The Globe and Mail - 08.04.2020

(WallPaper) #1

B10 OTHEGLOBEANDMAIL | WEDNESDAY,APRIL8,2020


GLOBEINVESTOR


T


he coronavirus pandemic
is hitting older Canadians
hard on two fronts: health
and wealth. Those with regis-
tered retirement income funds
(RRIFs) are facing the further
problem of the mandated RRIF
minimum-withdrawal schedule,
which will force them to cash out
some of their investments during
a serious market downturn.
Canadians are required to con-
vert their registered retirement
savings plans (RRSPs) into RRIFs
by the age of 71 and are then
mandated to withdraw a mini-
mum amount each year from the
conversion date onward. The
minimum required withdrawal
rate increases at each age – from
5.28 per cent at the age of 71, up
to 20 per cent for those 95 and
older. The government’s re-
sponse to the current COVID-19
crisis was to reduce the required
minimum withdrawals by 25 per
cent for 2020.
There is, however, a way for ol-
der Canadians to work around
the minimum withdrawal issue if
they don’t need all of the money
this year for living expenses. Ac-
cording to my research at the Na-
tional Institute on Ageing, in
partnership with FP Canada Re-
search Foundation, seniors in
this position can reinvest the un-
needed after-tax RRIF income in-
to their tax-free saving accounts
(TFSAs).
So long as the senior remains
in the same income tax bracket,
this workaround will deliver the
same after-tax money to spend
down the road as if they’d never
withdrawn the unneeded money
from their RRIF in the first place.
If they believe their invest-
ments will recover, they could re-
purchase the same portfolio mix.
Should stocks rebound, this
strategy could potentially leave
them with large tax-free capital
gains.
A simpler solution would be
for government to suspend the
minimum RRIF withdrawal re-
quirements altogether during
this volatile financial environ-
ment, as the U.S.government has
done for its corresponding
“401(k)” program.
However, this requires forfeit-
ing further tax revenue this year,
which may not be feasible for the
public purse.


The great RRIF debate


The argument around the right
level of minimum RRIF with-


drawals is a long-standing one.
The schedule was most recently
adjusted downward in 2015, rec-
ognizing that the minimum
withdrawal calculations were out
of step with today’s lower invest-
ment returns and greater longev-
ity among Canadians. Lowering
the required withdrawal rates
was a move in the right direction,
but perhaps not enough to pro-
vide sustainable income
throughout retirement.
How many Canadians are
grappling with the RRIF mini-
mum withdrawal rules? There is
no public data source to answer
this question. However, we can
piece togethergovernment and
industry data to get a high-level
picture.
Statistics Canada’s 2016 Survey
of Financial Security found that
60 per cent of older Canadians
have RRSP/RRIF savings, with a
median balance of about
$93,000.
In 2019, Sun Life found that
approximately one-third of their
universe of retirees takes the
minimum payment from their
RRIFs each year.
Putting these together, it ap-
pears as though about one in five
older Canadians is affected by
the RRIF withdrawal schedule.

The TFSA workaround

According to analytics provider
Club Vita, a typical 75-year-old
Canadian female (let’s call her
Gaby) can expect to live another
15 years. In the current environ-
ment of rock-bottom returns on
safe investments, if Gaby were to
make withdrawals according to
the revised 2015 schedule, her an-
nual income would be 40 per
cent less at 90 (her life expectan-
cy) than at 75. And if she lives
longer, that income would be
even lower.
However, Gaby could work
around the minimum withdraw-
als using TFSAs.
Suppose 75-year-old Gaby is
required to take out $10,000 of
her RRIF in 2020. Her daily ex-
penses are minimized from be-

ing restricted to her home – pos-
sibly for many months; there-
fore, she only needs half of those
funds.
This leaves $5,000 (less appli-
cable personal income taxes of
$1,500) to reinvest in her TFSAs.
With that $3,500, she can invest
in new securities in her TFSA, or
she can hold on to the same port-
folio mix as in her RRIF account
by taking advantage of an “in-
kind” transfer.
Should stocks rebound and
Gaby’s TFSA investment doubles,
she’ll have $7,000 to spend – tax-
free. Had the money been al-
lowed to stay in her RRIF in the
same assets, the original $5,000
investment would have also dou-
bled to $10,000.
But this money is taxable and,
after a 30-per-cent income tax
hit, Gaby would again have had
$7,000 to spend. In essence, this
TFSA strategy works around the
RRIF minimum withdrawal and
postpones the need to cash out
investments until after the crisis.
There are no withdrawal re-
strictions on her TFSA, meaning
she can delay drawing on that in-
come until her RRIF – now re-
duced because of the larger with-
drawals she was required to
make – will no longer support
her spending needs.

Managing the known unknowns

The right schedule of mandatory
RRIF minimum withdrawals is
open to debate.
And the full financial market
implications of COVID-19 – and
how they will vary from person
to person – are still significant
unknowns.
But what is clear is that the
unpredictable and dramatic mar-
kets drops are causing a lot of
anxiety, and even panic, among
investors.
Worried older Canadians who
don’t need their RRIF money at
this time should consider rein-
vesting into TFSAs. This financial
strategy can protect their invest-
ment portfolio by buying time
through the crisis.

BONNIE-JEANNEMacDONALD


ISTOCK

OPINION

PhDFSAFCIA,directoroffinancial
securityresearchattheNational
InstituteonAgeing,TedRogers
SchoolofManagementatRyerson
University


Seniorswhodon’tneedtheir


RRIFmoneyshouldconsiderthis


H


ow long can brands stay
top of mind in the absence
of traditional marketing
channels and open stores?
AskNikeInc.in a year and they
might have the answer.
With the spread of COVID-19,
the company has shuttered many
of its outlets worldwide. Addi-
tionally, its regular avenues for
major advertising, including the
Olympics, National Basketball
Association and other organized
sports leagues, are also on pause
for the foreseeable future.
How does Nike, or any global
retailer for that matter, navigate
such a challenge?
There is no shortage of bears
who view these dual threats as a
major issue for enterprises such
as Nike (NKE).
Moody’s has revised Nike’s
credit outlook to negative, and
analysts are slashing 12-month
stock price targets. Some see los-
ing the Olympics and profession-
al sports seasons as a lost oppor-
tunity for increased international
expansion and exposure. Fur-
thermore, coming quarterly reve-


nue and net income projections
are plummeting as the rate of
store closings rises.
The investment community is
bracing for an ugly income state-
ment. Indeed, retail analysts for
many product categories are pos-
ing similar questions as to what
upcoming quarterly financials
will look like.
Though the situation will
probably get worse before it gets
better, there is a contrary and bul-
lish case to be made for Nike.
Given its large presence in Chi-
na, the company was one of the
first affected by issues related to
COVID-19. During the peak of the
Chinese outbreak, Nike had to

close 5,000 of its roughly 7,000
stores and operated with reduced
hours and staff at the locations
that remained open. While this
dramatically decreased in-store
traffic, Chinese e-commerce grew
by 30 per cent, and the number of
weekly active Chinese users on
Nike apps grew by 80 per cent by
the quarter’s end. Nike’s success-
ful pivot to digital suggests it re-
mained relevant to customers de-
spite reducing stores and losing
key marketing venues, such as
the NBA. Since the end of the
quarter, China has reopened 80
per cent of its locations and shop-
ping activity is slowly – very slow-
ly – returning.

Now that North America and
Europe are in the grips of the pan-
demic, Nike is rolling out the
playbook it developed in China.
Stores are being shut, and the piv-
ot to e-commerce and apps is go-
ing full steam. Though each coun-
try is different, the organization
may well duplicate its Chinese
tactical success here in North
America, as well as in Europe.
Moreover, when the crisis does
pass, the company will have a
good idea of how it can best revi-
talize retail operations thanks to
the experience in China.
Nike’s brand appears resilient
enough to weather the storm, but
investors also need to ask, “Is the
balance sheet clean enough to get
them through a crunch?”
One can point to the famous
bankruptcy filing by General Mo-
tors in 2009 as proof that an icon-
ic symbol alone is not enough to
endure a crisis.
Though GM has long since re-
listed, the car maker’s storied 100-
year history did not protect its
shareholders during the dark
days of the Great Recession. For-
tunately for Nike, its balance
sheet is in good shape. Net debt is
low, current assets are nearly
double current liabilities and the
organization has ample liquidity.
This provides the enterprise with
a lot of ammo to fight through the
current downdraft.
Finally, investors must wonder
about Nike’s relative perform-

ance versus peers. It’s too soon to
say what Nike’s relative brand
ranking will look like versus oth-
ers, such as Adidas AG, Under Ar-
mour Inc. and Reebok Interna-
tional Ltd., once the COVID crisis
is over. Nevertheless, it’s clear this
Oregon-based firm continues to
connect with customers in a mea-
ningful way through this period.
It’s possible they come out
ahead; at the least, their compet-
itors are facing all the same chal-
lenges too.
A year from now, investors
may know a lot more about how
elite multinationals can maintain
their images in the absence of tra-
ditional marketing channels and
bricks-and-mortar retail. This
year will be rough – perhaps, for
some, even devastating.
However, the financial aspect
of Nike’s position is robust, and
the famous swoosh is unlikely to
disappear from the minds of con-
sumers. The company continues
to connect with cooped up cus-
tomers through their fitness
apps, driving online sales. When
stores finally reopen and leagues
like the NBA get up and running
again, Nike will still be there, and
the brand will arguably remain as
relevant as it is now.
The market may be coming
around to this thesis; NKE has re-
gained nearly half of its recent
losses and its performance is sig-
nificantly better than many peers
in the retail space.

Nosports?Noproblem.Whyit’stimetobuyNike


PHILIPMacKELLAR


OPINION

INSIDETHEMARKET


WriterfortheContratheHeard
InvestmentLetter


| REPORTONBUSINESS

A


U.S. dollar drought that’s defined the financial stress
of coronavirus is being met with a dam burst of liq-
uidity from the U.S. Federal Reserve. The resulting
flood of dollars could sink the greenback over the
coming years as economies normalize.
While funding stress will likely remain high as virus-strick-
en investors and companies around the world scramble to
secure dollar funding, some strategists and a growing body of
speculators are betting that the Fed’s intervention could
eventually reverse two years of exchange rate gains.
According to Friday’s data from the Commodity Futures
Trading Commission, hedge funds and other players built a
net short U.S. dollar position against major and emerging
market currencies alike to its highest since May, 2018 – show-
ing a powerful countertrade to the recent trend of dollar
strength.
And for some senior strategists such as Andreas Steno Lar-
sen at Nordic banking giant Nordea, that’s no short-term
punt. The Fed’s action to hose the world with U.S. dollars will
have big exchange-rate implications once the panic-driven
demand subsides.
“Everyone with a need of dollars will get it in size and this
should prove to be a game changer for the dollar, once we are
out of this mess,” he said in a research note, adding the green-
back could face a hit of more than 15 per cent over the coming
12 to 24 months once the global economy stabilizes.
That view is far from where the market sees the coming
months at least. More than two-thirds of 63 strategists polled
by Reuters last week said they expected the U.S. dollar to re-
tain recent gains or rise further over the next three months.
But Mr. Steno Larsen argues the Fed is on course to have
more than doubled its balance sheet by the end of this quar-
ter, and will by the end of the year expand it to almost a fifth
of GDP, or twice the European Central Bank’s equivalent.
This will be a significant net negative for the dollar if or when
funding pressures dissipate by midyear.
For two years, the world economy has been sapped by a
slowly rising greenback – spurred by relatively higher U.S. in-
terest rates and a protectionist push in Washington that led
to a trade war and sizable repatriation of U.S. multinationals’
cash piles.
White House resistance to the stronger dollar was vocal
and routine, often blaming the Fed for keeping rates too high
and lambasting U.S. trading partners for artificially subduing
their currencies for trade gain. The Fed, as always, insists it
has no target for the exchange rate and only looks to keep
inflation in check and sustain employment.
But a rising dollar tightens financial conditions globally
because of vast amounts of dollar debt in the world. Dollar
credit to non-banking entities outside the United States hit
US$11.5-trillion last year – or 13 per cent of annual world out-
put, according to the Bank for International Settlements.
As a sudden stop in economic activity in response to the
coronavirus led many companies and investors to scramble
for cash, many measures of dollar funding, such as cross-cur-
rency basis swaps, skyrocketed to levels not seen since 2008’s
crash. That was the widening dollar hole worldwide that the
Fed rushed to fill as it increased standing dollar swap lines
with five other big central banks and extended new lines to
nine mainly emerging central banks.
Last Tuesday, it also broadened its securities repurchase
agreements with foreign central banks, allowing them to ex-
change holdings of U.S. Treasury securities for overnight dol-
lar loans, a move mostly aimed at stressed emerging market
central banks.
The combination of an opening of these dollar taps, a re-
turn of interest rates to zero and a relaunch of the quantita-
tive easing program has in just three weeks has seen the Fed’s
balance sheet balloon to US$5.86-trillion, and it is rising.
The Fed’s moves have successfully flattened and even re-
versed the spike in cross-currency basis swap rates.
The speed with which the Fed can and will want to unwind
these emergency moves may dictate the eventual outcome.
But the scale of the hit to world output being forecast for 2020
as a whole means it will be in no rush to jam on the brakes,
and it will get no thanks from Treasury for any moves to lift
the dollar.

REUTERS

AftertheU.S.dollardrought,


recentfloodcouldundermine


greenback’sstrength


MIKEDOLANLONDON
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