20 bucks a week is petty just around 1040 a year, might as well just put it into ING or similar until you have enough for a gic or T-bill or similar, if its for college I'm not sure but you may be able to open an RESP even if the kid isnt in the oven yet, canadian scholarship trust might be good place.
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Apr 7th, 2005 09:16 PM #1
long term investment question
My wife and I want to start putting a little away for when we retire or have kids in college or things like that. We decided we want to put $20 a week away into a long term account (25-40 years). What would be the best place to put this money, where can we get the most interest, do we need a high principle for a lot of accounts?
Any suggestions would be appreciated
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Apr 7th, 2005 09:27 PM #2Deal Addict




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Apr 7th, 2005 09:35 PM #3
$20/week isn't much but its a start especially if you're looking at retirement and funding your childrens education. Interest isn't really a factor at this point as after a year you will accumulate about $1,200, so there is no real difference in finding something with the best interest as the dollar difference between 0.25% and 2.50% is small.
With that being said your best options are:
1) make the contribution into your or your wife's RSP, whoever is the higher income earner. Doing this will allow for tax deferred growth inside the RSP and a nice little deduction come tax time.
2) if you want to fund your childs education make the contribution in an RESP. The government will contribute 20% of what you contribute (ie. if you make a $1200 contribution annually the govt will kick in $240) Your contribution into the RESP is NOT tax deductible however any growth and income grows tax deferred inside the account until it is withdrawn.
Most mutual funds allow you to open accts and make periodic contributions into an RSP/RESP. Given your time horizon I wouldn't suggest an interest paying acct as that would get you nowhere after inflation. Research some mutual funds and purchase some grwoth funds with the money you're putting aside.
edit - disregard my math, I just woke up......but my points still stand_______________
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Apr 8th, 2005 12:40 AM #4
Your time horizon is long enough that you should consider putting your money into a low management fee Index fund. TD's eFunds is a good choice. The min initial investment is $100 for an RSP account and subsequent automatic contribution is $25, so you can setup a bi-weekly schedule.
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Apr 8th, 2005 08:18 AM #5Member


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Kind of what's been echoed above, but with your time horizon, you're in the best position to invest in riskier assets (ie stocks). In the long term, the return on investment will be much greater than a GIC or ING Savings account.
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Apr 8th, 2005 09:07 AM #6
If you don't want to be involved in trading individual stocks, a growth mutual fund would probably generate the highest return for you. Yes $20 isn't alot , but you have to start somewhere. I think most funds allow $25 as a minimum monthly deposit though. Might also consider telling the grandparents and other relatives that usually buy frivlous gifts at christmas , birthdays etc, to consider adding more units to the savings fund rather than the newest kid's fad.
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Apr 8th, 2005 11:37 AM #7Sr. Member



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TD Efunds good bet
Efunds have already been mentioned but they are a very good way to invest.
Cheap MER (mangement expense ratio-the money TD takes for its part)
is very reasonable and they will match actvely run funds overtime.
A TD investment counsellor or any investment rep. will never recommend these funds because they get very little renumeration in return. Actively managed funds give more money to the investment counsellors so that is why they push them. In a few years buy some exchange traded funds (index funds traded on the stock exchange) from www.iunits.com and equally buy the TSX, S&P 500, and International funds and you will be all set.
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Apr 8th, 2005 12:28 PM #8
The recommendation has little to do with renumeration. The reason why index funds aren't widely recommended is because they are designed to track the performance of a specific index, ie S&P 500, TIPS. Anyone idiot can buy an index.
Conversly, the mandate of a portfolio manager is to outperform the index, thus justifying higher fees for an actively manage portfolio, diversification, and professional management._______________
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Apr 8th, 2005 01:40 PM #9Member


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I have used a RESP. I have more than one child so it has more than a single name on it. The advantage is that if one kid's education costs more than the other (think chef school vs. university), there can be some flexibility there.
Originally Posted by joshmxpx
What if a child doesn't go on to any education/wants to bum around in Europe for a awhile, and the RESP needs to be collapsed?
Well, if the child is at least registered up for an education of some sort and a budget is submitted, the money can be drawn out of the RESP._______________
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Apr 8th, 2005 03:21 PM #10Sure, any idiot can buy the index. But you forgot to say that the idiot who buys the index will probably do better than the idiot who invests in an actively managed mutual fund.
Originally Posted by 15-20_God
So why do advisers recommend funds that are likely to do worse than index funds?
Remuneration seems a likely culprit when we're talking about advisers that make money from commissions.
Until we can get in the head of an investment adviser, we can't know the real answer, but I agree with superdsi that it's probably the trailer fee and whatever other commission they get from the mutual fund. The bigger the MER, the bigger the fees they can pay out to advisers. Can you think of another good reason to recommend an inferior product?
So let's look at all the reasons you think they deserve higher fees:
Originally Posted by 15-20_God
Sure they're supposed to outperform the index. But most of them don't.
Active management is just a way of saying they're not an index fund.
Diversification can be achieved by buying different index funds.
Professional management is only useful if you're getting more out of it than you're paying. And most of the time you don't.
So how does any of this "justify higher fees"?
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Apr 8th, 2005 03:49 PM #11
Another vote for TD efunds (can setup an RESP if that's your objective). Cash is not a longterm investment.
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Apr 8th, 2005 04:22 PM #12I don't know where he gets those figures from and what type of funds he's comparing it to. Its would be unfair to compare the mutual fund universe to the s&p500 as the s&p is a broad measure. Fixed income funds and money market funds would undoubtly underperform the index. You have to compare apples to apples.
Originally Posted by bdckr
Mutual funds are NOT an inferior product, however there are many inferior funds out there. An investor has to do their research and decide what is right for them. I can point out just as many funds that outperform the market as just as you can point out as many that outperform. Just like anything, there will be winners and there will be the dogs.
Advisors don't recommend funds based on compensation, believe it or not they are truly looking out for the best interest of client, otherwise they won't be around for long.
Here are a few funds to look at, notice that the investor is earning a higher rate of return while taking on less risk. Returns shown are net of fees.
http://globefunddb.theglobeandmail.c...t+Fund+Profile
http://globefunddb.theglobeandmail.c...t+Fund+Profile_______________
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Apr 8th, 2005 04:45 PM #13
bdckr is right on. Historically no managed fund has been able to consistently beat index funds. If you're thinking long term, nothing will outperform index funds. Anyone who knows anything about this stuff will suggest the same.
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Apr 8th, 2005 04:47 PM #14is this sarcasm or is this what you really think?
Originally Posted by e0gdi
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Apr 8th, 2005 05:05 PM #15?? there was no sarcasm there at all! If you think thats wrong then point me to a fund that has consistently outperformed index funds. And I'm not talking like one or two or even 5 year periods, in this case I'm assuming he's looking at 20-30 years.
Originally Posted by 15-20_God
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