If you are not yet familiar with the all-in-one asset allocation ETFs, do yourself a favour and get up to speed. These are game changers for Canadian investors. You might also hear them referred to as one ticket ETFs. TD calls their offerings ‘one click’. And one click explains it quite nicely. With one click […]
Investors take a breather, on the Sunday Reads.
The stock markets have had quite the run to say the least. And we have not even had a 5% correction since the Toronto Maple Leafs won the Stanley Cup. I’m exaggerating, it’s only been a few hundred days since we’ve had a 5% or more U.S. stock market correction. Perhaps the next real market […]
Rethinking retirement (RIP), on the Sunday Reads.
Today’s post will weave together retirement as seen in a more traditional sense and those who practice F.I.R.E. – an acronym for financial independence and retire early. In the Globe and Mail Brenda Bouw offered that the COVID pandemic is giving early retirees second thoughts, they’re going back to work. On FiPhysician, Dr. David Graham […]
The poor returns of Craig’s AGF Mutual Funds.
Last week we introduced a new series on Cut The Crap Investing. Real readers share their (horror) stories of investing in poor-performing high-fee mutual funds. These same readers admit that they don’t really know how to leave behind these funds that get in the way of true wealth creation. They want to move to lower-fee […]
Moving out of mutual funds on the Sunday Reads.
Today we’ll begin a new series where we’ll show the process of investors moving out of high fee mutual funds and into some sensible low-cost ETF portfolio solutions. A few readers have stepped up to offer their real-live scenarios. They feel trapped in mutual funds and offer that they’re not sure how to make the […]
Canadian retirees get a nice raise thanks to the Purpose Longevity Pension Fund.
It’s possible that the game has been changed for the better, for Canadian retirees. Purpose Investments has launched a retirement funding mutual fund that is designed to deliver an annual payout at 6.15% annual. That is, the fund would pay out a minimum of 6.15% of your initial total fund value. For every $100,000 that […]