Why A Fiduciary Standard For Investment Advisors Is Needed In Canada

The United States, Britain and Australia have recently introduced legislation to strengthen the legal rights of investors and put in place a professional standard for investment advisors. Unfortunately, Canadian standards are far inferior.  They rely on self-regulatory organizations such as the Mutual Fund Dealers Association, the Investment Industry Regulatory Organization of Canada and the Canadian…

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Fee Only Financial Planner Vs. Commission Based Advisor

Most people don’t consider using a fee only financial planner when they’re ready to start investing.  The first step is usually to meet with a financial advisor at your bank.  The advisor assigned to you guides you through a basic risk assessment profile and then, based on your assessment, suggests the appropriate investments. Commission Based…

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Why Is It So Hard To Sell Those Investment Dogs?

An investment dog is an underperforming stock or fund.  Typically, investment dogs have dropped in value, sometimes substantially, and then stagnated.  Belief in the asset itself, that its value will rebound and the desire to recoup the original investment keeps investors hanging on. Emotional Attachment Making the decision to sell low is quite often painful…

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Using ETFs Inside Your RRSP

Exchange traded funds have become more popular as investors realize the benefits of lower investment costs and diversification.  Most ETFs track a specific index, like the S&P TSX 60, or the S&P 500, and they are traded on stock exchanges – just like individual stocks. Unlike with mutual funds, which can be traded for free,…

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Do Stock Market Cycles Influence Your Investing Behaviour?

Just as nature abhors a vacuum, people hate randomness … I call this tendency the predication addiction.  Jason Zweig “Your Money and Your Brain” We all know about the economic cycle, the natural fluctuation of the economy going from growth, peak, contraction and trough.  It looks like the bell curve you’re familiar with from school.…

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Market Efficiency: A Glaring Oversight In Passive Strategies

Passive investors have been allowed to define active investing for active investors.  I want to even out the discussion from an active investor’s perspective. How Passive are Passive Investments? Let’s first call into question whether passive investing is really passive investing.  We’ll start with the American S&P 500 index. Unbeknownst to many investors, the S&P500…

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Why Do Certain World Events Spark Totally Irrational Behaviour?

I recently read an article about a man who liquidated his entire investment portfolio in 2008, just after Lehman Brothers collapsed.  He was convinced this was the end of capitalism and that currency would be worthless.  To protect himself he converted everything into gold. While I can understand the fear that drives someone to sell…

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What Are Segregated Funds?

Segregated funds – or seg funds – consist of a pool of investments in securities such as bonds and stocks, similar to mutual funds, but sold by life insurance companies. Segregated funds are owned by the life insurance company – not the investor – and must be kept separate (segregated) from the company’s other assets. Related:…

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Pitfalls Of Chasing The Highest Dividend Yield

Back in early 2009 I sold my mutual funds and opened a discount brokerage account with TD Waterhouse. I had about $30,000 to invest, and after doing some research on individual stocks I was drawn towards investing in companies that pay regular dividends. Related: Mutual Fund Fees – The High Cost Of Canadian Funds At…

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