ahead of the game thankfully. Learned a lot about retirement info for my parents who have me tending to their affairs. I would really like to have you look over my financial info and plans for my early retirement to see if it’s realistic. Is this a possibility?
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Well, thank you kindly! Feel free to check out our website to see if one of the options work for you: www.WellBuiltWealth.ca Cheers
@Andrew21882
@Andrew21882 Ай бұрын
If you have a retirement portfolio managed by a financial institution, transfer it to a self managed broker and build/manage your portfolio of low cost index funds yourself. If done properly the savings could be huge. Most people are not aware of the high management fees that are killing their wealth.
@A7480394
@A7480394 29 күн бұрын
In addition to compounding, I'd bet part of the reason that retirees have bigger investment portfolios is inheritance. Chartered Professional Accountants of Canada estimate that $1 trillion will move generations through inheritance between 2023 and 2026.
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth 29 күн бұрын
Indeed. A ton of money being passed down.
@hashtagshalako3619
@hashtagshalako3619 Ай бұрын
When you (and the survey) talk about the differences between pre-retirees plans for travel, vs retirees actual travel, it’s important to consider the timing of the survey, and possible impacts on attitudes towards travel (safety, cost, convenience, etc) resulting from COVID. It’s not addressed, but I believe is an important factor that contributes to the findings.
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Good point!
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
@@wellbuiltwealth Very good point. My travel went to zero for years for that reason.
@blackgrandpa7652
@blackgrandpa7652 Ай бұрын
Im in my low 50s with over 400k in my company pension plan my house is paid off i have no debt and o invest 75% of my current salary and im 11 years away from 65 hopefully I will be a millionaire before then hard work and sacrifice always pays off😂😂
@darryld_009
@darryld_009 Ай бұрын
One reason for the difference could be pre-retire look at interest rates, cost of living and wonder about working longer to afford it. Right now I'm working on my pre and post retirement budget and I need to cutback somewhere. I'm still shooting for 60-61 ish.
@TripleDeano
@TripleDeano Ай бұрын
Usually a divorce destroys a retirement plan. Mine saved me. A nothing to lose mentality stepped up and the increased risk funded an early retirement. Nothing wagered nothing gained. You live once. You miss all the shots u don't take. 😊
@ronmexico5908
@ronmexico5908 Ай бұрын
It would be interesting to hear from working age people what they are doing to not have financial shortfalls like the people in the surveys do. What are their priorities now?
@terryloubelle
@terryloubelle Ай бұрын
Interesting survey results. Main culprit in poor retirement planning is a lack of financial eduction in secondary schools. Nobody should not be allowed to graduate high school unless they can pass a personal finance 101 and 201 exam. Misconception #1 is you need make a lot of money to retire a millionaire.
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
It’s really quite crazy when you think about how the fundamentals of finance aren’t taught. Really makes you wonder why…
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
@@wellbuiltwealth When you can graduate high school and don't know how many minutes are in a quarter hour or how many dimes are in a dollar the bar is very very low.
@isaiah_b_3798
@isaiah_b_3798 Ай бұрын
Highschools teach queer gender theory and critical race theory. Isn't that equipping our children for the real world?
@tinayoga8844
@tinayoga8844 Ай бұрын
@@wellbuiltwealth Its really crazy that parents don't teach their kids to be financially responsible. My parents were immigrants who came to Canada with nothing and couldn't speak English. They worked and saved. Learned the language. Brought up three children. We learned to save. If we wanted something we would save for it.
@slf5141
@slf5141 15 күн бұрын
There is no downsizing your home nowadays.. the prices are ridiculous!
@alanj9978
@alanj9978 12 күн бұрын
Plus no one builds smaller houses. You either downsize into a condo or nothing. And condos just aren't that great.
@brl6219
@brl6219 Ай бұрын
I wonder if pre- retirees might focus on their savings and not consider the impact of CPP and OAS. I think many couples can bring in $35-$40k annually from these which can significantly reduce the reliance on savings. Taxes are often much lower in retirement with pension splitting as well as the pension and age credits. There is also generally no further saving for retirement, no mortgage payments etc so it becomes much easier than some might anticipate.
@DigiTiLMon
@DigiTiLMon Ай бұрын
Good point. Assuming the maximum amount of CPP for a couple it is a great benefit. For those short on cash they might take CPP early, have reduced payments due to missed years, or be single. Actual Average CPP for new applicants at 65 is $9900/yr in 2024, and at 60 is $6300/yr. Plus $9k in OAS. However many (about half) people are getting less than the average.
@markust8904
@markust8904 26 күн бұрын
Great if your a couple. try being single.
@Doctor_Bong
@Doctor_Bong Ай бұрын
On the topic of saving too much, I noticed a correlation with how I play video games. Again and again, I finish the game with WAY too much money, and should have bought better weapons and armour earlier on.
@johnnyv5995
@johnnyv5995 Ай бұрын
Pre-retiree, I'm 56 and planning on retiring by 58. YES planning on selling(downsizing) home so I can fund my early retirement - once that $ runs out - will "activate" CPP
@davecarpenter4917
@davecarpenter4917 Ай бұрын
I think they keep adding zeros until you claim, but you do get to drop 8yrs or so of the lowest income between 18 and CPP-start.
@Sedge63
@Sedge63 Ай бұрын
My wife and I both retired at 60 in February. We have been mortgage free for 20 years, we used both our Father's inheritances to pay it off. We retired due to health issues and just both being sick to death of working in the current climate and mentality of today's human being. We both feel very at odds with today's mind set. We do not intend to take CPP or OAP until we are 65.
@user-if4dm1uq3b
@user-if4dm1uq3b 20 күн бұрын
55 this year with a DBPP ready and waiting(but penalized for taking it before 60). Kids in early 20s(one in university). 8 years left on the mortgage and desperately fighting the cost of living to get ready for retirement. Have some moderate RRSP contributions for my spouse. She is also 5.5 years younger than I am, obviously affecting her CPP and OAS draw dates compared to mine . Thinking about down sizing early to put some money away and replace a car before stepping away from work but am uncomfortable with what would be a loss in home equity. Go at 60? Don't really want to touch CPP early but??? Thoughts?
@epictetus3406
@epictetus3406 Ай бұрын
Would really like to see your analysis on the capital gain tax increase. Basically a tax on certain people's retirement, like family doctors. How is that ok?
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
It isn’t.
@The_R_Vid
@The_R_Vid 21 күн бұрын
Or a large number of small business owners who chose to build businesses and employ people instead of funding an RRSP. It's a real [)!
@eltraveluis
@eltraveluis 18 күн бұрын
Hi. Your numbers? Before or after taxes? Thank you
@john335i
@john335i 29 күн бұрын
I was wondering if some of the numbers presented were based on one persons income or combined. Both my wife and I have (and are) saving for retirement. We both have about the same amount saved. Closing in on sixty and feeling good about where we sit combined
@Supe063
@Supe063 Ай бұрын
I'm 61. Working full time but only 4 days a week. The plan is to do this until 64, then scale back (because it is an option available to me) and work 1/3 to 1/2 less. CPP at 67. RRSP meltdown starts with a trickle as I begin taking less employment income. Planned out. Mapped out. Thing is, the thoughts of scaling back sooner are creeping in and there's a realistic option to retire sooner. I wonder if that's the case for more people since the stats show average expected retirement at 65 and actual retirement is almost 5 years earlier?
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
I like your game-plan :)
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
I think you should rerun your plan with scaling back tomorrow and having more fun. I worked too long for little to no improvement in my situation.
@pensionbooster1976
@pensionbooster1976 Ай бұрын
This is the reason why 1/3 of Canadians are eligible for Guaranteed Income Supplement. This isn't going to be solved any time soon. What the government needs to do is to allow seniors to receive GIS while living abroad, many retirees want to live in warmer places, but also more affordable and they can't because their GIS will stop. Seniors living in Canada represent a major healthcare expense, if the government makes it easy for seniors to move abroad, seniors will improve their lifestyle and Canada will save money. It's a win-win situation.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
Didn’t know person will lose GIS if they live abroad. Guess if people are making low income during working years, they actually have better living standard retired.
@isaiah_b_3798
@isaiah_b_3798 Ай бұрын
If you've lived 20 years as adult in Canada you don't lose OAS living abroad.
@isaiah_b_3798
@isaiah_b_3798 Ай бұрын
@@1966johnnywayne it's a form of communist wealth redistribution through taxes and gov borrowing that millenials actually vote for when they vote Trudeau/Gagmeat.
@pensionbooster1976
@pensionbooster1976 Ай бұрын
@@isaiah_b_3798 Correct, but seniors receiving GIS lose that part that can be large, especially if they have less than 40 years of residency.
@pensionbooster1976
@pensionbooster1976 Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 not necessarily.
@digitnomad
@digitnomad Ай бұрын
I think ideally 60-70 go-go, 71-80 slow-go, 80-max no-go.
@Andy_Thomas
@Andy_Thomas Ай бұрын
Question: At 5:40, are the portfolio sizes based on per-household or per-individual?
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Per household
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
@@wellbuiltwealth It should be noted that at least 27% of the cohort are single person households. These households also likely make up both ends of the wealth distribution.
@liveandretireusa
@liveandretireusa 11 күн бұрын
what a surprise
@derekcox6531
@derekcox6531 Ай бұрын
I wonder if the 59 yr retirement is due to a combination of people realizing they have enough saved in general to retire early,along with those folks who maybe don’t have as much saved,but have just enough to get them to their government entitlements,so they retire due to health concerns. If that makes sense to anyone.🤔
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Yup! The survey actually has a section on “why” people decided to retire.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
@@wellbuiltwealthyou need to have a separate video on this topic. Thanks.
@tdddcd
@tdddcd 5 күн бұрын
Thank you for what you do.Good work. Question: What happens if you take the CPP and OAS at 65 and you still work full time and still pay CPP until 70's. No house. Some RRSP and TFSA? can you say what is good/wrong? Please and Thank you
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth 5 күн бұрын
Thanks! Unfortunately, I can’t advise without a real deep dive into your situation, but working past 65 and still contributing to CPP will lead to an even greater CPP benefit. Cheers
@alexkuhnert6856
@alexkuhnert6856 Ай бұрын
Thanks for a great vid! This survey missed some key points such as: - How many folks really are semi retired [and not by choice], - the major impact of inflation or divorce on retirement failure, - and how people who are handicapped or chronically ill - deal with/ cope/ manage retirement. These factors are always overlooked or not discussed - leading to the self delusion/ deception that retirement is really a lot simpler than it actually really ...IS. Look at Turkey a G7 + NATO country with skyrocketing currency debasement and inflation. That Sovereign is a really bad actor - and is wiping out all the pensioners. Lebanon, Ukraine, Syria, Argentina and so on and so on and more examples of really bad Sovereign BAD ACTORS....who like to misbehave. We have a great happy talk presentation from the OSC...and its only partially real. But its missing a lot of...reality.... Remember, we have Trudeau now running after all kinds of CCPC stealth wealth confiscation and Capital Gains taxation - his goal of Legal Plundering of retirement savings is a CLEAR and PRESENT DANGER...to ALL YOUR VIEWERS. Thanks for the effort. You are appreciated!
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Thank you. And you’re right, this survey could go much much deeper. Would love to see something like that…
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
@@wellbuiltwealth Ask and IPSOS might provide. Salable data no matter who inspires/requests it.
@user-rd2em4zw1s
@user-rd2em4zw1s Ай бұрын
Or after retirement some fears go away,to much fear mongering!
@awebuser5914
@awebuser5914 Ай бұрын
It would be interesting to see how many people who have DB pension plans have "invested/saved" anything over and above their non-liquid assets (house, cars, etc.) Firstly, most of your RRSP room gets eaten-up by your DB plan, so that's gone right there and I suspect many just don't see the need with a plan that's essentially guaranteed and indexed to inflation.
@davecarpenter4917
@davecarpenter4917 Ай бұрын
Ok. Nothing, and yes that was the plan. Its great knowing that a steady monthly keeps appearing, and its some comfort to know that my spouse will get 2/3 of that upon my expiry ,until she kicks it. No savings to pass on to my kids tho.
@KY-jb4vd
@KY-jb4vd 28 күн бұрын
we have a good db pension coming but have also invested.. rrsp was limited amount for sure but has grown over the years and tfsa are maxed. We also have non registered investments that have flourished with some luck (4-5 years from retirement now).
@minimaxmiaandme.4971
@minimaxmiaandme.4971 25 күн бұрын
Yes, invested in RRSP as well...
@alanj9978
@alanj9978 12 күн бұрын
They should at least invest in their TFSA and use it for big purchases in retirement.
@nicholashermansen6396
@nicholashermansen6396 26 күн бұрын
i have 1.2 million in property value with 400k owing. plus i have 250k invested in index accounts and am adding 12k a year to these investments. will my spouse and i be able to retire before we are 60?
@tammymcconnell821
@tammymcconnell821 13 күн бұрын
My husband has a pension and he is 58. He can retire at 60 but if he waits until he is 65 we will receive an extra $2,000/month. So we are on a 7 year count down. I on the other hand do not have a pension and am 57. I might retire at 60. I have to do the math.
@vm6824
@vm6824 17 күн бұрын
The main reasons I can retire about 12 yrs earlier than most are due to life choices - no ownership of anything (therefore no debt), no brats, no vehicle, good $$ saver, happily single. If you had kids in the last 30 yrs - you are screwed. Have fun working til you're 70. Sounds like fun.
@doonie5396
@doonie5396 11 күн бұрын
Look at all those books...
@andrewf2225
@andrewf2225 24 күн бұрын
Bigger question is, how long will you live? No one knows, everyday is a gift.
@JebbAdams
@JebbAdams 29 күн бұрын
Pensions are only paid once a month. I noticed that difference. Every month I notice it! Lol!
@psychette8846
@psychette8846 29 күн бұрын
1:17 - 15% of retirees rate their financial situation as poor 4:49 - 27% of retired households make less than 40K So 12% are happy at less than 40K. Maybe that should tell us something about money not buying happiness or maybe 12% of retirees were on welfare and OAS and GIS represent a masive pay bump. I like looking at retirement related stats that seem to counter eachother.
@richardpiggins2936
@richardpiggins2936 25 күн бұрын
Financial Advisors say you need a million dollars to retire. But do you? If you own your home and it is in good condition that eliminates a huge expense a mortgage. No credit card debt is good too. No car payments either, especially electric car payments. After the kids leave home & the mortgage is paid, put the mortgage amount into your RRSP and TFSA. Also your health is important and your friends. Be in good health and have many REAL friends. If you worked in another country for 10 years or more you maybe entitled to a pension from there, add that to your Canadian pension and your savings of around 500K per family and you'll be OK.
@DubbleD69
@DubbleD69 Ай бұрын
Spent much of my early adult life living under the poverty line as a new pilot in Canada. Then spent the next 9ish years making ‘ok’ money. Tried to find a balance between’now I can buy some desirables’ and thinking of the future. I’m now 56, earn about 150g with a small fam and a mortgage that should be over in 5 years. Am I fucked? I think I am, and plan to work until I drop dead. Sad life in the end. But hopefully my family will prosper once I’m gone.
@markust8904
@markust8904 26 күн бұрын
ya, your fucked, sad life to be sure, forget the family prospering you do you and live.
@Bees-knees99
@Bees-knees99 29 күн бұрын
This is Post War (Silent generation) & Boomers vs GenX, there is so much information written about why those generations are better off financially. Us Gen Xers have to work harder to maintain that lifestyle. And the same will be for all generations upcoming.
@logarithmic7
@logarithmic7 Ай бұрын
Since time immemorial, peasants don't retire. They die.
@drd4059
@drd4059 Ай бұрын
Planning is difficult when your retirement savings are in a business and capricious governments are finding ways to turn your work into someone else's entitlement.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
Actually most small business pays much lower tax compared to regular salary income. Stop blaming others, do your own planning work. Social safety net is the foundation for a livable society, I for one happy to pay my tax for.
@markbernier8434
@markbernier8434 Ай бұрын
Such as capital gains taxes on gains that are notional because of the devaluation of the currency during the time you held the investment.
@paulinanelega
@paulinanelega Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 The tax is lower on the small business earnings, but when withdrawn (i.e., dividends to pay oneself), tax integration essentially levels it to be same as tax on regular salary income. I am fine with that.
@drd4059
@drd4059 Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 Not true. There is corporate tax AND personal tax on salary or dividend drawn from the corporation. The combined tax is higher. Society did fine for thousands of years before social safety nets as everyone paid their own way. Feel free to combine with others on a voluntary basis, but don't ask me to pay your benefits.
@JustMakingItWork
@JustMakingItWork Ай бұрын
Retirement age: I think those who have already retired at the age of 60 squeezed out of the workforce during covid and an opportune time. Those still in the workforce right now are probably feeling the post-covid pinch of high interest rates, high inflation, and uncertain times in the global environment. Taxes ARE NOT the reason why people have no money. It's time for people to start resenting the greed-flation of the corporations and start appreciating that CPP/OAS will always exist and health is free. Otherwise, please feel free to leave for the U.S. or Thailand or some other 3rd-world country
@jessicayoung1190
@jessicayoung1190 Ай бұрын
I believe the reason more people are working into their retirement ago is because they over spent in the last few decades while the economy was good . Remember the slogan from Bank of Nova Scotia , you are richer than you think . 😂
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
There’s definitely been a cultural shift between generations in regards to their attitudes on spending. For sure…
@JustMakingItWork
@JustMakingItWork Ай бұрын
​@@jessicayoung1190"They think we are richer than we are"
@cathys7087
@cathys7087 Ай бұрын
@JustMakingItWork 💯
@barenekid9695
@barenekid9695 8 сағат бұрын
Expectations for Retirement Life are .. 99% exaggerated by Financial 'people' pushing for Their Own advantages. Reality is that once Retired .. unless Soo unfortunate as to enter retirement with Debt loads... One needs FAR less income/ coin to live great lives ... than when one was 'Saving' for retirement.
@nicoleross9969
@nicoleross9969 26 күн бұрын
It is divorce and the recent increase in inflation, and supporting children that derails the expected date of retirement
@Paul-mn8ql
@Paul-mn8ql Ай бұрын
What would I do all day if I didn't work? Sometimes I worry that I'll just sit around all day - eat, sleep, walk the dogs repeat... This isn't something I look forward to. My retirement is fully funded and I could walk away tomorrow but I'm just gonna keep on working and saving.
@glendacastillo6504
@glendacastillo6504 25 күн бұрын
Travel to see the world 🌍
@brianmcintyre8563
@brianmcintyre8563 18 сағат бұрын
Don't forget we have Trudeau/Libera/Libral/ NDP govt which makes a good retirement just a dream for many Canadians,
@tonyglen33
@tonyglen33 Ай бұрын
Overtaxing of the population contributes to people being broke in retirement.
@freedomlife3623
@freedomlife3623 Ай бұрын
Then most people in Western Europe & Nordic countries will have no retirement saving at all as they pay much higher tax. It’s consumerism & careless planning lead to lack of saving. Time to stop blaming & look into the mirror.
@Redneckboy991
@Redneckboy991 Ай бұрын
There is some truth to that. The federal government looks at us like we're their personal piggy bank. Inflation for some could very well prolong retirement. Regardless of inflation I've always invested a percentage of my pay since the age of 18. I'm now almost 59 and my investments have always outpaced inflation. Because of life circumstances it can be difficult for some to save, but it needs to be done as retirement is a long term strategy.
@tonyglen33
@tonyglen33 Ай бұрын
@@freedomlife3623 I said "contributes"
@gavinhassett479
@gavinhassett479 Ай бұрын
When the govt changes the tax rules on our savings and nest eggs then it is a major problem. This is what is happening now in Canada... the Liberals happen to be in govt now, but I have no doubt the conservatives will continue to errode Canadians savings and retirement funds.
@ralphneelands3990
@ralphneelands3990 Ай бұрын
Taxes have generally decreased during my lifetime. Retirement shelters like RRSP, TFSA, RDSP, etc. have been created. CPP has been stabilized so we don’t need to worry about future cuts. The cost of investing has dramatically decreased. But there’s always someone shouting about overtaxing. Taxes are good if the money helps the poor and middle income folks to live a healthier, happier, and more convenient life without destroying things for our grandkids.
@heidibartman7160
@heidibartman7160 19 күн бұрын
Expectation to live longer
@davekrindle1311
@davekrindle1311 Ай бұрын
To answer the question posed at the end of the video, 1 answer comes to mind. Far, far, far fewer defined benefit pension plans and those that exist have changed the rules from 30 years of service to years of service + age > 85 and most of those have changed again to > 90. I guess the second part maybe people fearing that CPP and OAS will be drained by the Baby Boomers!
@wellbuiltwealth
@wellbuiltwealth Ай бұрын
Less pensions are definitely a big part!!
@JS-jh4cy
@JS-jh4cy 14 күн бұрын
Damn too young to start over, too old to restart in another country
@Eron55555
@Eron55555 Ай бұрын
Retire? In Canada? bwahahahahahahahahahahahahahahaha
@svenjohnson2389
@svenjohnson2389 28 күн бұрын
😂😂 I was broke before I retired, now I am retired and I’m still broke. Oh well, came into this world with nothing and will leave with nothing.
@potatofarmer
@potatofarmer 25 күн бұрын
At the current rate of the government spending my money for me, work will only set me free. Yes that is a horrible history joke, playing out in reality.
@RobertH-qb5it
@RobertH-qb5it 22 күн бұрын
Yeah I really don't want to hear people blubber they can't retire. It is called poor planning and life choices.
@pierremajor8712
@pierremajor8712 Ай бұрын
And many of us will not be able to retire, unfortunately.
@flyingriders631
@flyingriders631 Ай бұрын
Well, many of us will definitely be able to retire but, unfortunately, it will be a miserable retirement.
@liverpool3469
@liverpool3469 Ай бұрын
People complain about savings, but they don't save enough. The minimum should be 25% off your home pay. Not 5%, not 10%... but 25%! Stop any travel, restaurants, shopping, buying new vehicles, anything that is not important for survival and save for retirement. I am shocked that only 1% saving what I am saving... Wake up, nobody is going to hire you after 60.
@lindaa9005
@lindaa9005 26 күн бұрын
I agree with watching your spending , and saving more, however doomposting is unnecessary. People do get hired after 60.
@user-ey2te5vs3z
@user-ey2te5vs3z Ай бұрын
Biggest thing holding people back from being able to retire is this pathetic excuse of a government. Socialism 101.? I praise anyone that can make some cash to keep it out of the hands of the thieves running this country. Good on you!!
@rationalevidence9095
@rationalevidence9095 Ай бұрын
Why would you tell people to spend money when they don't need to? Why not tell them to find a charity they can really enjoy and give philanthropically? Saving orphans or hurricane victims is more noble than simply buying more junk to take care of.
@michaeldecsi1698
@michaeldecsi1698 Ай бұрын
People retire early because they are the first to be laid off and are unhireable after 50. Pretending that retirement is predictable is folly. Ageism is real.
@lindaa9005
@lindaa9005 26 күн бұрын
I agree, ageism exists, however saying that people are unhireable after 50 ? No, that's an oversimplification - there are fields where that's less of a factor, such as consulting/ contracting.
@minimaxmiaandme.4971
@minimaxmiaandme.4971 25 күн бұрын
Not true, I have a nice little part time job that I use to pay for vacations.......they hired me at 67....still working it.
@derekserfas7250
@derekserfas7250 Ай бұрын
I'm not retiring in Canada. If you had a couple millions of dollars your not going to be able to keep up with rising costs. Better off moving and making your money go further.
@cthompson658
@cthompson658 Ай бұрын
Later retirement is partly to due to Trudumb ,Taxland and their band of thieves. More useless taxes to fund their wages and retirement packages.
@rimowa33
@rimowa33 Ай бұрын
I have found my taxes reduced under PM Trudeau, also my OAS increased under PM Trudeau for 75+ year olds. Both were unexpected but real. I find there is no room for arguing against a Liberal Federal Government. With a Conservative Govt, taxes increased and benefits were under threat. I voted NDP. Anti Trudeau rhetoric is somewhat unfair. Keep putting him down and of course he will perform worse, just like you would perform if your boss always berated you, even when you did a good job. Get out of the perpetual negative rut, please.
@chrisevans7416
@chrisevans7416 Ай бұрын
​@@rimowa33your taxes might have reduced,your benefits increase ,however are no match for the cost of living inflation caused by thr current government, you are worst off
@petewick8627
@petewick8627 Ай бұрын
@@rimowa33this is why state funded media is so effective
@ChrisSymes-ct1wd
@ChrisSymes-ct1wd Ай бұрын
I do not go by state media so much, I go by my actual experience ($) and gut feeling from the distant past to the present. I used to have > 1000 people go by me a day, every day for 31 years - I developed a pretty good judgement about people. I listen intensely to those who at first I do not like, usually I dislike them even more. But if they have a good policy or idea, I will latch onto that. I have been around the block many many many countless times. I trust my gut and some valid info I have gathered in my little brain. I ain’t formally educated except by the hard knocks of life. I appreciate educated people. I listen to what they say as they usually have something of value to offer. I read the Economist, and listen to learned speakers. How about you?
@ChrisSymes-ct1wd
@ChrisSymes-ct1wd Ай бұрын
Inflation has been with us all around most of the world, before and since I was born. All leaders, left and right, try to keep it under control.
@wadeross6311
@wadeross6311 Ай бұрын
Canadians need to learn how to vote better if you want to retire.
@cathys7087
@cathys7087 Ай бұрын
There is no one to vote for who will make things better.
@vm6824
@vm6824 17 күн бұрын
I guarantee you that your life has never changed no matter who was in charge! Mine hasn't! My quality of life is down to my life choices and how I handle my money. Taxes and inflation will always be there - doesn't matter what idiots have been voted in!
3 Easy Ways to Know How Much You Need To Retire in Canada
23:10
Well Built Wealth
Рет қаралды 127 М.
3 RRSP Meltdown Strategies to Save MASSIVE Taxes
23:13
Well Built Wealth
Рет қаралды 452 М.
Homemade Professional Spy Trick To Unlock A Phone 🔍
00:55
Crafty Champions
Рет қаралды 58 МЛН
The joker's house has been invaded by a pseudo-human#joker #shorts
00:39
Untitled Joker
Рет қаралды 9 МЛН
What Does It Take To Retire With $7,500/Month?
15:42
Well Built Wealth
Рет қаралды 101 М.
8 TFSA Mistakes You Must Avoid
11:20
Parallel Wealth
Рет қаралды 78 М.
Top 8 Reasons to Take CPP at Age 60 | Canadian Retirement Benefits
11:14
Well Built Wealth
Рет қаралды 519 М.
When Are People Actually Starting CPP?
7:11
Well Built Wealth
Рет қаралды 16 М.
The Men Who Stole the World (and got away with it)
54:54
Best Documentary
Рет қаралды 905 М.
Retirement   How Much Is Enough?
15:47
All Things Retirement - Canada
Рет қаралды 7 М.
Canadian Retirees Surveyed - How Do You Compare?
13:57
Mark Walhout
Рет қаралды 30 М.
Here's The MINIMUM Amount Every Canadian Can Get in Retirement
13:24
Homemade Professional Spy Trick To Unlock A Phone 🔍
00:55
Crafty Champions
Рет қаралды 58 МЛН