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My latest crack at a "Retirement Portfolio"

Showing posts with label inflation. Show all posts
Showing posts with label inflation. Show all posts

Sunday, May 1, 2022

Risk free comes at a price

If you want a risk free investment, buy a GIC. You may only make 3.5% on a four year term but at maturity all your investment will be returned. Oh, it may have lost buying power if inflation runs at more than 3.5% but you will get all your money back. Guaranteed.

 

If 3.5% is not enough yield, why not take on a little risk and put 2% of your portfolio in IGM stock. IGM is off its recent high by 21.2%. It is selling for $40.71. A price that puts it in bear territory. Buying today, you will enjoy a dividend income of 5.53% for the next four years. That much is pretty much guaranteed. IGM is not overly generous with its dividend. Its payout ratio is quite reasonable. The dividend should be secure.

Morningstar lists IGM on both its Canada Core Pick List and its Canada Income Pick List. Only eight stocks receive this buy recommendation in the recent monthly report. At the moment, Morningstar gives IGM four stars. This means Morningstar believes IGM will most likely reward investors with capital gain.

During the March 2020 bear market, IGM dropped in price to about $21. Clearly, the IGM price can fall a lot more. A paper loss is possible. On the bright side, it climbed out of the depths of the 2020 bear market in little more than a year. If you can afford to hold, its price should recover. (IGM was selling for $43.20 at market close Mar. 7th, 2023.)

My take

I ended up buying some REITs wrapped up in the ETF RIT. I the units were $17.95 with a yield of 4.5%. These units partially replaced the units of XRE that I sold at the beginning of the recent correction. I sold the XRE high and I bought the RIT at a much lower entry price point.

One thing you never get with a GIC is a profit surprise and with a yield of only 3.5% you are hardly being paid to be patient or otherwise.

Make a note to yourself and revisit this advice in four years. See if I was right when I pronounced RIT or even IGM a better investment than a GIC. With a GIC you have almost locked in a guaranteed loss. With RIT or IGM, but especially RIT, I like to think I am risking making a tidy capital gain and banking a generous dividend. That is a risk with which I can live.