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by vchynarov 3719 days ago
Generally I agree with you. However I can provide a personal counter-example. I am a student with a modest sum saved away (with great help from my parents) in an index tracking mutual fund. Due to the way my bank offers investment packages, I am far below the minimum portfolio balance required for significantly less fees. However, I can have a mutual fund in a different type of account offering which is essentially the same as an identical ETF.

This is (Canadian) RBC - Direct Investing.

In addition this particular fund also significantly outperformed other ETFs during 2008-09.

2 comments

Questrade in Canada lets you buy ETFs for free, as little as one share at a time. You only pay when you sell ($0.01 a share, minimum $5 a trade).

Anything sold by the big banks in Canada is almost always a ridiculous rip-off.

Even better might be something like Wealthsimple.

(Not affiliated with either company except as a customer)

Friend of mine work over at WealthSimple. Glad to hear people like it.
Outperforming the market in bear years is the main reason in keep some of my money in managed funds.