One of the interesting trends I have noticed in my household is that during the summer months spending tends to drop, due to:
This gives us a chance to try to catch up before the September onslaught of spending. September to December is the worst spending time for my family, due to start of school, sports and Christmas all piling in together and causing a glut of spending.
Did I mention it’s 6 months and 8 days until Christmas? Have you started planning yet?
I mean that in a facetious fashion of course, but productivity dropped for another quarter again, according to Stats Canada.

In the first quarter of 2008, the labour productivity of Canadian businesses declined for a second consecutive quarter, in a context of inclement weather, reduced working hours, and a widespread drop in manufacturing output, especially in the motor vehicle industry.
Productivity of Canadian businesses edged down 0.3% in the first quarter of 2008, slowing from the upward revised 0.7% decline in the fourth quarter of 2007. The back-to-back declines followed four quarters of growth.
I think higher gas prices is going to be hitting us and a much stronger Canadian Dollar is going to really hurt manufacturing for a good long while.
BCE takeover bid takes another step towards wherever it may end up with a Supreme Court hearing being set. This expedited hearing means that BCE’s battle with it’s bondholders might be over soon and the final fate of BCE may be known before my kids go back to school? Maybe a little premature on that, but who knows?
More importantly the BCE board has defferred on whether to declare a second quarter dividend until the end of June, and speculation has it that that money might be used as part of a deal with the bondholders.
The Canadian Press reported Friday that one scenario would see the $294 million that otherwise would be paid as the second-quarter dividend instead used to compensate bondholders.
Hey, that’s my money! I am a shareholder and I hold BCE as a dividend paying asset, and you guys are keeping my money? Hey!
BMO analyst did a survey and even with the Canadian dollar hovering around parity with it’s American cousin, prices of things in Canada are still 18% more expensive than they are in the U.S. . Is this surprising, not to me, price gouging has been going on for Canadians for a good long time, and I don’t expect parity in pricing in the next year if the Canadian Dollar stays at parity. When a CD costs $12.99 in Canada and $9.99 in the US (the same one) you can see that the Canadian market is not that important to the manufacturers. Do I sound bitter? You bet.
Now with companies like Kia and Rogers using the “If you didn’t buy coffee you could buy this” in their advertising (please note I mentioned this first in the Tim Horton’s Savings Plan many years ago), maybe Tim Horton’s should start their own bank, like PC Financial. Offer points for frequent users and then they can introduce the save a nickel with every coffee, which would be their customer lock. Each time a customer buys with their Pre-paid card, 5 cents is deposited in a savings account for them (or their RRSP), Scotiabank already offers something like this as do other financial institutions.
Look for the “Bank of the Big Cajun Man” coming soon!
As with last month, this month’s year over year increase was lower at 5.2% and the month over month increase was Zero, which is quite interesting too. Have a look in the attached table for where you live and the new house price increase.
New housing prices increased at their slowest pace in more than two and a half years in April, despite strong markets in Saskatchewan, Newfoundland and Labrador and Nova Scotia.
| New Housing Price Indexes | |||||
|---|---|---|---|---|---|
| April 2008 | April 2007 to April 2008 | March to April 2008 | |||
| (1997=100) | % change | ||||
| Canada total | 158.4 | 5.2 | 0.0 | ||
| House only | 168.1 | 4.9 | -0.1 | ||
| Land only | 139.5 | 6.2 | 0.2 | ||
| St. John’s | 154.1 | 16.3 | 3.6 | ||
| Halifax | 148.2 | 11.3 | 0.0 | ||
| Charlottetown | 119.4 | 2.0 | 0.1 | ||
| Saint John, Fredericton and Moncton | 115.8 | 2.6 | 0.0 | ||
| Québec | 154.0 | 5.0 | 1.0 | ||
| Montréal | 159.2 | 4.3 | -0.1 | ||
| Ottawa–Gatineau | 166.4 | 3.2 | 0.1 | ||
| Toronto and Oshawa | 145.8 | 4.6 | 0.1 | ||
| Hamilton | 152.9 | 3.2 | -0.1 | ||
| St. Catharines–Niagara | 157.0 | 4.9 | 0.5 | ||
| Kitchener | 142.2 | 3.0 | 0.2 | ||
| London | 141.7 | 4.6 | 0.6 | ||
| Windsor | 103.8 | -0.2 | 0.4 | ||
| Greater Sudbury and Thunder Bay | 110.8 | 5.4 | 0.0 | ||
| Winnipeg | 174.5 | 14.8 | 0.1 | ||
| Regina | 238.3 | 34.0 | 7.1 | ||
| Saskatoon | 241.6 | 43.7 | 0.4 | ||
| Calgary | 251.0 | 2.5 | -0.8 | ||
| Edmonton | 241.5 | 8.1 | -0.6 | ||
| Vancouver | 124.7 | 5.4 | 0.1 | ||
| Victoria | 119.0 | 1.9 | -0.3 | ||
|
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Now that we have figured out how to track our Mortgage using this Mortgage Work Sheet with Excel , we can now start doing some interesting tricks to see what we can do with our Mortgages.
I have some dear friends who paid off the houses they lived in, very quickly each time they moved from house to house (as their family grew). They both had good paying jobs, so they set up a simple goal with their Mortgage, each Mortgage payment they made, they were going to “double up” (i.e. pay a double payment to the bank). They had chosen the type of Mortgage (so there were no penalties to make extra payments) and sure enough they paid off their houses incredibly quickly.
How quickly could this be? If we go back to the model I have been using all week, this is how fast our family could pay off their house if they doubled up on their payments.
| Date | Payment | Interest | Principal | OverPayment | Balance | Total Interest |
| 01-Jun-08 | $0.00 | $100,000.00 | $0.00 | |||
| 1-Jul-08 | $636.84 | $489.80 | $147.04 | $636.84 | $99,216.12 | $489.80 |
| 1-Aug-08 | $636.84 | $485.96 | $150.88 | $636.84 | $98,428.40 | $975.75 |
| 1-Sep-08 | $636.84 | $482.10 | $154.74 | $636.84 | $97,636.83 | $1,457.85 |
| 1-Oct-08 | $636.84 | $478.22 | $158.62 | $636.84 | $96,841.37 | $1,936.07 |
| 1-Nov-08 | $636.84 | $474.33 | $162.51 | $636.84 | $96,042.02 | $2,410.40 |
| 1-Dec-08 | $636.84 | $470.41 | $166.43 | $636.84 | $95,238.76 | $2,880.81 |
| 1-Jan-09 | $636.84 | $466.48 | $170.36 | $636.84 | $94,431.56 | $3,347.29 |
| 1-Feb-09 | $636.84 | $462.52 | $174.32 | $636.84 | $93,620.41 | $3,809.81 |
| 1-Mar-09 | $636.84 | $458.55 | $178.29 | $636.84 | $92,805.28 | $4,268.36 |
| 1-Apr-09 | $636.84 | $454.56 | $182.28 | $636.84 | $91,986.16 | $4,722.92 |
| 1-May-09 | $636.84 | $450.55 | $186.29 | $636.84 | $91,163.03 | $5,173.46 |
| 1-Jun-09 | $636.84 | $446.51 | $190.32 | $636.84 | $90,335.87 | $5,619.97 |
| And a lot of time passes | ||||||
| 1-Jan-14 | $636.84 | $191.50 | $445.34 | $636.84 | $38,015.14 | $23,351.38 |
| 1-Feb-14 | $636.84 | $186.20 | $450.64 | $636.84 | $36,927.66 | $23,537.57 |
| 1-Mar-14 | $636.84 | $180.87 | $455.97 | $636.84 | $35,834.86 | $23,718.44 |
| 1-Apr-14 | $636.84 | $175.52 | $461.32 | $636.84 | $34,736.70 | $23,893.96 |
| 1-May-14 | $636.84 | $170.14 | $466.70 | $636.84 | $33,633.17 | $24,064.10 |
| 1-Jun-14 | $636.84 | $164.73 | $472.10 | $636.84 | $32,524.22 | $24,228.83 |
| 1-Jul-14 | $636.84 | $159.30 | $477.54 | $636.84 | $31,409.85 | $24,388.14 |
| 1-Aug-14 | $636.84 | $153.84 | $482.99 | $636.84 | $30,290.02 | $24,541.98 |
| 1-Sep-14 | $636.84 | $148.36 | $488.48 | $636.84 | $29,164.70 | $24,690.34 |
| 1-Oct-14 | $636.84 | $142.85 | $493.99 | $636.84 | $28,033.88 | $24,833.19 |
| 1-Nov-14 | $636.84 | $137.31 | $499.53 | $636.84 | $26,897.51 | $24,970.50 |
| 1-Dec-14 | $636.84 | $131.74 | $505.09 | $636.84 | $25,755.58 | $25,102.24 |
| 1-Jan-15 | $636.84 | $126.15 | $510.69 | $636.84 | $24,608.05 | $25,228.39 |
| 1-Feb-15 | $636.84 | $120.53 | $516.31 | $636.84 | $23,454.91 | $25,348.92 |
| 1-Mar-15 | $636.84 | $114.88 | $521.96 | $636.84 | $22,296.11 | $25,463.80 |
| 1-Apr-15 | $636.84 | $109.21 | $527.63 | $636.84 | $21,131.64 | $25,573.01 |
| 1-May-15 | $636.84 | $103.50 | $533.34 | $636.84 | $19,961.47 | $25,676.51 |
| 1-Jun-15 | $636.84 | $97.77 | $539.07 | $636.84 | $18,785.57 | $25,774.28 |
| 1-Jul-15 | $636.84 | $92.01 | $544.83 | $636.84 | $17,603.90 | $25,866.29 |
| 1-Aug-15 | $636.84 | $86.22 | $550.61 | $636.84 | $16,416.45 | $25,952.51 |
| 1-Sep-15 | $636.84 | $80.41 | $556.43 | $636.84 | $15,223.18 | $26,032.92 |
| 1-Oct-15 | $636.84 | $74.56 | $562.27 | $636.84 | $14,024.07 | $26,107.48 |
| 1-Nov-15 | $636.84 | $68.69 | $568.15 | $636.84 | $12,819.08 | $26,176.17 |
| 1-Dec-15 | $636.84 | $62.79 | $574.05 | $636.84 | $11,608.20 | $26,238.96 |
| 1-Jan-16 | $636.84 | $56.86 | $579.98 | $636.84 | $10,391.38 | $26,295.82 |
| 1-Feb-16 | $636.84 | $50.90 | $585.94 | $636.84 | $9,168.60 | $26,346.71 |
| 1-Mar-16 | $636.84 | $44.91 | $591.93 | $636.84 | $7,939.83 | $26,391.62 |
| 1-Apr-16 | $636.84 | $38.89 | $597.95 | $636.84 | $6,705.05 | $26,430.51 |
| 1-May-16 | $636.84 | $32.84 | $604.00 | $636.84 | $5,464.21 | $26,463.35 |
| 1-Jun-16 | $636.84 | $26.76 | $610.07 | $636.84 | $4,217.30 | $26,490.11 |
| 1-Jul-16 | $636.84 | $20.66 | $616.18 | $636.84 | $2,964.28 | $26,510.77 |
| 1-Aug-16 | $636.84 | $14.52 | $622.32 | $636.84 | $1,705.13 | $26,525.29 |
| 1-Sep-16 | $636.84 | $8.35 | $628.49 | $636.84 | $439.80 | $26,533.64 |
That’s amazing, you pay off the house in 8 years (give or take a month or two). Can most people do this? Not very likely, but it is something to think about and play with. Can you pay off your house early if you give up going out as much, and instead pay your Mortgage down? That is the question to ask.
With this worksheet you can explore the following interesting scenarios:
Use this worksheet as a tool, and learn about what you can and cannot do when you buy your house.