We recognize that each and every client thinks about wealth differently. Everyone has different goals and ideas about how retirement should look. We work with you to figure out what that is and how to get there.
For over 40 years, we’ve been sitting down one-to-one with clients to understand what makes them unique. We don’t use models. We don’t chase returns. We design long-term plans that fit your lifestyle, your plans for retirement, your tolerance for risk, your gifting goals.
We advise a select group of clients and that affords us the ability to focus and be there when you need us. We pride ourselves on going beyond just managing your money, we manage the connection between your wealth and your day-to-day so you can focus on what makes you happy.
We believe in a long-term approach – that’s our mandate. It helps reduce exposure to volatility in today's markets where everything is correlated. It protects the legacy you’ve built.
We pride ourselves on excellent service – we’re the touchpoint for any advice you need. We work with your outside professionals and leverage Richardson Wealth's expert team of tax and estate planning professionals to make sure your plan looks at every angle.
We commit to creating long-term planning that makes sense. Retirement, your way.
Tax & Estate Planning
Strategies
Learn about strategies to help protect and enhance your wealth from our Tax & Estate Planning professionals.
Taxes
Understanding the Alternative Minimum Tax (AMT)
The Alternative Minimum Tax’s (AMT) scope is expanding, and it could impact more Canadians than ever before.
Read more
Market Research
Insights
Get the latest market insights and trends from our internal research experts.
Market Ethos - January 12, 2025
Ethos rewind: the year’s biggest themes
The world knows that we have too much oil; the market knows this, the forward energy curve knows this, and hence oil is trading where it was five years ago.
Investor Strategy - January 2026
2026 Outlook: Questions on the year ahead
We could argue a Santa Claus rally seems unlikely, considering it appears Santa came really early this year and already dropped presents into investment accounts.