Business
It’s RRSP season again — is it worth additions amid other ways to save?
6 minute read Saturday, Feb. 7, 2026Canadians have great tools to save tax-deferred or tax-free for the future — and the granddaddy of them all is the registered retirement savings plan.
The calendar now turned to February, RRSPs are on the minds of many, with the March 2 deadline looming for the last contributions for 2025.
Yet in the context of the other ways to save — the tax-free savings account (TFSA) and the newer, first home savings account (FHSA) — the RRSP is not always the most attractive place to park, invest and grow money.
The ideal is to fund all of these savings vehicles, based on need, to their annual maximums.
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What do you do when your best is not enough?
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Winnipeg retiree recounts making contrarian trade of buying shares of big bank hit by scandal
6 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026Drone application big step in crop protection
4 minute read Preview Saturday, Feb. 28, 2026Chinese market exposure puts Manitoba in trade deal picture
5 minute read Wednesday, Feb. 25, 2026Days before a new trade agreement between Canada and China is set to take effect, some Manitoba industries are expecting relief, while others are stuck with uncertainty.
China implemented a 100 per cent tariff on a number of Canadian products in March 2025, including rapeseed oil, pork and peas. After a state visit to China in January, Prime Minister Mark Carney announced China would be lowering tariffs on products including canola meal, lobsters and peas, starting March 1 until the end of 2026.
In an analysis of the local impact the trade deal will have across the country published this week, the Institute for Research on Public Policy found some Manitoba communities were among the most reliant on the Chinese market.
Manitoba is home to three of the report’s 10 Canadian communities with the highest exposure to China exports. Parts of northwest Manitoba reported seven per cent of its jobs are tied to the Chinese market, the third-highest in the country, because of its ore mining industry. Parts of the Pembina Valley and Westman regions reported 6.4 per cent and 5.7 per cent reliance, respectively, the fifth- and sixth-highest rates in the country, both through farming exports.
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