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	><title>Sacha Chua - tag - taxfree</title>
	<subtitle>Emacs, sketches, and life</subtitle>
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	<updated>2009-01-09T23:01:36Z</updated>
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		<title type="html">Thinking about the Canadian Tax-free Savings Account</title>
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		<author><name><![CDATA[Sacha Chua]]></name></author>
		<updated>2009-01-10T04:12:03Z</updated>
    <published>2009-01-09T23:01:36Z</published>
    <category term="finance" />
		<id>https://sachachua.com/blog/?p=5587</id>
		<content type="html"><![CDATA[<p>W- and I picked up a 2008-2009 tax planning guide from the Toronto Public Library, and I was pleasantly surprised to find that the tax-free savings accounts (TFSA) recently introduced by the Canadian government can be used to hold equities which will not incur capital gains tax when sold. Now I&#8217;m trying to figure out how I should best manage the $5000 TFSA limit I have this year.</p>
<p>Because I&#8217;m young and I have some funds I&#8217;m not planning to use for a while, I&#8217;m leaning towards considering this as part of my retirement portfolio. It won&#8217;t be locked in like my registered retirement savings plan is (RRSP), and it won&#8217;t be taxed on withdrawal. Withdrawals from the RRSP are added on top of your income, and capital gains taxes are applied. According to <a href="http://www.theprovince.com/Business/Making+with+TFSA/1142361/story.html">this article on TFSAs and RRSPs</a>, it may make sense to hold income-generating investments in the RRSP (where they won&#8217;t get taxed as they grow) and things like equities in the TFSA (where you won&#8217;t get capital gains tax on large growth).</p>
<p>Of course, that all depends on whether or not you think equities will stop going down and instead regain some value. Prolonged recessions have happened before. Glass-half-full folks could also see this as a great time to pick up mutual funds or individual stocks at a discount, though. =) </p>
<p>Another alternative is to use it as a high-interest savings account for my emergency fund and short-term goals. $5000 There&#8217;s currently no other tax-efficient way to store funds I may need/want to access in a bit.</p>
<p>Or perhaps a mix of both!</p>
<p>Decisions&#8230; decisions&#8230; Anyway, if you&#8217;re going for the high-interest savings account, try <a href="http://pcfinancial.co">PCFinancial</a> For guaranteed investment certificates (GICs), try <a href="http://ingdirect.ca">ING Direct</a> (they&#8217;re easy to manage and they have decent rates). If you&#8217;re going for a mutual fund, try <a href="http://tdcanadatrust.com">TD Canada Trust</a> &#8211; their index e-series funds have the lowest management expense ratio I&#8217;ve come across so far, and they&#8217;re fairly easy to manage online. =)</p>
<p>Take this blog post with a grain of salt. I&#8217;m not a certified financial planner, just a 25-year-old who likes figuring things out.</p>
<p>UPDATE: PCFinancial offers the Tax Free Savings Account with an interest rate of 3.05% on the entire balance of your account (instead of the tiered system of ING), so it beats ING a little bit when it comes to savings accounts. Although at this point, you&#8217;re quibbling over 0.35%, which (given the $5000 contribution room) comes out to less than $20. May not be worth opening another account for over one year, and interest rates tend to fluctuate anyway.</p>
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