Just looking to invest in some funds that could earn anywhere from 6-9% a year. Although I have a financial advisor I like to hear anyone else's good expericences with funds. I know there's some very wealthy posters here because this is an expensive hobby so I thought there might be some savvy investors in the market.
My advice to a novice investor is always that you ultimately want to educate yourself and manage your own investments. Financial advisors have their place, but at the end of the day they are salesmen and you should not trust your advisor to manage your finances anymore than you should trust a car salesman to tell you what car to buy. For example, I am heavily invested in commodities. The mainstream considers commodities to be risky investments because of their volatility, and no financial advisor is going to recommend as heavy a weighting as I have because they don't want the backlash if their client loses say 20% in a year. That being said, I am willing to accept that risk, and my RRSP is up 67% this year and I am averaging a 15% return annually since I started tracking in 2003.
If you truly can't stand to do your own research and just want something to buy and forget, I'd say get a Canadian equities mutal fund or ETF and dollar cost average into it (ie., buy a fixed amount every paycheque).
I would not recommend mutual funds because of the relatively high fees as the other poster has said. Exchange Traded Funds are the ETFs of the new century -- they do everything mutual funds do, and they are cheaper and you can trade in and out of them more easily.
If you are willing to spend even a half hour or so every three months, a better solution would be to divide your portfolio into four equal quarters, each invested into a different sector. My own suggestion for you would be:
* 25% broad Canadian equities (eg., Claymore Investments Canadian Fundamental Index ETF - TSE:CRQ)
* 25% Canadian utilities (eg., BMO Equal Weight Utilities Index ETF - TSE:ZUT)
* 25% emerging markets (eg., Claymore BRIC ETF - TSE: CBQ)
* 25% commodities (eg., iShares S&P/TSX Capped Materials Index Fund - TSE: XMA)
Every three months, rebalance your portfolio so each sector is an equal 25% again. The idea is that over the course of the year your relative percentage invested in each sector will change as some funds go up and some go down. By rebalancing your portfolio on a regular basis you are buying low and selling high.
You might be content doing this strategy for the rest of your life, but I would suggest this is just a starting point. Again you want to educate yourself to the point where you can buy a basket of individual stocks, say about 10 to 15, and actually have an opinion on why you like this company or this fund.
I'm not picking on you, but just talking generally I'm always surprised that people spend so much time working on their careers and typically won't spend a few minutes a week working on their investments and managing the fruits of their hard work.
Anyway, I hope that gets you started and good luck with your investments. If you have any other questions, please feel free to post them or PM me
