Our financial planners have been quoted in the following media:

 

"Is there a bear in your portfolio?" screamed the ad with the picture of a mean-looking grizzly. It sure got my attention

Advisors Edge Magazine, by Marc Lamontagne, CFP, R.F.P., FMA
October 2008

Bear or inverse ETFs are a new breed of leveraged instruments, which move opposite to the direction of a given market or sector.

Offered in Canada by Horizons BetaPro, these bear-market versions are designed to give investors an inverse of 200% of the daily return of a particular market or sector, before fees and other expenses such as interest accrual.

So, if you held the HBP S&P/TSX 60 Bear Plus ETF on a day that the TSX 60 index was down 2%, then you'd have earned a positive 4% rate of return for that day, before fees.

This is made possible by using derivative products known as forwards. Unlike futures products, which trade on commodities exchanges south of the border, forwards are contracts that aren't traded on an organized exchange, and are not settled by an organized clearing corporation. In essence, a forward is a contractually negotiated agreement with a counterparty (usually a bank) based on delivery of return that is derived from an underlying commodity, financial instrument, or in this case a stock investment strategy.

Full text: How things work: Is there a bear in your portfolio?

"Seg" funds no longer make much sense

MoneySense Magazine, by Julie Cazzin
October 2008

If you’re a senior citizen, a small business owner or simply a cautious investor, you’ve probably heard sales pitches for what are known as segregated funds. Our advice? Steer clear.

“Seg” funds are offered by insurance companies; at first glance, they look much like mutual funds. But seg funds impose very high fees — as much as 4% a year, which is substantially more than the 2% to 2.5% that most mutual funds charge, and four to 10 times what index funds bill you.

So why would anyone buy a seg fund? A major appeal used to be that creditors could not seize seg funds if you went bust. So if you had concerns about your financial health, or ran a small business in a risky industry, seg funds provided you with a lockbox that your creditors couldn’t get into if things went wrong.

Full text: Segregated funds: A cracked nest egg

Chances are you've already spent the bonus you've been expecting — in your imagination, anyway. It's not hard for most people to come up with ways to spend a lump of money

Manulife Investments WealthStyles Articles

But the first thing to consider, says Marc Lamontagne, a cerified financial planner with Ryan Lamontagne Inc. in Ottawa, is that the lump sum you're anticipating is probably not what it seems, because you haven't paid tax on it yet.

Full text: Stretching your bonus

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