How the best balanced funds are riding the bear market
Low-fee and resilient, these funds remain key for diversified investors
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Low-fee and resilient, these funds remain key for diversified investors
“I’ve also listed a couple of balanced funds that hold passive portfolios designed to track broad market indexes. The CIBC Balanced Index Premium fund requires a hefty initial investment of $50,000 but charges only 0.39% annually. The TD Balanced Index fund requires only a $100 initial investment, but charges 0.89% per year.”
Over the last 12 months the CIBC fund lost 1.9% and the TD fund fell 2.2%, according to Morningstar.ca. Those aren’t marvellous results, but they’re much better than the Canadian stock market, which fell 8.2% over the same period, including reinvested dividends. Now let’s see what I said about the three active funds.“I’ve been a long time fan of two balanced funds from Calgary-based Mawer Investment Management. The Mawer Balanced fund charges 0.96% a year, has beaten the market by an average of 1.6 percentage points a year over the last 10 years, and is designed for RRSPs. The other is the Mawer Tax Effective Balanced Fund which charges 0.98% a year, has bested the market by 1.5 percentage points a year over the last 10 years, and is designed for regular taxable accounts. You can get both with a $5,000 initial investment through a discount broker.
The Steadyhand Founders fund is an alternate that comes with an unusual fee structure. It offers rebates to those who have more money in the fund and who have stayed with it for a long time. As a result, the annual fee on the Founders fund ranges between 0.69% per year and 1.34% per year. If you have $10,000, you can buy the fund directly from Steadyhand.”
Over the last 12 months the Mawer Balanced fund gained 1.3%, the Mawer Tax Effective Balanced fund gained 1.1% while the Steadyhand Founders fund gave up 1.8%. They all beat the index funds, but it was an admittedly near thing for the Steadyhand fund. While it hasn’t been a great period for investors, I still believe that the five low-fee balanced funds mentioned above represent good long-term options for new investors–or those who don’t want to spend much time on their investments.Name | Price | P/B | P/E | Earnings Yield | Dividend Yield |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
National Bank (NA) | $40.56 | 1.46 | 9.97 | 10.03% | 5.33% |
CIBC (CM) | $95.18 | 1.81 | 10.53 | 9.50% | 4.96% |
Shaw (SJR.B) | $24.13 | 2.19 | 13.71 | 7.29% | 4.91% |
Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS) | $61.23 | 1.45 | 10.58 | 9.46% | 4.70% |
BCE (BCE) | $58.44 | 3.89 | 19.61 | 5.10% | 4.67% |
Royal Bank (RY) | $72.70 | 1.71 | 10.9 | 9.17% | 4.46% |
TELUS (T) | $40.15 | 3.11 | 17.53 | 5.70% | 4.38% |
Bank of Montreal (BMO) | $77.13 | 1.29 | 11.48 | 8.71% | 4.36% |
Power Corp (POW) | $28.84 | 1.06 | 7.23 | 13.84% | 4.32% |
Emera (EMA) | $46.87 | 1.98 | 17.21 | 5.81% | 4.05% |
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