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Type: Posts; User: Echo
Try Unhaggle - http://www.unhaggle.com/
Ok, this is insane (if it's true) - http://gawker.com/for-sale-a-video-of-toronto-mayor-rob-ford-smoking-cra-507736569
Edit: Looks like The Star saw the video, but they claim they didn't buy it -...
Maybe she decided to trim her client list and pawned off the clients she didn't like dealing with onto the new PBR :)
I contribute 10% of my salary toward my defined benefit pension so, psychologically, I want to account for that somewhere in my net worth. Each year I get an annual statement that gives me the...
Our house represents about 68% of our total assets and the home equity represents about 42% of our total net worth. I'm 33 years old.
I don't think Lending Club accepts Canadian investors. According to their FAQ, only the residents 27 of 50 states are eligible to invest -...
Here's a brilliant (and hilarious) 3-part series done by The Daily Show's John Oliver on gun control and how Australia successfully regulated guns back in 1996:
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I only agreed to look at the review copy after I saw that Jon Chevreau posted a review on MoneySense - http://www.moneysense.ca/2013/04/29/10000-gold/
Apparently he knows the author, but he gave...
I got a review copy of this book, too. I think I'll follow Andrew's advice.
A poll conducted by me and my wife revealed that husbands who refer to their wives as 'The Wife' are 100% more likely to have separate finances.
We're a single-income household so all our...
@Ponderling - the lender is still making some money from this deal because they'll charge a mortgage admin fee and an RRSP admin fee (maybe up to $500 per year)
Some good discussion in the...
And spinning off $150,000+ per year in dividends!
Wow, congrats Marina!
Not to mention mortgage debt is super cheap right now with 5 year rates under 3% and 10 year rates under 4%. Debt to income ratio is not a good metric on an individual household level.
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Some homeowners are leveraged 10:1 (1,000%) and you'd lose sleep over 160% debt to income ratio? You wouldn't be comfortable with an $80,000 mortgage if you made $50,000 a year?