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If you read the papers and listen to the "experts," you''ve heard the usual pitches about retirement: you''ll need a million dollars so you better start an RRSP early and maximize your contributions, trust the stock market and mutual funds for the best returns and put your faith in a financial advisor. But what if this advice is wrong? By reading this book, you will learn the truth about these myths. You will also be given six free spreadsheets to figure out where you really stand, including the latest "Retirement Optimizer" that allows you to compute your retirement income year-by-year and the "Personal Rate of Return Calculator" so you can determine just how well your investments have done. Find out if you are saving enough ... or too little. Smoke and Mirrors dispels the five main retirement myths:1. If I had $1,000,000 I could retire. Find out why you might be fine with much less.2. RRSPs are the holy grail of retirement. Discover what is more important than the size of your RRSP.3. Don''t worry about your investments; you''ll be fine in the long run. You''ll learn how to figure out the truth about how well your investments are really doing.4. We have met the enemy, and he is the tax collector. You may be interested in reducing your taxes, but find out why tax shelters may be dangerous to your financial health.5. Secure your financial future - buy life insurance. Find out who needs it, who doesn''t and how to get it cheap.
Stop risking everything to make your investment advisor rich The stock market crash of 2008 proved one thing: traditional retirement planning advice simply doesn't work. The risks are too enormous. Trusting the stock market is like gambling with your family's future.
A contrarian and controversial look at personal finance, and a super simple strategy for making and keeping more money Traditional financial wisdom persuades us to grow our net worth and build our assets. But traditional financial wisdom is often wrong.
As the majority of Canadians are now spending much more than they make, their debt levels are reaching crisis proportions. Excluding mortgage debt, the average Canadian owes over $25,000 in consumer debt, which poses massive risks not only for the individuals carrying that financial load, but for our entire financial system.
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