Written by Amy Legate-Wolfe at The Motley Fool Canada
When it comes to building a Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP) cornerstone, the financial sector, and insurance in particular, offers a rare mix of stability, compounding power, and consistent dividends. It’s a steady, quietly profitable business model that aligns perfectly with the long-term, tax-deferred nature of an RRSP. So, let’s look at why, and one finance stock I’d consider on the TSX today.
Insurance companies make money in two main ways. The first is through underwriting, collecting more in premiums than they pay out in claims. The second, and often more important, is through investing the massive pools of cash they hold between collecting premiums and paying claims. What makes insurers especially appealing for long-term retirement planning is how predictable and scalable their businesses are. People and businesses will always need insurance. As populations age and wealth grows, demand for these products only rises.
Another advantage is dividend reliability. Unlike cyclical sectors, insurers manage risk through diversification and regulation, giving them stable payout histories. Their dividends aren’t just high, but durable, often growing faster than inflation. And since RRSPs shelter that income from immediate taxation, investors can reinvest every cent, accelerating compounding. Over 20 or 30 years, reinvested insurance dividends can turn modest annual returns into substantial long-term growth.
Insurance stocks also bring a measure of defensive growth to an RRSP. They’re less volatile than banks or energy stocks, and international exposure means they’re not overly dependent on the Canadian economy. Ultimately, insurance companies provide the predictability and compounding power that a retirement account needs.
Sun Life Financial (TSX:SLF) is the kind of finance stock that belongs at the very heart of a long-term RRSP strategy. Sun Life provides life and health insurance, group benefits, and investment products to millions of clients across Canada, the U.S., and Asia. These generate recurring, resilient cash flow through every market cycle, giving investors confidence that their dividends and growth will hold up over the long run.
What makes Sun Life particularly compelling is how it’s evolved into a global growth engine. While its Canadian operations remain solid, much of its momentum now comes from expanding markets in Asia, where rising wealth and aging populations are fuelling demand for financial protection and retirement savings. Its presence in countries like India, Vietnam, and the Philippines positions it perfectly to capture that growth.
Read More: This Finance Stock Could Be the Cornerstone of Your RRSP


