Posts Tagged ‘canada’

Comparing Canadian Index Fund

June 27th, 2010

Before today, we were thinking that all Canadian index mutual funds should have the same (or at least similar) return over a couple of years. We are just surprised learning that it is not the case.

There are a couple of Canadian index mutual funds from major institutions in Canada, e.g.:

If we use chart comparison from The Globe and Mail, the chart of those funds in the last 10 year looks like the following:

cibc_canadian_index

rbc_canadian_index

scotia_canadian_index

td_canadian_index

The chart above assumes that we invest $10,000 in January 2000.

As we can see here, the four funds above have different result. CIBC Canadian Index has the lowest return, i.e. $15,713. Meanwhile, RBC Canadian Index has the highest return, i.e. $16.529.

There is more than 6% difference between the return of CIBC Canadian Index and RBC Canadian Index. We are not really sure why. We are also not sure why the gap between S&P/TSX total return and those funds are quite significant.

Link

Property in Vancouver is Still Bubble?

April 19th, 2010

For those who don’t know, we used to live in Vancouver area, British Columbia, for a couple of years. We bought a town-house there about 3 years ago. Unfortunately, we couldn’t stay longer because of the recession. I almost lost my job because my company was in trouble. We had to move to Ontario where the jobs are.

Although we move to Ontario, we still keep our town-house. The property market in Vancouver area was really bad when we left. We didn’t want to sell it below our purchase price. So, we decided to rent it out.

A couple of days ago, we received an assessment letter from BC Assessment. Our town-house is assessed with the value of $336,000. It is far below our purchase price, $382,000. We were a little bit shocked for a moment. As we wrote a couple of weeks ago, Canadian housing price seems to have recovered from its low.

Then, we checked MLS listing to see if any of our neighbours are selling their houses. Yes…, there is one neighbour who is selling their house. Their model is pretty much the same to ours. Their assessment value is also the same to ours. Guess what, they’re listing it for $469.000! We had another shock. Why is it far above our purchase price now?

We checked another source of data, i.e. Plunge-O-Meter. The chart below shows the average house price in Vancouver area since 1999. As you can see, there is a significant dip in late 2008 and early 2009. Then the market recovered quickly starting in mid-2009 to continue its long-term trend, moving even higher.

It makes more sense now. BC Assessment assessed our property value on July 1, 2009. This is where the market is bottoming. Since then, the price has gone up significantly, it’s now even higher than the previous peak in early 2008.

Vancouver BC Housing Price

How Does Our Portfolio Look Like?

February 22nd, 2010

Log Book

So far, we’ve been talking about our stock picks (see also here), but we never disclosed our portfolio. Now, we’re going to disclose our real portfolio.

First of all, we use a couple of different strategies in our portfolio. For example, we use dollar-cost averaging in our retirement account. We use a combination of fundamental and technical analysis in our short-term trading account. Having said that, we try to keep our portfolio as simple as possible.

How does our portfolio look like?

  • 15% US index
  • 15% Canadian index
  • 15% Emerging market index
  • 30% fixed-income, which includes government bonds, corporate bonds and preferred shares.
  • 5% REIT
  • 20% speculative stocks, long-term options and currency speculation

As we mentioned in our previous posting, we use mostly ETF and index mutual funds (we always prefer “no-load” mutual funds). We’ll discuss about which ETF/mutual funds issuers that we use in future posting.

(Picture is from stock.xchng.)

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