RE:RE:RE:Some thoughtsYep, spot on. Always keep an eye on the MER to see how much they gouge you. Easier method is what ticker mentioned.
TickerTwit wrote: The dividend funds reap (typically) 25-50% of the income in management fees. You don't get the dividends in full unless you self-manage. Read the funds' holdings, duplicate them (or perhaps the top ten) in a self-directed account, and then you get the capital appreciation -AND- the dividends without a huge rake by the fund manager.
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ckwong wrote: Sarge, your strategy works well and I looked at the dividend for the banks and FTS. Their yield against the current dividend is 10 time 10 years earlier.
If you consider mutual fund, you may want to look into some dividend/income fund. But becareful with their performance number. For example Royal Bank's dividend/income function (RBF1014) claims their 10 years performance is about 9% annualized which is the gain in 10 years divided by 10. Coumpounded growth is actually 7% which is not bad.