The best GIC rates in Canada for 2025 + MORE Feb 10th

How prorogation will impact capital gains tax changes in Canada + MORE Jan 6th

Nvidia’s earnings: Blackwell AI chips play into (another) stock price rise + MORE Nov 21st
What Canadian finance pros need to know about money and mental health Nov 28th
'No options' on tariffs without more time, says company importing from U.S. - CBC Apr 18th
How much money should I have saved by age 40?
– moneysense.ca
All the while, you’ve got a serious case of FOMO every time you check social media—all those friends who are jetting off on lavish vacations, buying new cars and splurging on cottages. How are ordinary Canadians actually doing this? And how can you get ahead and save more?
What’s the average savings for Canadians in their 30s? How much should they have saved?
A lot of Canadians are managing to save, despite the above financial challenges and obligations. According to Statistics Canada’s 2019 figures (the most recent available), the average person under age 35 had saved $9,905 towards retirement (RRSPs only) and held $27,425 in non-pension financial assets…
The best dividend stocks in Canada 2024
– moneysense.ca

Overview
Top 100 Dividend Stocks
Past Performance
Methodology
Best Dividends in Canada Table of Contents
Top 100 Dividend Stocks
Past Performance
Methodology
It has been a lousy couple of years for dividend investors in Canada. First, the stock market meltdown of 2022 destroyed capital for most stock investors, then rising bond yields in 2023 served to lure investors’ money out of dividend stocks. If you had a selection of Canadian dividend payers at the start of 2022, it’s quite possible they’ve experienced a capital loss. The Dow Jones Canada Select Dividend Index had an annualized rate of return of -0.11% for the two-year period ending Dec. 31, 2023.
The good news, though, is that the field of dividend stocks today is looking lean and fit in terms of both yield and valuation, which could position Canadian dividend investors to reap gains in 2024…
Top 100 dividend stocks in Canada 2024
– moneysense.ca

Overview
Top 100 Dividend Stocks
Past Performance
Methodology
Best Dividends in Canada Table of Contents
OverviewPast PerformanceMethodology
Top 100 dividend stocks in Canada
With the Bank of Canada having cut interest rates for the first time in four years in June, and again in July, we may have reached an inflection point, according to market watchers. Dividend stocks, which have underperformed the past two years as interest rates rapidly rose, are poised to come into their own.
High rates punish dividend payers in two ways, the theory goes. They lure capital towards safer interest-bearing assets such as bonds and guaranteed investment certificates (GICs) that now boast competitive yields. And they raise financing costs for dividend-heavy sectors that do a lot of borrowing, such as utilities, pipelines and real estate…