Archive for April, 2009

Boring is the new Sexy

Boring is the new Sexy

Canada Will Emerge From Global Crisis First

For a long time now Canada has had to put up with jibes about being a boring country. This is something that Canadians have come to live with in a sense. Being called boring isn’t nice, exactly, but there comes a point where you cease to care what people think about you based on your nationality. Equally, ask an Irish person if it bothers them to be called “stupid”. This clichéd image of friendly, but drunken and unintelligent Irish, people was common currency for years. That Ireland had turned out Oscar Wilde, George Bernard Shaw and W.B. Yeats was ignored. Now Irish people are happy for someone to underestimate them – as it means the advantage is with them.

Equally, while Canada was carrying on being “boring”, other more “exciting” nations were mortgaging their futures on the wave of credit that never seemed to slow at all. While the banks were taking on customers in their millions, and those customers were buying expensive goods, houses and cars, there may well have been many people who looked at Canada from the outside and considered its financial caution to be boring and pedestrian. But looking at Canada’s financial position, which has attracted somewhat envious compliments from US President Barack Obama, who would swap places with the “exciting” countries now?

Yes, there is a recession in Canada, and it will not be here today, gone tomorrow. There are hurdles to clear, and right now it is a little more difficult to get a home loan than it was a few years ago. But with the government’s financial policies having stipulated caution while all around were deregulating and hiding behind credit – very shaky credit at that – the Canadian banks have not required bailouts like in the US, Britain, Germany and elsewhere. This means that while those countries are still recovering from the battering that their economies took, and looking at a tax burden that could persist for some time, Canada will emerge in a better position.

Finance Minister Jim Flaherty has recently expressed an opinion that will probably write a thousand headlines between now and the end of the global crisis. Speaking to a seminar in Chicago on financial literacy he gave the opinion that “boring is the new sexy”. There are very few countries in the world that would not love to be where Canada is right now, and fewer still who wouldn’t like to be where Canada is going. Having succumbed last to the crisis, Canada is due to escape it first – and then, the possibilities are intriguing.

Sure, nothing is guaranteed in this climate, and even if there are positive signs, it would not be a typically “Canadian” attitude to crow about the relative strength of our position. But if the current global situation shows us anything, it is that being “boring” while everyone else is counting on the goose to continue laying golden eggs can be a very wise decision. Just watch the other global economies once they are back on their feet. They’re likely to be a lot more “boring” than before. Especially now that they know how sexy it is.

 

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There is no doubt that an over-reliance on credit is a bad thing. One has only to look at the mess that the world is currently in to see that the banks’ readiness to lend to people who really should not have been borrowing was unwise. Equally, some of those people doing the borrowing must have been aware that what they were doing carried a huge risk. And yet, if handled correctly, credit can be a way of doing things to your advantage in the long term.

To make credit work for you, you need to keep in mind that risk management is a vital part of the process. As far as possible you need to keep risk out of the equation altogether. You need to keep your interests, your long-term security and needs in the forefront of your mind. Although things like high-value purchases of consumer items may seem hugely tempting, they are to be ignored if there is any chance that they will infringe on your financial security.

So in reading this, you may well be questioning how credit can be your friend at all. The truth of the matter is that credit allows you to spread life’s costs. This is possible without a great deal of risk, because banks will be happy to give good lending deals to people who show the ability to manage credit. And you can do this by living on credit. Don’t worry – this is not as risky as it sounds. It simply involves using the rules to your advantage, and requires discipline (so if you are prone to getting distracted by bargains, do not proceed unless you are sure you can restrain yourself).

The first step is to open a savings account. The best one to go for is one that has either got no limit as to how much you can put in monthly or over a year, or a limit that matches or exceeds your salary. Of the options this leaves you, pick the one with the highest rate of interest. This account is where you want to put your wages each month.

Now, take out a credit card. The experiment ends here if a bank will not give you a credit card due to past borrowing nightmares – but that is probably a good thing. This credit card will be what you use to do your essential shopping. Groceries? On the card. Fuel? On the card. Bills? On the card, if possible. Is this reckless spending? No, it is not because you are going to pay the balance off, in full, before it gets the chance to accrue interest. Most cards accrue interest monthly, but it is not going to be an issue if you monitor your card balance and withdraw from the savings account to pay it off e very time a balance appears.

If you do this with a modicum of discipline you will find that there is still money in the savings account at the end of the month, and it is accruing interest. Meanwhile, your credit score is increasing with every full balance payment you make to the card. Not only are you financially solvent, but you are making savings, and have the borrowing power to get the best mortgage possible should you have your eye on a house, or a loan to buy a car. And the savings? They come in very handy if you want to bring down the monthly payments on a loan.

 

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Canada will be one of the first countries to climb out of the mess

As things stand today, there are few parts of the globe that have not been touched by the problems in financial markets – problems which began in earnest over a year ago now and have been worsening ever since. The situation right now seems to point to a global recession which will only begin to lift during the latter part of next year. While playing the blame game is certainly not going to help anyone, there is a lot of blame flying around anyway, most of which is being aimed at the most acquisitive economies, and a large amount of that is directed squarely at the United States. Conversely, experts seem to have mostly good things to say about Canada.

There is little doubt that part of the reason for this is the proximity with the United States, which allows a side-by-side comparison between neighbours. While the crisis itself has been attributed to the sub-prime mortgage lending crisis in the US – although this is only part of the story, and the sub-prime market’s collapse was more catalyst than cause – the global nature of the markets ensures that when one economy takes a blow, the businesses which have investments in that economy suffer also. Hence, it was not just US banks that suffered in the light of the credit crisis, and when the problems precipitated a comparatively small gust of wind, those businesses which were not built on the strongest of foundations began to collapse.

The credit crisis, therefore, may have been catalyzed by what was happening in the US, but it immediately affected banks in the United Kingdom, Germany, Japan (which was already having problems) and beyond. To date it has even caused governments to be recalled, including that of Iceland, which had been surfing a wave of financial well-being. Canada itself has been far from untouched, but the current suffering here has been more of an inevitable outcome of global problems than a headlong plunge precipitated by failure to plan. While other countries pretty much dived head first into the cracks, Canada was slowly sucked towards them before sliding over the edge. Therefore, when the markets begin their definitive improvement, Canada will be one of the first countries to climb out of the mess.

There are so many stereotypes about supposed national tendencies, and some of the more unkind ones seem to imply that Canada is a country where nothing much happens, and what does happen is not that exciting. Anyone living here can see how inaccurate that is. The upside, however, of that stereotype is that Canada tends to find itself in better shape than others having refused to gamble away everything it owns.

Things right now are shaky – not just in Canada, but in most of the world – but this does mean that if you have cash to invest, prices now are at their lowest in some time and may not have far to fall. And once the economic indicators dictate that we are on the way to recovery, watch those numbers climb. Much better to watch it from Canada than anywhere else.

 

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Canada Mortgage

Canada Mortgage

Canada has not been immune to the credit crisis that has hit the world over the last eighteen months, but there are many inside Canada and out who feel that of all the major developed nations things have been handled better in Canada than anywhere else. This is down, in no small part, to a sense that Canadian banks have had more sensible lending policies and that panic is something that is not a major part of the Canadian psyche. A recent IMF report has said that Canada is actually specifically well placed to handle any further economic crisis and has applauded the $400billion stimulus plan unveiled in January as being the right amount at the right time. In addition, Canada has been recognized as the last country to succumb to the crisis and is expected to be the first to lift itself out.

What this means for those hoping to buy a house in Canada is that there may never be a better time, if you currently have the borrowing power, to buy one. By taking advantage of the effects of the crisis – admittedly something that causes a moral issue for many – one can find some bargains that will begin to increase in price once the clouds start to lift. The question is, where should you go in order to borrow the money it will take to buy? With Canada less marked than other countries by the crisis – but marked nonetheless, no doubt – the banks are more willing to lend to those who can show credit worthiness than banks in other countries.

Before you decide on a mortgage, the first and most important step is to shore up your own position. This can be done chiefly in two ways. Firstly, it is vitally important to save cash for a deposit, or down payment. If you can place this in a high-yield savings account, so much the better. By putting aside more money, you will cut into how much money you have to borrow when the day comes. This can dramatically change how much you have to pay back, and bring a number of properties within your reach that would have been fantasy purchases otherwise. It will take a bit of time to make significant savings, but the base that this gives you and the difference that it makes will be well worth the wait.

In addition, you should live on credit for a while. Yes, you read that correctly, but do not make the mistake of thinking that this is advice to go crazy with your Mastercard. The reason for this possibly controversial advice is actually fairly sensible. If you make purchases on your credit card and pay them off immediately, you build up a strong credit rating. And the people with the better credit ratings get better mortgages. By  paying off credit card purchases the moment they hit your balance, you will avoid having to pay interest, so there is no penalty for use. It’s a more roundabout way of doing things, sure – but it’ll get you into that house quicker! Try to make sure, too, that you do not have high balances on any lines of credit when you apply for your mortgage – this will badly squeeze your borrowing power.

 

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Global Credit Crisis and Canadians