Building Wealth

For the first 30 or so years of working, saving and investing, you’ll be first in the mode of getting out of the hole (paying down debt), and then building your net worth (that’s wealth accumulation.). But don’t forget, wealth accumulation isn’t the ultimate goal. Decumulation is! (a separate category here at the Hub).

Tools and platforms for would-be Webpreneurs

By Linda Binklage

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

So you need your own website? Whether you’re a small business, a budding webpreneur or just someone with a message to share, a website is a great way to reach your audience.

Nevertheless, many people are put off starting a website for fear of the costs and expertise involved. What they don’t know is that there are loads of amazing tools and platforms out there that can help them to design an effective website at an affordable price.

Here are some of the best tools and platforms for making a website:

Duda

Duda is a responsive website builder. Choose from a range of ready-made templates then use the drag and drop editor to create the look and the layout you want. You can integrate your site with the likes of PayPal, OpenTable and Disqus. And there are some great website personalisation features, allowing you to adapt your site for different customers.

WordPress

WordPress is a favourite amongst rookie and professional web designers for a reason. It’s great for everything from a basic blog to a fully-fledged e-commerce site. It’s really easy to use. And this is one platform where the cost of a website needn’t be a worry. Free packages cover all of the basics. And if you’re looking for more templates, greater customisation or full control over how your website looks and behaves, there are very reasonably priced upgrades you can sign up for. Continue Reading…

Quality is the Factor ETF investors should emphasize in today’s Market

By the WisdomTree ETFs team
Special to the Financial Independence Hub
 

Investing is hard. Trying to time the market is harder. Timing return factors at the right time? Forget about it.

The past few years have seen some of the industry’s brightest minds publish papers concerning the feasibility of timing return factors. The conclusions have varied slightly, but most generally agree that when investing in factors, trying to determine which ones to invest in at a given time is an incredibly difficult undertaking.

However, most of these papers analyze factor timing from the lens of the valuations of these factors. What if we take a different approach and see if we can estimate which factors could outperform from the context of where we are in the market cycle?

Where are we now?

The U.S. equity bull market started on March 9, 2009. In the almost nine years since then, the S&P 500 has rallied nearly 400%.1 We are certainly not calling for an end to the bull run — in fact, the market environment still appears benign, and corporate earnings have remained strong — but it is certainly not a stretch to claim that we are closer to the end of the cycle than we are to the beginning of it.

As of this writing [mid-February], we are in the midst of the longest period without a 3% pullback in the history of the S&P 500.2 With implied and realized volatility hovering near their all-time lows, it seems reasonable to expect more choppiness — if not an outright correction — coming in the next few months. Based on what we know from history, what factors tend to outperform in the late stages of market cycles?

Factor performance prior to market corrections

Factor Performance Prior to Market Corrections

Late-Stage Outperformers: Momentum, Quality

Dating back to 1990, there have been ten distinct 10% corrections in the S&P 500,3 with bifurcated results in the months preceding the correction. In the lead-up to the downturns, momentum and quality stocks have seen consistent excess performance compared to the market, whereas the size and value factors have generally underperformed.

These results provide an interesting backdrop for today’s market. If we are indeed late in the cycle, and the market dropped 10% tomorrow, this trend would hold true once again. The MSCI Momentum Index and MSCI Quality Index have outperformed the S&P 500 over the last 12 months (by 1,700 and 320 basis points (bps), respectively), whereas the Russell 2000 Index and Russell 1000 Value Index (well-known small-cap and value indexes) have both lagged by more than 700 bps.4

While it is interesting to look at what factors worked well, we think it is also important to analyze what didn’t. If size and value lagged, one can conclude that their complements — large caps and growth companies — outperformed as a result.

Factor performance during market corrections

Factor Performance during Market Corrections

Quality: The best of Factors in the worst of times

Shifting our focus to the market corrections themselves, when the S&P 500 fell at least 10%, it is clear that quality was the most desirable factor by a relatively wide margin. Intuitively, that makes sense—when there is stress in the markets, high-quality companies should help protect investors during market downturns. Encouragingly, the factor excess performance was largest in the most severe market sell-offs (with the quality factor having captured only 74% of the market downside during the tech bubble and 81% during the financial crisis).

Again, value underperforms here, with size and momentum each having relatively more mixed results during market corrections.

What are Size and Value good for? Continue Reading…

The 5 worst financial decisions you can make

 By Alana Downer

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

Sometimes when it comes to your finances it can be difficult to know if you’re making the right decision. What bank account should you pick? Should you buy a car outright or pay it off as you go? Are you eating too much takeaway? Every day we have to make decisions that affect our finances and some are harder and more consequential than others. In fact, sometimes one small financial decision can have a lasting impact on the health of your bank account. Here are the five worst financial decisions you can make, so you can avoid making the wrong choice in the future!

1.) Spending more than you earn

Overspending is probably the number one money mistake that you can make. You cannot build wealth or be financially secure if you are spending more than you’re earning. By spending money that you should be saving you are doing serious damage to your finances and stalling your financial progress.

It’s true that not everyone has high-paying jobs or huge inheritances, but this doesn’t mean you can’t build up healthy savings by simply monitoring your spending. Part of spending less than you earn means putting effort into living below your means. Track your spending and take a hard look at your spending habits. Are you buying two or three coffees a day? Do you pay a lot of money every month for a gym membership you don’t use? Or perhaps on a bigger scale, you have a huge house or luxury car that you just don’t need.

2.) Never Budgeting

Creating a budget goes hand in hand with learning how to spend less than you earn. A budget is a blueprint for financial success. Without budgeting, it is nearly impossible to keep track of your expenses and ascertain whether or not you are spending more than you should. By creating a budget to follow week-to-week or month-to-month you can stay on top of your finances and prevent yourself from making financial decisions that you may regret.

When creating a budget, it’s a good idea to look at your whole year and the payments that you have to make, such as your rent, your bills, your car registration and cost of transport. Use bills, your bank statements and receipts to help you understand all your expenses. Once you’ve figured out roughly how much you spend over a certain period, figure out your net income (i.e. the money deposited in your bank account each pay period). Subtract your expenses from your income and what is left should be what you aim to save.

3.) Not creating an Emergency Fund

Many people have the mindset that bad things won’t happen to them and that if they do, they will find some way to deal with it when the time comes. This is not a financially intelligent way to think and could leave you in serious trouble if something goes wrong. An emergency fund is exactly what the name suggests, a bank account that can you use in the case of an emergency without having to dip into your savings or rearrange your budget. It is money set aside specifically for use when things go haywire.

Continue Reading…

Doing the math on investment fees: the math isn’t pretty

A few weeks ago I invited readers to share their portfolio details with me so I could help ‘do the math’ on their investment fees. Many of you did, and the results weren’t pretty. From accounts loaded with deferred sales charges (DSCs), management expense ratios (MERs) in the high 2 per cent range, and funds overlapping the same sectors and regions, it was a predictable mess of over-priced products.

The worst of the bunch: the number of portfolios filled with segregated funds.

I’ve highlighted segregated funds as the biggest offender when it comes to fees for two reasons:

1.) The MER on segregated funds are higher than most mutual funds (which we know are already high enough). I looked at one portfolio that held a suite of segregated funds from Industrial Alliance called Ecoflex, with MERs of 2.99, 3.26, and 3.29 per cent;

2.) Segregated funds were exempt from CRM2 disclosure rules because they are considered insurance products. Investors receive the fund facts sheet, which still express fees in percentage terms rather than breaking them down and disclosing in dollar terms.

Doing the math on your investment fees

 

Keep in mind most readers were looking for me to do the math on their investment fees for portfolios valued at $250,000 or more. One reader, a soon-to-be retiree, had an average MER of 3.13 per cent for his $412,000 portfolio.

I told him he paid nearly $13,000 in investment fees last year and asked if he thought he was getting good value for his fees. He said he hadn’t met with his advisor in three years, despite repeated attempts to get together to discuss his retirement plan.

Another reader held $300,000 in high-fee mutual funds with Investors Group. She recognized the fees, but was on the fence about switching because she was in the middle of the deferred sales charge schedule:  a penalty that would cost her $10,000 if she sold the funds and transferred to a robo-advisor. Continue Reading…

The 2018 MoneySense ETF All-Stars

The 2018 edition of the MoneySense ETF All-Stars has just been published: you can read the whole article by clicking on the highlighted headline: The Best ETFs for 2018.

The “All-Star” portfolio consists of a 7-person expert panel plus myself. While the number of ETFs trading in Canada have reached 583, the All-Star list is now at 20, up from 14 a year ago. We added one to each existing category (except international equity) and
created a new category: the panel was unanimous in declaring the three new Vanguard Asset Allocation ETFs as All-Stars. See the Hub’s February 1st commentary on the launch of those three new products: Gamechanger.

In addition to adding the new category we call “One Decision” Packages, the panel added a single new ETF in three of the four existing categories: Canadian equities, US Equities and Fixed Income. We stood pat on the three international equity ETFs, although that asset class is also covered by the new Vanguard products.

Canadian equities

New in Canadian equities is the BMO S&P TSX Capped Composite IDX ETF (ticker ZCN), which expands the list from the returning three picks: Vanguard FTSE Canada ;All-cap Index ETF (VCN/TSX) XIC: the iShares Core S&P/TSX Capped Composite Index ETF; and HXT: Horizons S&P/TSX 60 ETF.

The panel was unanimous in retaining all three of these picks, since the trio maintain the lowest management fees among the segment, and HXT is particularly tax efficient and low cost for non-registered portfolios. But the panel agreed with Forstrong’s recommendation to add ZCN, which has the same rock-bottom annual fee of 0.05% as VCN and XIC. ZCN now has more assets than VCN.

US Equities

The panel agreed to add a fourth pick to the US all-cap space, again from BMO: BMO S&P500 Index ETF (CAD), ticker ZSP. As the Forstrong team observed, ZSP’s fee of 0.08 is the same as VFV’s and the fund now has the most assets of the four core US ETFs.

Two of our returning US equity picks are the hedged and unhedged versions of Vanguard Canada’s S&P 500 ETFs: VSP and VFV respectively, plus the iShares Core S&P US Total Market ETF (XUU.)

Fixed Income

The panel added a sixth ETF to the existing lineup of fixed-income ETFs: the iShares Core Canadian Short Term Bond Index ETF (XSB). Continue Reading…