Preview Mode Links will not work in preview mode

The Rob Tetrault Show - BA, JD, MBA, CIM


Oct 5, 2019

RRSP Investment Options 

You want to avoid putting the wrong type of investments in an RRSP. You’ll end up paying a fee and you’ll have to pull the money out. There's consequences and taxes on that because CRA doesn't like it.

Let’s look at what you can and can't put in there.

If you received a letter from CRA and you don't know what to do, please go to speaktorob.com, fill out the form. We will schedule a no obligation strategy call to hopefully put your mind at ease.

The RRSP eligible investments is like the TFSA eligible investments. You can put a whole bunch of different stuff in there.

Full Video & Blog Article on TFSA vs RRSP 

You can put term deposits, GICs and you can put most of what is done through a branch level. You can also put stocks, bonds, preferred shares, debentures, derivatives and any kind of security that trades on an exchange.

A derivative is effectively a call or a put. It's an option if you will, to buy or sell a stock at a future date at a future price. Those can be very volatile.

They're a swing and a miss, but if you are owning them, sometimes it would make sense for you to own that in an RRSP.

You could also do real estate investment trusts, exchange traded funds, mutual funds, SEG funds and bonds.

You can do provincial bonds, corporate bonds, Canadian government bonds and Canada savings bonds.

You can actually put your own mortgage or structure a mortgage product to put in your own RRSP. They also have private mortgage funds like private debt funds.

Alternative asset classes such as real estate and private REITS can be included in there as well. CRA does not maintain a list of those specific investments that are qualified or not qualified, nor do they make determinations.

If CRA feels you're breaking the rules, then they're going to reach out to you and let you know.

Hypothetically, let’s pretend you own shares of a private corporation that doesn't trade on the exchange or you might even own options, which are derivatives of a publicly traded company.

Perhaps, you are given options and the right to buy your own company stock at a future date and maybe the shares are now worth dramatically more than they were when you were starting out in the company.

You might have warrants to buy shares of your company at 15 cents and you think those are worth 2 bucks.

Perhaps, you’re thinking of putting those in your RRSP and that you’re going to get all the growth tax-free in the RRSP. Well, you need to pump the brakes.

CRA won't like that and when they catch it, they DO fine.

They’ll reverse it. CRA will make you reverse it and you end up being way worse off than had you been if you just owned it personally.

Publicly owned corporations and the options on publicly owned corporations are the two big ones to consider avoiding.

With respect to RRSP contributions and when you are making the contribution and investing in there, what advisors typically do, they will put the same investments, the same cookie cutter portfolios in your TFSA, in your RRSP, in your non-registered account, in your LIRA, and your corporate account.

All of the investments are the same across the board. To me, that makes no sense and that is not taking advantage of the fact that there are different tax rates and different tax implications for the different accounts.

If you have that RRSP account, that is a prime opportunity. You're deferring the tax and you're getting tax free growth in there.

If you have a private MIC in your portfolio that's yielding 8% that is classified as income, or if you have a PPN or a note that's going to be classified as income, that would be a perfect spot in the RRSP. Reason being is that you get the tax rate growth, it gets converted and doesn't get treated as income.

Whereby, you could have stuff like dividend paying stocks, private REITs and publicly traded REITs in your non-registered account where the tax implications are much favorable to you.

It’s something to consider when you are making that RRSP contribution and you're considering whether your RRSP investments are qualified.

If you need advice on your RRSP, please go to speaktorob.com, we'd love to chat about that more with you.

📞 Call us directly at 204-259-2856 to schedule your FREE consultation