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Investment Q&A

Not investment advice or solicitation to buy/sell securities. Do your own due diligence and/or consult an advisor.

Q: I currently have my 2 kids (2 and 4 years old) RESP's invested in TD's eseries funds (CDN, US, INT). The fees the last time I checked are 0.33, 0.35, 0.50 respectively. I chose e-series because of the low fees. I manage my own portfolio and don't want to manage stocks in 2 RESP's as well so I want to stick with Index funds or etf's for simplicity. I am wondering it if would save me enough money in fee's to change from the e-series funds to Vanguard etf's of the same category (CDN, US, INT) due to the lower fees. The Vanguard etf's range from around 0.05% mgmt fee and 0.06% MER for the CDN. Since the RESP's have many more years to maturity should I make the move to ETF's since they are about 1/3rd of the price or are we talking about pennies in the long run since the fees for both are already really low? Has performance been better in either?

Thanks,
Read Answer Asked by Adam on November 20, 2018
Q: In addition to diversified RSP, RIF, TFSA accounts, I have a small Trading account that I use for 'nice to have' rather than 'need to have'.
I have sold Photon and Reliq recently for tax loss and have 22% in cash which I would like to redeploy. In this account I am willing to take higher than average risk.
Current holdings are COV 9% (with small loss), TSGI 43% and SYZ 26% (both with good profit). Your suggestions for one or two stocks that you think have higher than average growth potential in the coming year would be appreciated.
Re your recent update reports - good timing with so much going on and I liked the format
Thanks as always.
Read Answer Asked by Alexandra on November 20, 2018
Q: Greetings, I have not asked a question for a while now (2 years?); here it goes. This seems like a good time to deploy some of my cash held in my TFSA. Can you suggest a stock similar to KXS in potential? Maybe GUD, PHO? Thanks as ever.
Henry
Read Answer Asked by Henry on November 20, 2018
Q: I know you have recommended growth stocks in a tfsa account
For tax reasons, what about fixed
Income portion in the tfsa and
Dividend and growth in a investment account for the same reason. I review the previous questions and couldn’t find anything
Thanks for the help
Sam
Read Answer Asked by Sam on November 20, 2018
Q: As a retired person I am always looking for high yield investments.
So I look at something like HHL from Harvest. It holds 20 equal weighted mainly US healthcare stocks. A solid sector with good long term demographics. I see their current yield on what they are paying out is 8.67% - all capital gains - great! But I see the average dividend yield on the stocks held is only 1.96%. How can that be? Seems it’s done using covered calls Not sure how that works but sounds like it creates added risk. What if the covered call $ generated isn’t enough to meet their intended distribution? Where does the extra $ go if covered call exceeds the distribution.

So I investigate the industry a little more and I see words like- total return swap based, inverse, currency hedged, low/ high volatility, fund of funds, proprietary methodology, 2x returns etc., and I start to wonder what’s going on?

Then I remember the term “ flow through shares” of some time ago and say to myself “ it’s déjà vu all over again.

Derek
Read Answer Asked by Derek on November 20, 2018
Q: I have followed your research and recommendations for a couple of years and have enjoyed the ride. I began with a liquidity of 'say $500k' so to speak. I invested approx half over a short period of time and kept the residual in cash. At my current age of 69, and having developed a distinct aversion to loss, I felt comfortable in maintaining this significant liquidity position. Now, with the markets in turmoil, rather than selling into the market, I am tempted to 'average down' and let go of the cash position I've maintained. I will not be in need of this 'fund' for at least 5 years or so. Would you recommend that I take this posture of buying more of what I have (which includes most of the companies you have in your balanced equity p/f), and if so, which stocks in particular would you recommend I add to.
Thanks,
cj
Read Answer Asked by Claus on November 20, 2018
Q: Dear 5i
I'm trying to understand how companies actually get paid when we own for example an ETF that has a MER of for an example .5%. If the anticipated yield is say 3% you had stated in an earlier question of mine that the 3% is inclusive of fees . So all yields posted are generally always inclusive of fees right ? This means then that the actual yield is 3.5% minus the MER of .5%. So its a matter of the company in question holding their fee back from the yield rather than a case of the said company getting paid the fee which comes out of my brokerage company account directly .Sorry if this sounds confusing . I'm just trying to understand the process and be sure about what yield I'm actually getting and what fees I'm actually paying .
Thanks
Bill
Read Answer Asked by Bill on November 20, 2018
Q: I am considering buying a small basket of jr. copper producers. This is based on the recovery of copper prices up to the $3.50 to 4.00 dollar level in the next 2 years. Would you buy any of the aforementioned stocks and in what order?
Thanks
Read Answer Asked by tom on November 20, 2018