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What can we do for you?
- Identify the many Myths in the financial system, including the dream of “beating the market” through individual stock selection.
- Identify the key factors to becoming better do-it-yourself investors AND identify those which are under your control, such as an optimum allocation of your investments across appropriate asset categories.
- Accompany you each step of the way in the saving and investment process- see our User Guide.
- Help self-investors to better control their costs, what Warren Buffett calls the financial system’s friction costs.
- Help you better use your tax-exempt (
RRSP) account.
- Show you how to minimize your tax-related investment costs.
- Give you access to information to help you better manage a portfolio intended to constitute an important source of retirement income.
- Identify areas where the financial system does not adequately take into account the interests of independent investors.
- Encourage reforms to the regulatory system.
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For more details on the choice and meaning of the symbols click here.
| S&P/TSX |
11280.64 |
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| Dow Jones |
1313.47 |
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| S&P500 |
0.00 |
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| XIU.TO |
16.12 |
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| IVV |
131.92 |
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| EFA |
48.915 |
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| EEM |
37.97 |
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| XBB.TO |
31.38 |
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| AGG |
111.045 |
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| XSB.TO |
28.96 |
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| XRE.TO |
16.61 |
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| RWR |
69.43 |
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| RWX |
34.83 |
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WELCOME to our site for the independent investor which was officially launched March 18, 2008. Become a member (it’s free) and enjoy full access to the site + receive on a preferred basis our weekly newsletters. Our site has been described as one of the few educational websites that offer the unbiased, clearly written material that busy investors need (The Globe & Mail 30 05 2008) and as a site dedicated to providing individual investors with independent, objective, free advice and information (The Gazette, Montreal 31 03 2008).We are also on Twitter under DIYInvestor .
NEW: On JANUARY 1ST WE LAUNCHED OUR NEW SITE: INFOINVESTDUJOUR.COM . The site contains an electronic calendar called All about Investing. It provides, on every day of the year, information selected from the best texts from our existing site, plus additional, never published, information. It will notify you when North American markets are closed for the day, key Canadian tax dates, anniversaries of people who historically have played important roles in the world of finance, and much more. WE ENCOURAGE ALL MEMBERS TO CONSIDER SIGNING UP TO INFOINVESTDUJOUR.COM, for only $2.19 plus applicable taxes for each period of 30 days.The revenue from the new site should allow us to continue to offer FREE membership to our existing site.
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Manifesto for a new approach to investing by Paul Woolley |
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Page 3 of 3
The manifesto for action and individual investors
Woolley has the big picture right. He mocks the view that if the finance sector is flourishing, this is seen as a sign that the overall economy is necessarily well. His claim that we need to cut the finance sector down to size- otherwise we may be facing the end of capitalism as we know it, will resonate with readers of our site. In a recent commentary we criticized the proposed Canadian securities Act for not attacking the cost structure of the financial industry; see Proposed Canadian Securities Act and investor protection: a failing grade on our site.
But as interesting as Woolley’s analysis may be, is it relevant to individual investors? Yes and no. Here’s why.
Points relevant to individual investors
Four of his points are directly relevant to small investors. Here they are:
- 1
Adopt long-term investment approach (future dividend flows), rather than momentum (short-run price change)
Long term investing is an approach that we believe in and
promote.
- 2
Cap annual turnover of portfolios at 30%.
Costs is the enemy of good long term investment returns; see Costs of investing on our site. Limiting trading is the best way of reducing costs and avoiding market timing strategies.
- 6
Not engage in alternative investments – Hedge funds, Private equity, commodities
For numerous reasons, we recommend against most alternative investments ; see Alternative Investments
on our site. So this is another point we agree with.
- 8
Ensure everything in the portfolio is traded on a public exchange
As well, we counsel against privately placed, non-traded securities; see
Venture capital (private equity)
on our site.
A red flag
However, Woolley‘s approach to diversification and active vs. passive investing is in our view inappropriate for individual investors. He believes that great funds should diversify based on cash flows, not on share prices, and points out that indices can be wrong, giving the Japan and high tech bubbles as examples. He proposes a growth of GDP plus a premium for risk as a better return benchmark. These are interesting concepts, but individual investors have neither the time nor the expertise to second-guess market indices or benchmarks or to carry out cash flow analyses. In our view, until further notice, retail investors would be well advised to stay with a passive, price index approach.
Conclusion
Paul Woolley’s argument that we have an overly-expensive, destabilizing financial system is right on. And Canadians in particular should step back and smell the roses the next time one of our politicians starts cheerleading for our financial sector. And individual investors everywhere would do well to seek inspiration from Woolley’s manifesto.
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 24 October 2010 )
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