Random INFO Flashcards

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1
Q

What are considered taxable income from the following list?

A
  • Employment Income = TAXABLE INCOME
  • Worker’s compensation = NOT TAXABLE INCOME
  • Child support Payments = NOT TAXABLE INCOME
  • Royalties = TAXABLE INCOME
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2
Q

What is Tenancy In Common?

A

-an arrangement where an asset is owned by two or more individuals together, but without the right of survivorship. What this means is that the entire asset does not automatically pass over to the surviving owner

  • If one owner dies the other owner has no tax implications on their half, only will be taxed when they dispose of their half of the asset
  • asset will not pass to the other when one dies, instead the dead persons 50% will be included in his estate assets on death
  • dead persons share will be in their estate, NOT passed on to tenant in common (unlike joint tenancy)
  • it is possible for dead person estate to apply for principal residence exemption to shelter some capital gain from cottage property (asset in joint tenancy)
  • TIC has NO right of survivorship like JT does…
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3
Q

What are three sets of indicators in a business cycle?

A
  1. Leading Indicators
    -Orders of durable goods like cars
    -Housing starts
    -Commodity Prices
    -Stock market returns
    -Manufacture orders
  2. Concurrent Indicators
    -Personal Income
    -Retail Sales
    -Production
    -Trade and sales volume
    -GDP
  3. Lagging Indicators
    -Unemployment
    -Inventory levels
    -Exchange Rate
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4
Q

How is inflation measured?

A
  • by comparing last years Consumer Price INdex (CPI) with the current years CPI
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5
Q

What is CPI?

A
  • Basket of 600 goods and services that households would regularly purchase - the price of this basket is referred to as the General Price Level
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6
Q

What is Monetary Policy?

A
  • Involves measures taken by central banks to control the amount of money and securities in circulation
    *Manipulation of interest rates - gets the most attention (changes in the overnight rate). Increase IR to slow down rapid growth and inflation. Decreasing happens when economy is slow to encourage spending and borrowing. Prime rate is set by the consumer banks (CIBC) and higher than their bank rate. Prime lending rate is a lagging indicator.
  • Increase or Decrease money supply (less used)
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7
Q

What is Fiscal Policy?

A

-While the Bank of Canada implements Monetary Policy our elected officials implement fiscal policy
- taxes
-gov’t spending
-regulation

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8
Q

What is rule of 72?

A

The Rule of 72 is a calculation that estimates the number of years it takes to double your money at a specified rate of return. If, for example, your account earns 4 percent, divide 72 by 4 to get the number of years it will take for your money to double. In this case, 18 years

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9
Q

Cautionary words in MC questions

A

“Will” “Certainly” and “Always” are yellow flags - you should be 100% sure if you choose an answer with these words

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10
Q

Interest rate insights

A
  • Interest rates do respond to economic activity, which is cyclical, there is no certainty that rates will go up in response to market cycles. Housing costs do not always exceed inflation. If there is high inflation, public sector employees, are likely to respond to inflation with higher wages. Private sector employees can face employment pressures in a recession (job security risk aka).
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11
Q

CPP / OAS - stuff to memorize

A
  1. EARLY CPP is you minus .6% per month or 7.2% per year (max: 36%)
    - a person’s max benefit is $1,200/month at 65, they want to take it at 63 instead. So .6 x 24 months = 14.4% reduction… so 1200x.114 = $172.8 less per month. New benefit = 1200-172.8 = 1027.2/mo
  2. LATER CPP you add .7% per month (or 8.4%/year) (max: 42%)
  • things to consider with CPP; longevity, taxes, lifestyle, access to other sources of income (doesn’t make sense to drain RRSP to delay CPP for a couple hundred dollars more a month)
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12
Q

Other CPP benefits

A

a) CPP Post Retirement Benefit - if you work and contribute to CPP while receiving CPP you will get a PRB (bump up in monthly amount) - you can request to stop by age 65 and have to stop at age 70

b) CPP Disability Pension - you can’t receive CPP and CPP DP at the same time. One or other.. it will auto convert at 65 IF you are on CPP DP to just CPP

c) CPP Post-Retirement Disability Benefit - if you are receiving CPP you can maybe have this added until you turn 65 as a top up (severe/long disability) ($558.74/mo)

d) Children’s (dependent) Benefit - children under age 18 or 18-25 full time student given to children of deceased or disabled CPP contributor ($281.72/mo)

e) CPP Survivors Pension - if survivor is 65 and older you get 60% of deceased (if not receiving other CPP benefits) - its a calculation. If you and under 65 37.5% if not receiving other CPP benefits

f) CPP Death benefit: $2,500 single payment to dead persons estate

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13
Q

OAS clawback / delay start

A

2023: $86,912 - you repay 15% of excess over this amount to the max total of OAS received

Age: 65-74 ($86K - $142K)
Age: 75 + ($147K and up)

Example:
The threshold for 2022 is $81,761.

If your income in 2022 was $96,000, then your repayment would be 15% of the difference between $96,000 and $81,761:

$96,000 - $81,761 = $14,239

$14,239 x 0.15 = $2,136

WHAT IS YOU DELAY? You get 0.6% more per month up to 36%

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14
Q

OAS

A

Who gets it?
-Resident for 10 years (40 years for max), reduced at 2.5% per year under 40, monthly max in 2021 $635.26

EG: Only resident 30 years: (40 years for max - 30 years resident) = 10
= 10 x 2.5% = 25%
= 635.26 - 25% = $476.45 lowered monthly payment

Min age to start is 65, must apply, can delay until 70

Indexed quarterly to CPI

Taxable income benefit

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15
Q

GIS

A

Cut off roughly around $21K in 2023

What reduces GIS?
- RRSP/RRIF income
-dividend income
-NET rental income
-CPP
-workplace pension
-foreign pension
-OAS DOES NOT REDUCE GIS (exclude it)
- First $5,000 of income is excluded

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16
Q

EI Benefits Quick Facts

A
  • EI is taxable income
  • Withholding amount is applied to EI benefits (10% typically) so the amount your quoted will actually be less with the WHing
  • Not possible to accept EI while absent from Canada
  • one-week waiting period for payment
  • THere is no upper limit on who qualifies but there will be a clawback, assuming income stays at a high level… it will not take affect until the tax return is filed for the year in question

REGULAR: lost job through no fault of their own
MATERNITY: 600 insurable hours in the last 52 weeks
PARENTAL: up to 35 weeks, same with the 600 hours - extended available too
SICKNESS: 15 weeks
COMPASSIONATE Care: up to 26 weeks, family member gravely ill (likely to die within 26 weeks) “broad family member definition”
CAREGIVER: up to 15 weeks , care for an adult family member
PARENTS TO ILL CHILDREN: 35 weeks, must be a minor

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17
Q

OAS KNOW THIS:

A

Once 10 years of residency are accumulated after age 18, OAS can begin.

IF YOU HAVE NOT ACCUMULATED 10 YEARS YOU WILL NOT GET OAS… you can have two “right answers” for a CPP question mathematically but the correct answer will be minimum of 10 years

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18
Q

CPP Disability taxation

A

ALL disability benefits, even those extended to dependent children, are taxed in the disabled persons hands

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19
Q

What are some tax advantages of incorporating a business?

A
  1. IPP or RCA
  2. Incorporating gives limited personal liability for owners
  3. There is a lifetime capital gains exemption of over $971K in 2023 - this can be claimed against taxable capital gains, there are several tests to be met to meet these qualifications
  4. Proper corporate structure could allow for dividends to be paid to spouses or adult children allowing for some income splitting opportunities
  5. Small Business Deduction enjoys a lower corporate tax rate and increased cash flow for business
  6. Incorporating could allow for the use of an Estate Freeze, which would provide more efficient tax transfer of ownership for future generations
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20
Q

How to qualify for CMHC Homeowner Mortgage Loan Insurance?

A
  1. house must be in Canada
  2. max house price of $1M
  3. Minimum down payment is 5% and must come from buyers own sources, 5% on first $500K, 10% on $5001K-1M
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21
Q

What 4 Unities are required in Joint Tenancy?

A
  1. Unity of Interest - each tenant has equal ownership
  2. Unity of Title - Each has same quality of title
  3. Unity of Possession - each has equal right to the entire property
  4. Unity of Time - created for each at the same time
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22
Q

What happens if someone dies in Joint Tenancy

A
  • if one person dies the other automatically becomes the owner of the whole property, wills do not apply
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23
Q

What happens with Tenants in Common when someone dies?

A
  • Each owner keeps their interest in the property, when one dies that person’s share goes to his or her heirs in Will.
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24
Q

What are the 6 steps in the financial planning process?

A
  1. Determine current financial situation
  2. Develop financial goals
  3. Identify alternative courses of actions
  4. Evaluate alternatives
  5. Creating and implementing a financial action plan
  6. Monitor and review
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25
Q

Some additional facts with HBP

A
  1. $35K max per person
  2. If you withdraw some and repay you can withdraw that amount again to help a disabled person to buy a home
  3. You have to payback the funds within 15 years
  4. You can withdraw a single amount or make a series in same year, you just can’t exceed $35K
  5. Conditions:
    -first time home buyer
    -must have written agreement for home for yourself or disabled person
    -you must occupy new home
    -must be resident of canada
    - must be done before October 1 of the year after the year of the withdrawal
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26
Q

LLP / HBP facts

A
  • annual limit for an LLP withdraw is $10K, total limit is $20K
    -You can participate in LLP and HBP at same time
    -Max payback period is 10 years for LLP, 15 for HBP
  • HBP requires 1/15 repayment annually and 1/10 for the LLP annually
    -in order to pay back LLP over 10 years person must be in a full time program or continly enrolled in the program at the end of March the following year of LLP withdrawal
    -LLP payback MUST start fifth calendar year after your year of withdrawal
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27
Q

LLP RePayment Knowledge!!

A

You need to be a qualifying student in an enrolled program at least 3 months of the year and the repayment starts the earlier of these two scenarios:

a. IF YOU ARE you a qualified student you have to start making payments the 5th year after the first withdraw.. KEY WORD payment due in the 5th year after their first withdrawal.

b. if they do not meed the requirements two years in a row, say their program ends in 2017 then they would be required to make a payment in 2019, the second year they were not qualified. KEY WORD, payment due in the 2nd year they don’t qualify…

The payback amount minimum for LLPs is 1/10th, they have 10 years to pay back. Say they withdrew $5,000, they would owe $500 per year for 10 years.

If they did not make the payment CRA would automatically add it to their income for taxes.

28
Q

LLP Basics

A
  1. must enroll in qualifying education on full time basis (part time only if disabled conditions met)
  2. Funds withdrawn from LLP can be used for any purpose - they DO NOT have to be used specifically for education
  3. You can W/D $10K any calendar year - ANNUAL LIMIT
  4. You can withdraw within the specified limits of $10K / year max or $20K total max untul Jan 31 of the 4th year after first LLP withdrawal
  5. Yearly max $10K, Total Max $20K
  6. If you do not qualify you must pay back in 2nd year you do not qualify. Eg finish the course in 2017, first payment due 2019 (if you don’t pay it’ll be added to your income)
29
Q

GDSR limit

A

over 32% - 35% unacceptable , allowing a mortgage over this rate could be unacceptable as the couple would struggle to meet their debt service obligation causing undue stress.

30
Q

Home Buyers Plan time constraints on withdrawals

A

Taxpayer has to receive all the withdrawals from RRSP within a 13 month period that begins with the Jan 1 of the year, even if they actually take the funds in say November…

Say you take it in Nov 2020… you would have until Jan 31 2021 since the program assumes it starts Jan 1 2020 regardless of the actual month…

31
Q

What is liquidity required for in Financial Planning Theory (3 purposes)

A
  1. Emergency Fund
  2. Take advantage of investment opportunities
  3. To achieve short term goals (usually within a year)

It is NOT for paying known, pending expenses. Trick question… grr..

32
Q

Does the Code of Ethics allow references to be provided with client’s consent?

A

Yes..

33
Q

RESP Family Plan Stats, each bene must:

A
  • be related to each living subscriber or to a deceased OG subscriber by BLOOD, ADOPTION
  • must not be 21 (after 1998)
  • blood means parents, grandparents, siblings, children and grandchildren. EXCLUDE nieces and nephews or grand nieces and nephews.

Family Plan benefit is additional flexibility for contribute… if one bene doesn’t use their funds another bene can use them instead

INDIVIDUAL RESPS CAN BE FOR ANYONE (almost, including nieces and nephews, just not family ones)

34
Q

What is something with RRIF withdrawal that you are required to remember?

A

How to calculate your minimum annual RRIF withdrawal?

1 / (90 - your age) X market value of RRIF

35
Q

When instructed to “evaluate and provide a recommendation” what are the three things in order you should answer?

A
  1. Description of Options
  2. Implications of each for client
  3. Recommendation that is justified based on specific details of case
36
Q

Holding onto very little equites exposes you to what type of risk?

A

Inflation risk

37
Q

What type of fund would not attempt to beat the market?

A

A “passively” managed fund, which reduces “non-systematic risk”

38
Q

What happens to Bond prices when inflation goes up?

A

They devalue - coupons are fixed and as interest rates rise they make that bond less valuable

Rising inflation is bad for bonds

39
Q

What happens to stocks and bond prices when interest rates rise?

A

They both go down
If IR rates go down (falling iR), bonds and stock values go up because lower discount rates = higher valuation

40
Q

RESP for disabled person differs how?

A

Longer tax sheltering: 40 years vs 35 (max)
Plan length: 35 years vs 31

41
Q

What can you do with RESP’s that does not get used for qualified education?

A
  1. Transfer RESP cont to subscribers RRSP if they have cont room) up to $50K per subscriber
  2. W/D funds from RESP (fully taxable in subscribers hands)
  3. Transfer to another bene (another child)
  4. If disabled can contribute portion to RDSP (both cont and income portions) any CESGs and CLBs must be repaid though
42
Q

RESP vs RDSP

A
  1. Life time limit
    50K vs 300K
  2. Annual limit: both have none
  3. neither are tax dedictible for contributions
    4.
43
Q

Calculating Annualized Return:

A
44
Q

How Many years must you live in Canada to collect any form of OAS?

A

20 years AFTER the age of 18 or you live in another country that has a social agreement with Canada

45
Q

What should be the PRIMARY consideration in any Financial Plan Recommendation?

A

The Client’s stated objective. EG. to be mortgage free (even if it is not the most reasonable choice)

46
Q

CPP Disability Benefits create what…?

A

RRSP deduction limit

47
Q

CPP Disability Benefit is always….

A

Slightly more than the CPP Retirement Benefit, you can’t recieve both at the same time (age 65 it auto transfers to CPP retirement)

48
Q

DCP is…

A
  • ## not liquid up age age 55, you can transfer to LIRA and then LIF to withdrawal (earliest age)
49
Q

TFSA contribution room formula is:

A

New Room created (new year) + unused room + withdrawals from previous year

50
Q

What is the Pension Income Credit?

A

After age 65, $2,000 on “eligble” pension income, saves you about $300

51
Q

What is the only way to get money out of a DCP?

A

Convert to LIRA and then LIF

52
Q

When calculating OAS eligibility

A
  1. Know they must be living in Canada for a minimum of 20 years between their 18th and 65th birthdays
  2. If you are a candidate you can collect OAS no matter where you retire
  3. GIS cannot be collected while you’re a non-resident only
53
Q

Dividend Gross up rate is

A

38%

54
Q

The current Net Worth Statement uses what value on properties?

A

Fair Market Value FMV - CURRENT VALUE (not what your value is with depreciation costs)

55
Q

How are foreign dividends taxed?

A

They are NOT grossed up - they are taxed as regular income

56
Q

All these assets would roll over tax free to a spouse (including requesting a RRIF rollover within 60 days of death)

A

1 RRIF
2 Joint House
3 Shares in small business corp
4 collectibles with high value
5 GIC

57
Q

When moving to the USA or buying a rental, a big change could be?

A

Estate Taxes

58
Q

How long is the Principal Residence Exemption available ?

A

For up to 4 years while the owner is not residing there (assuming they are renting elsewehere)

59
Q

How long can charitable donation credits be carried forward?

A

3 years

Donations over $200 generate a 29% credit

33% tax credit applies to those in top federal tax bracket

60
Q

What is the difference between discretionary and non-discretionary expenses?

A

Non-discretionary; considered mandatory: house payment, fuel, food

Discretionary - considered non mandatory: vacation

61
Q

How much CPP premiums can you deduct as a self employed person?

A

Only HALF - like a hired employed person.. Employer does other half and self employed person does both but DOESN”T get two deductions, only 50%

62
Q

What is unique about DPSPs?

A

EMPLOYERS CONTRIBUTE ONLY - employees cannot

63
Q

What is the GST credit?

A

is a tax-free quarterly payment that helps individuals and families with low and modest incomes offset the GST or HST that they pay

64
Q

Where does OAS clawback start?

A

$86K plus and taxed 15% on top of 86K

65
Q

What is indicative of someone with a low debt service ratio?

A

Likely a good saver, high DSR would mean poor savings

66
Q

What are the rollover provisions for an eligible retiring allowance?

A

Rollover allowed amount is separate from RRSP contribution amount, if client has eligible retirement allowance rollover it will not affect his RRSP contribution room and can be rolled over even if there is none left.

67
Q
A