Tangerine Bank Offers a Free e-Book Copy of the Wealthy Barber Returns

I recently downloaded a free copy of The Wealthy Barber Returns from the Tangerine website—you may want to also before December 31, 2016.

Who Is The Wealthy Barber and From Where Is He Returning?

Way back when it was fairly new, I read a library book called The Wealthy Barber. It was written before discount brokerage accounts were easily available, before the internet was widely used and before ETFs existed. In the book, the author pointed out that saving first, automatically so you wouldn’t really notice the money getting taken, into a very diverse number of stocks could help you become modestly rich by retirement. I liked the diversity idea, and bought some units in a relatively low-fee mutual fund that mimicked the Toronto Stock exchange from a Big Canadian bank which was a reasonably good choice in those days.

Now the financial landscape has changed significantly. If you have $10 000 to $15 000 you can open a discount online brokerage account with no annual fees or charges. In your account, you can buy units of Exchange Traded Funds, ETFs, where you can see exactly what price you will be paying because the sale takes place immediately, not at the close of the day. You can find ETFs which have extremely low fees, such as some of the Vanguard and Blackrock funds. And you can find ETFs that hold a very diverse number of stocks, for example a fund that mimics the S&P TSX-Composite Index, or similar indices in New York or in stock exchanges around the world.

So the author of The Wealthy Barber decided to write an updated book. He or his publisher coined the name “The Wealthy Barber Returns.” I guess he’s returned to the book shelves at your local library. And to the cloud called the internet, in e-book form.

The Wealthy Barber himself is a fictional character. He’s an every day person with a modest-income job who manages to save his way to a nice retirement lifestyle.

Why I Keep an Eye on the RedFlagDeals Personal Finance Forum

I check the posts on the RedFlagDeals personal finance discussion website as a hobby. I cringe reading confessions of over-spending and bad credit. I wince reading the cynicism some commenters exhibit when discussing matrimony and common law relationships. And I get interested when I read about good high interest rate promotions at banks or good new information about pensions and cutting costs.

Last week, I noticed a post there which included a link to the Tangerine website. Apparently Tangerine is offering free electronic copies of the e-Book “The Wealthy Barber Returns.” Although I have already borrowed the book from the library and read it, I went and downloaded a copy. It’s a book for which I don’t mind using a few KB of storage.

If you’d like a copy, the link is
A Gift from Tangerine To You

You might want to visit the RedFlagDeals post and click on Thanks to the original poster, if you download the book.

I don’t know when Tangerine will take down the offer. The book was available on Monday September 26, 2016. It might be gone at any time. The deadline on their website says “By December 31 2016.” If I notice it’s been removed, I will update this post, but I don’t intend to keep a careful watch on the site. (Perhaps if you notice it’s gone you could add a comment here to warn me? If so, you’d have my thanks and that of other readers!)

Now I’m going to make a cup of tea and re-read it.

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Do you follow the advice of The Wealthy Barber and automatically save part of each and every pay cheque? Please share your savings strategy with a comment.

No Easy Answers to Saving in The Retirement Catch-Up Guide

Like most library patrons, I keep an eye on the books sitting on display shelves and happily pick up any that sound interesting: after all, if the book isn’t good it didn’t cost me anything to try it. (I prefer to only buy books that I will read more than once, like Terry Pratchett novels.) The Retirement Catch-Up Guide seemed like a catchy title, so I snagged it looking for any easy answers to increasing our savings or improving our pensions.

Check the Country of Origin of Retirement Books

When I opened the book at home the first thing I noticed was the annoying phrases “Uncle Sam”, “IRAs, and Roth IRAs”  and “401(k)” littering the Introduction’s starting page. I had made the classic mistake of not checking the country of origin of the book. Fortunately, I hadn’t bought the book. I decided to read it anyway, in case there were ideas that could cross the border successfully. Sections on avoiding taxes and so on, however, were irritatingly common.

For example, in the USA State taxes can vary greatly depending on what services, or lack of services, the state provides. If you look at an income tax calculator for Canadian taxes, though, like the one that Ernst and Young provides, you’ll find there isn’t a huge difference in provincial taxes. That’s because our provinces all offer a fairly similar level of service . So the book’s advice to consider moving to another State to significantly lower your taxes isn’t particularly useful to Canadians intending to stay in Canada.

Some of the advice about minimizing taxes and mortgages is also not relevant in Canada. Generally speaking, we can’t deduct mortgage interest costs from our income taxes.

Check the Date of Original Publication of Retirement Books

The copy of the book I borrowed had been acquired by the library in 2006. But it was first published in 2000. That means it was likely written in 1998 or 1999. It had been revised in 2003 but not as much as you might expect given the dot-com stock market bubble popped.

The book is based on “real” examples of situations people found themselves in while approaching or in retirement. That means that the amounts of dollars that they were saving or receiving were the real amounts in the late 1990s when the book’s data was collected. With inflation, though, these numbers now seem ridiculously small. It’s jarring to read.

Similarly, the numbers quoted for “average” rates of return seem ridiculously high. Here’s an example, “She will sell an investment property that she’s been renting out, and re-invest the proceeds—hopefully at a 15 percent rate of return per year.” I wish!

What’s Good about The Retirement Catch-Up Guide

  • The book does have some good advice and some good points, though.
  • It leads the reader through the basic steps required to plan for retirement, although without a great deal of detail. For example, the reader should
  • Check all of the possible sources of income for retirement. The book gives examples of some that people might have overlooked.
  • Plan what retirement looks like. Someone who plans to travel the world playing the top golf course in each country will need more retirement funds than someone who plans to downsize to a rented apartment in a small town where their children live and provide childcare for their grandchildren in return for meals.
  • Estimate what retirement costs will need to be paid.
  • Look for creative ways to increase retirement savings or income. Some examples include people selling real estate and investing the proceeds or buying real estate as an investment or as a rental income option. Many people upgraded their skills and looked for jobs that paid more for their last 15 working years. Others planned to work part-time in retirement, often for themselves, and acquired the skills they would need to make that happen while still working.
  • Consider whether you can maximize your retirement living while minimizing your costs by re-locating. The book describes how some retirees moved out of the country and within the country to reduce their costs of living.

What’s Bad About the Retirement Catch-Up Guide

  • It’s outdated. This really shows up in the expected rates of return for investing and costs of living.
  • It’s fairly shallow. You can’t describe well how to invest in 10 pages including the stock market, real estate and a personal business.
  • It’s country-specific to the USA.

Recommendation for the Retirement Catch-Up Guide

If you have this book freely available, for example at your library, it may be worth a quick read through, especially if you live in the US. Generally, though, I’d skip this one and look for a more recent book written for the country you live in.

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Do you have any miraculous tips for improving retirement savings for someone a few years from making the leap? Please share your hints with a comment.