What happens to your debt when you die + MORE Mar 6th

2022 Income Tax Guide for Canadians: Deadlines, tax tips and more + MORE Feb 27th
Can you use the Home Buyers’ Plan to buy a foreign property? Mar 20th

What does the average wedding cost in Canada? + MORE Dec 26th

How much credit card debt does the average Canadian have? + MORE Jan 2nd
Are ETFs a good investment for an all-weather portfolio?
– moneysense.ca
It’s true short-term bank savings accounts and guaranteed investment certificates (GICs) seem relatively safe from both stock meltdowns and precipitous rises in interest rates, but now there’s the added scourge of rising inflation. Even if you can earn 2% annually on a GIC, if inflation is running at 4%, you’re actually losing 2% a year.
Are ETFs a good investment for an all-weather portfolio?
It’s tempting to throw your hands up and retreat to those much-praised asset allocation exchange traded funds (ETFs)…
How to use ETFs in your child’s RESP
– moneysense.ca
In many ways, RESPs are fundamentally different from retirement accounts such as RRSPs. They typically have a shorter time horizon, and they are usually depleted within four or five years once your child reaches post-secondary school. In general, they are also much smaller than retirement accounts, since the most you can contribute is $50,000 during a beneficiary’s lifetime. But the same principles of risk management apply, and holding nothing more than a Canadian dividend ETF in an registered education savings plan account may not provide enough diversification.
READ: What is an RESP?
If you’re opening a new RESP for a baby, then you have at least 18 years before you need to start withdrawing the money. So you should start with the goal of building a globally diversified portfolio, which includes all asset classes, not just Canadian dividend stocks…

