Harder to get insurance is a game changer

In the US inflation estimate for January, auto insurance premiums rose 20.6% year over year, while tenant and household insurance rose 6% annualized over just the last three months.

Across the developed world, insurers are exiting some areas and demanding higher premiums and deductibles in others; affordable insurance — often a condition of mortgage and vehicle debt — is getting harder to secure.

As individuals increasingly bear more and more financial risk, our ideas of what constitutes diversification and mitigation naturally change. At the same time, the companies and activities contributing to the chaos will be tapped to pay for the damage created via rising fees, taxes and damage awards. See The uninsurable world: what climate change is costing homeowners:

Last year saw a record-breaking number of natural catastrophes causing at least $1bn in insurance losses: 37 separate events, according to data from insurance broker Aon. That included 25 so-called severe convective storms, of which 21 were in the US. It is the growing weight of events such as storms and wildfires — and the broadening of the areas that are exposed to them — that is raising anxiety in the sector, and changing the way risk is viewed.

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New tax filing requirements for jointly held assets in Canada

New bare trust reporting requirements for the 2023 tax year include accounts where adults have been added to the bank and investment accounts of another relative.

For Bare Trusts ending December 31, 2023, you have to file a T3 tax return, says Ali Spinner, tax partner at Crowe Soberman LLP. Here is a direct video link.

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What it means to restore home affordability in Canada

To restore Canadian home affordability to historically sustainable levels, prices need to halve, incomes double or some combination of both. All options are painful in the short to medium term for asset prices, the leveraged and Canada’s real estate-concentrated economy.

Charles St. Arnaud, Chief Economist at Alberta Central and former economist at the Bank of Canada, joins BNN Bloomberg to discuss what it means to restore affordable housing for Canadians, after recent data from Alberta Central shows housing affordability in Canada is at its lowest in 40 years. Here is a direct video link.

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