Stock news for investors: Mixed Q4 results with big profit gains for Enbridge, Nutrien, and Cenovus + MORE Feb 21st
Stock news for investors: Groupe Dynamite reports strong Q4, adjusts 2025 outlook Jan 17th
Who you gonna trust: Barry Ritholtz or Jim Cramer? + MORE Oct 25th
A simple guide to investing your first $500 + MORE Jan 24th
Stock news: Dividend hikes, earnings results, and what moved Canadian stocks this week + MORE Feb 7th
Stock news for investors: Groupe Dynamite Q2 profit jumps to $63.9M on strong sales growth
– moneysense.ca
Here’s a round-up of news for Canadian investors this week.
Groupe Dynamite
Roots
Transat A.T. Inc.
Empire Co. Ltd.
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How to plan for old age when you don’t have kids
– moneysense.ca
In fact, the proportion of Canadian women without biological children has been rising steadily, up to 17.4% of those over 50 in 2022. And family sizes are smaller than they used to be, which lowers the chances that the kids people do have will be nearby, available, and capable of helping. “Many people assume their adult children will step in to help with things like tech issues, downsizing or health care,” says Kara Day, a financial planner in Vancouver. “If you don’t have kids to lean on, retirement looks different, and it requires more intentional planning…
Should you sell stocks you inherit?
– moneysense.ca
How are stocks taxed when you inherit them?
When a spouse or common law partner is a beneficiary, assets can be transferred to them on a tax deferred basis. So, for this section, we will assume a non-spouse beneficiary.
For non-spouse beneficiaries, inheriting stocks usually triggers tax consequences at the estate level, not for the individual. The estate settles any taxes owed before distributing the after-tax proceeds to the heirs.
A registered account like a registered retirement savings plan (RRSP) or registered retirement income fund (RRIF) is fully taxable based on the account value. The market value of the account on the date of death is considered income to the deceased. The tax is payable on their final tax return. Income or growth after that is taxable to the beneficiary:
If the estate is named as beneficiary, it will pay the incremental tax…


