A
aesop081
Guest
Expect to lose between 30-40% for taxes, EI, CPP, CFSA, etc, etc,etc...
JBoyd said:A recruit actually makes the same amount as a Pte, which is $2624/month. 2009 Pay scale NCM regular force http://www.cmp-cpm.forces.gc.ca/dgcb-dgras/ps/pay-sol/pr-sol/rfncmr-mrfr-eng.asp
This amounts to $31,488 annually before taxes.
2009 federal tax rate for income up to $40,726 is 15% (http://www.revenu.gouv.qc.ca/eng/particulier/impots/taux.asp)
If your BMQ is in Quebec and you are taxed by their provincial rate then for 2009 their income tax rate for income up to $38,385 is %16 (http://www.revenu.gouv.qc.ca/eng/particulier/impots/taux.asp)
A rough estimate of income tax taken is $9,761.28 leaving you with $21,726.79 annually (1810.57/month).
Keep in mind this does not include amounts deducted for CPP/QPP, EI, and CF Pension, nor does it include possible separation expense and/or PLD that you could earn during BMQ.
SupersonicMax said:About paying off your mortgage faster....
I would personally discourage it. Use the money and invest it. Especially during times like now. Chances are you will make more interest than what you would save on mortgage interest. If your RRSPs are not maxed out, invest in them, giving you twice the advantage (more interest and tax deductions). My mutual funds on average make 10% a year. I pay 3% interest on my mortgage. That's a 7% difference, plus tax deductions at the end of the year.
Pusser said:If your guy had to pay for the stuff lost during his "travels," I would hope that it was because he never should have been "traveling" with the stuff in the first place.
SupersonicMax said:About paying off your mortgage faster....
I would personally discourage it. Use the money and invest it. Especially during times like now. Chances are you will make more interest than what you would save on mortgage interest. If your RRSPs are not maxed out, invest in them, giving you twice the advantage (more interest and tax deductions). My mutual funds on average make 10% a year. I pay 3% interest on my mortgage. That's a 7% difference, plus tax deductions at the end of the year.
George Wallace said:???
Are you nuts? I wholeheartedly disagree with this advice. Pay off your mortgage as soon as you can. You save paying the Bank twice to three times what your purchase price was in Mortgage fees and interest. I paid weekly and knew that a certain amount was taken out of my account every week and didn't have to try to remember if it was this week or next that the bank was taking money out. Weekly or bi-weekly payments are the same, and in the end of a year you will have made thirteen months worth of payments instead of twelve, thus knocking the amount of years left in your mortgage down. If you can afford to make "Anniversary Payments", do so. That will also cut down greatly on the amount of interest you are paying and the number of years you will have to pay. If you can get rid of your mortgage, then you will have even more to put into your investments. If you can get rid of your mortgage, and then be able to pay off your car loan, and then pay off any other debts, and max out your SRSP, you will have even more spare cash to make your investments.
Mortgages, rent and car payments only puts your money in other people’s pockets. Why pay rent, in effect paying off someone else's mortgage, when you can invest in your own property? Property is just as big an investment as stocks, GICs, Bonds, etc.
Redeye said:Actually, he's not nuts. Putting on my financial planner hat, even fairly conservative investment portfolios will still bring better returns than the interest rate on a mortgage.
ballz said:Your annual interest rate and the effective annual interest rate are two different things as well.
ballz said:The housing market growth
ballz said:a house that you don't have to pay capital gains on if (when) you sell it, the taxes you will be paying when you eventually cash those other investments
ballz said:If you're going to go that route though, you're better off not mortgaging a house period and renting instead, and taking the difference between a mortgage payment and a rent payment and investing it (or other things) as well.
ballz said:If you can do weekly payments, even better. Same amount of money being paid, all it changes is the amount of interest that gets compounded.
George Wallace said:So? You are advising us to pay up to three times our purchase price on a home and make payments to investments instead? I ask, as I maxed out my SRSP every year, paid off my Credit Card monthly, paid off my auto ASAP, and paid my mortgage weekly, with Anniversary payments when I could afford the payments. I even had "fun money" that I could afford to put into the Markets (Mostly unsuccessfully). Now I know owning a house short term can be a risk, but if one remembers "Location, Location, Location" they should in most cases come out ahead. In the end, I am mortgage free.
George Wallace said:What did I learn in my Service? Don't be like the Sergeant Majors who lived in PMQs, owned a big car, a boat, a Ski Doo and all kinds of other "toys". When they reached retirement age, they had no home, had to sell their "toys" and landed up working as cleaners in the shacks. A young Service Member should start planning now for their retirement. We can all benefit now from SRSPs which those old Sergeant Majors never had the opportunity to. We also have many Financial Advisors available to us these days to give us those informed decisions that we can make. Depending on how frugal you want to live is up to you. We all have many options to how we reach our goals, and not all our goals will be the same.
George Wallace said:When we first got introduced to the SRSP, we were told how we could have a RSP worth a million dollars when we retired after twenty years. Nice dream to look forward to, but it never happened. What did happen is we are left well better off than those who never planned for their retirement and hopefully be debt free able to enjoy the pleasures we dreamt of.
George Wallace said:Unlike some here, I am not a Financial Advisor, and I have made many mistakes in my finances over the years. I was not lucky enough to have the access or opportunity to seek the advice of people like Redeye who have the knowledge to make well educated financial choices. I did have to bite the bullet at times and live rather frugally. I just did not like to carry any debt and now live, not in luxury, but comfortably.
ballz said:Your annual interest rate and the effective annual interest rate are two different things as well.
Sigger said:Redeye,
Fantastic advice.
I am taking notes.
Redeye said:Let's do some math. Suppose we've got a $250,000 mortgage at 6% (which is about the long term average for rates if I remember right). Making bi-weekly accelerated payments (which is always a good idea) gives you a mortgage payment of about $800 every two weeks, and the mortgage is paid off in 21 years. You'll pay about $186,000 in interest over the life of the mortgage that way. (You'll save about $44000 going biweekly instead of monthly).
Now, suppose you decided you could afford an extra $200 a month to use either to save or to invest... So, with the same mortgage terms, let's increase the payment to $900 every two weeks... what's that get us? Well, you'll knock four years off the mortgage and save about another $41,000 in interest. That sounds pretty good, right?
Well, suppose you're in a 30% tax bracket and you toss that money in an RRSP every year instead for the 17 years. With a modest rate of return of 5% (which is basically the long term rule-of-thumb rate for a pretty conservative portfolio), in 17 years you'd be sitting on about $69,000 in an RRSP. You won't have the mortgage paid off, sure... but in the remaining four years while you finish paying it off that RRSP will grow to about $95,000 if you keep the strategy in place. Oh, and you'll save about $780/year in taxes which could be channeled to paying down the mortgage if you so chose anyhow.
See why it makes sense?
I played with a couple of calculations about assumptions on rates of return and mortgage rates, in the long run it seems like at mortgage rates above 7% it becomes a bit of a wash - assuming that the entirety of the mortgage payment once done is channeled into RRSPs and the tax returns invested as well. In practice, that doesn't happen - which is why I advise people not to neglect retirement savings while paying their mortgage down.