Mutual Fund & ETF Quotes
I recommend shorter term or broad market government bond index funds. [2018] - Andrew Hallam
Studies show non‐currency‐hedged stock market ETFs perform better. [2018] - Andrew Hallam
Horizons Canada offers three swap‐based ETFs on the Canadian market. Its Horizons S&P/TSX 60 index ETF costs just 0.03 percent. It tracks Canada's 60 biggest stocks. Horizons S&P 500 index ETF tracks the US market. It costs 0.12 percent. And Horizons' Canadian Select Bond Universe ETF costs 0.17 percent. Most indexes physically hold stocks or bonds within them, but not these. Instead, they're like contracts backed by the National Bank of Canada, promising investors the full return of a given index as if all dividends or interest were reinvested. Because investors don't actually own the index's holdings directly, they aren't charged dividend taxes on the stock indexes or income taxes on the bond index. [2018] - Andrew Hallam
In general, building an entire portfolio out of ETFs usually makes sense starting in the ballpark of $50,000. Anything less than that, and you're most likely better off with mutual funds or a mix of mutual funds and ETFs. The exception is if you're buying ETFs using Scotia iTrade or Qtrade, where many ETFs can be traded for free. In that case, the ETF portfolio may make sense for even the smallest of accounts. [2013] - Russell Wild
As a rough rule, if you have $50,000 to invest, consider something in the ballpark of a 5-10 ETF portfolio, and if you have $250,000 or more, perhaps look at a 15-25 ETF portfolio. Having may more ETFs than this won't enhance the benefits of diversification but will entail additional trading costs every time you rebalance your holdings. The Nonwealthy investor can build a pretty well-diversified portfolio with just four ETFs: one small value, one small growth, one large value, and one large growth. We hold a similar philosophy when it comes to global investing: U.S., Europe, Asia, emerging markets.... [2013] - Russell Wild
Stocks of large companies - value and growth combined - should make up 50-70% of your total domestic stock portfolio. The higher your risk tolerance, the closer you'll want to be to the lower end of that range. Whatever your allocation to domestic large cap stocks, we recommend that you invest 40-50% of that amount in large growth. Take a tilt toward value, if you wish, but don't tilt so far that you risk tipping over. [2013] - Russell Wild
If you have a portfolio of $10,000 or less, you should either be thinking mutual funds (not ETFs) or be seeking to invest at a brokerage that won't charge you for trading ETFs. Otherwise, the trading costs could eat you alive. If, however, you're unlikely to do any trading in the next several years, an ETF portfolio may make sense. In that case, consider a simple and all-encompassing "everything" (total ball of wax) ETF for your domestic stock holdings. [2013] - Russell Wild
Owning both a large cap and small cap ETF will give you an average return very similar to mid caps but with considerably less volatility because large and small cap stocks tend to move up and down at different times. Generally, small caps do well in good times and market recoveries because people are less afraid to jump into growth stocks. Large caps tend to outperform in periods of uncertainty, when stability and brand name familiarity are key. [2013] - Russell Wild
Many financial experts say 50% of your stock holdings should be international, with 25% of that in the U.S. We think that percentage works fine, but some experts are now saying that we may want to reduce our domestic exposure, which is often correlated to oil prices, by a bit. Consider putting 50-60% in international stocks. [2013] - Russell Wild
For most portfolios, a reasonable split of foreign stock holdings would be something like the neighbourhood of 40/40/20, with 40% going to Europe (England, France, Germany, Switzerland); 40% to the developed Pacific region (mostly Japan, with a smattering of Australia, New Zealand and Singapore); and 20% to the emerging market nations (Brazil, Russia, Turkey, South Africa, Mexico, and a host of countries where the entire value of all outstanding stock may be less than that of any S&P 500 company). [2013] - Russell Wild
In today's low interest rate environment, short duration bonds are better buy because their prices will fall less than long bonds when rates rise. In other words, short-term bonds are a less volatile form of fixed income. Of course, because you're taking on less risk, yields will be lower. [2013] - Russell Wild
Come up with a rough number of how much you're going to need to take from your nest egg each year. Whatever the number, multiply by 10. That amount, ideally, is what we'd like to see you have in your bond portfolio, at a minimum, on the day you retire. In other words, if you think you'll need to pull $30,000 a year from your portfolio, we'd like to see you have at least $30,000 in cash and about $300,000 in bonds. That's regardless of how much you have in stocks - and you should have at least an equal amount in stocks. Most people (who aren't rich) should have roughly one year's income in cash and the rest in a 50/50 (stock/bond) portfolio on retirement day. [2013] - Russell Wild
We suggest that most investors devote 10-15% of the equity side of their portfolios to REITs. If your portfolio is 50% stock and 50% bonds, we suggest that 5-7.5% of your entire portfolio be devoted to REITs. If your home represents a big chunk of your net worth, and especially if you are approaching a stage in life when you may consider downsizing, you may want to invest less in REITs than would, say, a renter of similar means. Or you may forget about Canadian REITs (VRE, XRE, ZRE) altogether and invest only in foreign REITs. [2013] - Russell Wild
No more than 5% of your portfolio should be allocated to precious metals. The iShares Silver Trust (SLV) operates much the same as the iShares Gold Trust (IAU). One simple approach to previous-metals investing is worth considering: the ETFS Physical Precious Metals Basket Shares (GLTR). In one fund, you get a basket of four precious metals - gold, silver, platinum, and palladium - each in proportion to its economic footprint. Shares are backed up by the physical metals held in vaults. The fund's cost is 0.60% a year. [2013] - Russell Wild
In general, interest-paying ETFs (REIT ETFs, bond ETFs) are best kept in tax-advantaged accounts. [2013] - Russell Wild
House investments with the greatest potential for growth in your TFSA - TFSA money won't ever be taxed (presuming there are no changes in the law). Foreign ETFs should be held in your RRSP - The reason is that foreign dividends are subject to withholding tax, usually about 15%. You can get that money back on U.S. investments, but not on stocks based in other countries. The withholding tax doesn't apply on investments held inside an RRSP. [2013] - Russell Wild
Mutual funds work best in retirement accounts. [2009] - James DiGeorgia
Make sure that the mutual funds you are interested in have at least a five-year track record. Most business cycles last three to five years. You also want to look at bad years such as 1991, 1994, 2001, 2002, and 2008. [2009] - James DiGeorgia
All funds will have management fees, but not all funds will have a load. Management fees can be less than 0.5 percent or more than 2 percent per year. [2009] - James DiGeorgia
The best hedge fund managers and professional traders are ecstatic when they achieve a 35 percent return for the year. [2003] - Marcel Link