I also received some dividend income lately: 14.56$ from Pengrowth Energy Trust (PGF.UN) and 57.06$ from Emera Incorporated (EMA).
Thursday, August 19, 2010
I am now richer than ever but its not enough to call for retirement yet
I also received some dividend income lately: 14.56$ from Pengrowth Energy Trust (PGF.UN) and 57.06$ from Emera Incorporated (EMA).
My investment portfolio in date of August 18, 2010
1 000$
Non registered Investments:
Stocks and Units investment portfolio
Sprott Inc. (SII): 1 900.35$
Timminco (TIM): 87$
Blue Note Mining (BNT): 34$
Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS): 5 466.63$
Hanwei Energy Services (HE): 126$
Methanex Corporation (MX): 2 268.06$
Fortis (FTS): 3 052.80$
Pembina Pipeline Income Fund (PIF.UN):
8 218.89$
Just Energy Income Fund (JE.UN): 10 075.56$
Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN):
2 361.45$
Bell Aliant Regional Communications Income Fund
(BA.UN): 2 550$
Pengrowth Energy Trust (PGF.UN): 2 087.91$
Enbridge Income Fund (ENF.UN): 4 534.16$
Corby Distilleries Limited (CDL.A): 3 030$
Davis + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN):
1 769$
Premium Brands Holdings Corporation (PBH):
2 670$
Cash: 12.77$
TOTAL: 50 244.58$
Tax-free savings account (TFSA):
RBC O’Shaughnessy Canadian Equity Fund:
2 640.66$
The Consumers’ Waterheater Income Fund
(CWI.UN): 1 921.68$
Sprott Canadian Equity Fund:
5 178.04$
Dumont Nickel Inc. (DNI): 345$
Cash: 60.78$
TOTAL: 10 146.16$
RSP investment portfolio:
Claymore Gold Bullion ETF (CGL): 3 748.42$
EnCana Corporation (ECA): 2 904$
Emera Incorporated (EMA): 5 334.60$
Cash: 38.08$
CIBC Dividend Growth Fund: 496.85$
CIBC Emerging Markets Index Fund: 417.13$
CIBC Monthly Income Fund: 990.37$
Energy and Base Metals Term Savings (Indexed term savings):
503.46$
Natural Resources Term Savings (Indexed term savings):
502.06$
GIC National Bank: 1 192.64$
GIC Plus: 500$
TD Canadian Bond: 116.87$
TD Monthly Income: 104.38$
TD Emerging Markets: 82.12$
TD Energy: 79.76$
TD Precious Metals: 114.32$
TD Latin American Growth: 95.98$
TD Entertainment and Communications: 105.39$
TD Dividend Growth: 191.76$
TD U.S. Mid-Cap Growth: 96.78$
Maritime Life International Equity Fund
(Templeton): 608.50$
Manulife Simplicity Growth Portfolio: 838.52$
Maritime Life CI Harbour Seg Fund: 973.37$
Maritime Life Fidelity True North Seg Fund: 944.61$
Maritime Life Trimark Europlus Seg Fund: 582.73$
Great-West – various: 1 753.62$
RBC Canadian Dividend Fund: 501.42$
RBC U.S. Mid-Cap Equity Fund C$: 1 679.05$
RBC Global Resources Fund: 832.68$
RBC O’Shaughnessy International Equity Fund:
580.92$
RBC O’Shaughnessy All-Canadian Equity
Fund: 1 023.86$
GIC Canadian Market: 1 000$
TOTAL: 28 934.25$
Social Capital at Desjardins Membership share
for 3 accounts: 40$
Savings + Stocks, units, mutual funds + Tax-
free Savings account + RRSP + Online Income
(107.57$):
90 472.56$
Wednesday, August 18, 2010
I am spending too much
Sunday, August 15, 2010
Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN) dividends for August 2010 are in
This weekend had been quite easy as I just work my usual weekend shift and it’s about it. Some people are really getting annoying at my weekend job and there are so a bunch of Quebec morons there. It’s unbelievable. I am just not getting use to it. I didn’t apply for any credit line over the phone like I wanted to. And it’s not a Quebec jerk who’s going to refuse me because I am going to call the English line for all the places I am going to apply to (because I could get refused…). I am going to try to take care of this tomorrow morning. My investment project is going on so fine. I received this weekend Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN) dividend, a nice and gentle 30.01$. I guess it will DRIP on Monday or so. I should receive around 4 new units of Yellow Pages Income Fund. The dividends are slowly adding up. I think this is the first ever I am receiving a 30$ from Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN). Hope one day I will have enough to espace from Quebec province forever.
Saturday, August 14, 2010
I need more credit
Talking about dividend, I receive this week Just Energy Income Fund (JE.UN) dividend (76.77$) and Pembina Pipeline Income Fund (PIF.UN) dividend (54.73$). The dividend keeps adding up! I really hope that one day I won’t have to work as hard as I am working right now. At a point, just working part-time, cashing in the dividend could be just so the dream. But knowing myself, I might continue to work just to be able to invest more… and why not, pay off those heavy debts that I have lol. Anyhow, let’s update my dividend earnings and see how the DRIP strategy had worked so far:
My non registered Stocks and Units investment portfolio
Sprott Inc. (SII): 515 x 0.10 cents + 0.04$ special dividend =
72.10$
Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS): 107 x 1.96$ = 209.72$
Methanex Corporation (MX): 103 x 0.62$ = 63.86$
Fortis (FTS): 106 x 1.12$ = 118.72$
Pembina Pipeline Income Fund (PIF.UN): 423 x 1.56$ = 659.88$
Just Energy Income Fund (JE.UN): 748 x 1.24$ + special dividend of 0.20$ = 1 077.12$
Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN): 450 x 0.80$ = 360$
Bell Aliant Regional Communications Income Fund (BA.UN): 100 x 2.90$ = 290$
Pengrowth Energy Trust (PGF.UN): 208 x 0.93$ = 193.44$
Enbridge Income Fund (ENF.UN): 314 x 1.15$ = 361.10$
Corby Distilleries Limited (CDL.A): 200 x 0.56$ = 112$
Davis + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN): 100 x 1.84 = 184$
Premium Brands Holdings Corporation (PBH): 200 x 1.18$ =
TOTAL: 3 937.94$
+ my next investment in David + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN) (184$)
= 4 121.94$
My TFSA investment portfolio
The Consumers’ Waterheater Income Fund (CWI.UN):
408 x 0.76$ = 310.08$
I am leaving my RSP portfolio behind, as it’s not possible to cash in the dividend coming from a RSP broker account.
OVERALL TOTAL: 4 432.02$ (or 369.34$ per month…)
Regarding the debt, I have that 1 000$ and something currently at CIBC Visa at 3.5% or so. The special interest rate is going to expire in September. At this point, of my investment game, I am not in position to pay off any debt because if I do, I may not be able to reach the 100k portfolio by the end of 2010. So this situation is kind of a dilemma for me. I am already full pack of debt, but I wonder if I could get approved for a credit line at RBC or CIBC at a low interest rate. So I am going to do my request this weekend and see if something can be done for me. I could have used margin on my portfolio but I am feeling very insecure about it. A pro would have use margin, a Derek Foster imitator….. credit card balance transfer lol. At this time, I don’t have any room left for credit card balance transfer. I didn’t receive new credit card balance offer from RBC Visa or CIBC Visa, just from TD Visa and my TD Visa is currently “fully” full… So I am in need of a miracle. But you know, sometimes, miracle happens.
Wednesday, August 11, 2010
And what about a 50 198$ value in my non registered stocks & units online portfolio?
Yesterday, something very special happen. My non registered investment portfolio of stocks and units reached the 50 198$! When I saw the amount I couldn’t believe my eyes! WOWW! This is the highest value reach ever for my non registered stocks and units portfolio. I always say that once I reach 50 000$ in my non registered portfolio, that day will be special… I always wanted to be there. So now I am there. No today, but I was there yesterday.
There’s currently overtime available at my job so I finished work very late yesterday and arrived home late. I just took the time to take a quick look at my portfolio… And there it was, it was there, the magic number was there! It’s really too bad I didn’t have time to update my portfolio yesterday. On date of yesterday, I may had been around 90 500$ in total assets or something it probably. I am always good at telling at around which level I am at by looking at the TSX. Today the TSX lost a couple of points, but nothing major. I am at 49 900$ something right now.
I am really working hard right now because since overtime is available, I may be able to make my next investment by the end of the month. And this is very exciting. I am also very close to my 100$ payout for my online earnings. So that’s pretty cool too because I would very like to purchase a pair of Gisele Bundchen sandals (can a pair of her sandals make me look like her, please!! lol) and a new pair of running shoes. I won’t be able to purchase both with 100$ but still. By encouraging The Dividend Girl, by visiting my advertisers, you make things possible you know. Earning a couple of 100$ per year by working online is kind of nice. I will be celebrating my 30th birthday by the end of the month and it will be awesome if I could make another investment just before hitting 30th you know, just to say to myself ok, I might be working at some extraordinary boring jobs (no offense but that’s how my jobs are lol) – but at least, I am f***** rich! LOL!!!! And you know what, I have a feeling I am going to be able to make that investment of 100 new units in David + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN) really soon! Call me stupid, call me dumb, I couldn’t be more careless. I am going to make it anyway, even after being laid off by BMO Bank of Montreal. Finance stuff is just a matter of touch and sense. If your heart is good and understands the basic, you can do better than anyone else (even me lol) and I am at a point where I begin to think that I am pretty good at the investment game. It’s all about following the right person. In my case, Derek Foster books had been pretty useful and I have to say, that’s where the extraordinary all begin. And thinking about it, Derek Foster is such an angel, for the way he answered people on the Canadian Business forum. Always cheerful, always polite, so professional. Whenever I want to say f*** you to a customer or/and hang up on them lol!!!, I think of Derek Foster and his kindness. He’s so professional and a good person. Such so the complete opposite of who I am. F Quebeckers will have to apologize me and F BMO Bank of Montreal employees who had decided to lay off me would have to eat shit one of these days. That’s really all. Because I really begin to think that I am pretty good at everything I do and those F of Quebeckers and BMO Bank of Montreal will have to get use to it. That’s really all. I am sooo terribly sorry. I am being sooo bad. But I am really telling the true. The customers I am dealing with at my job in a call center? I am just trying not to yell at them.
I have someone at work who catch me looking at the TSX and stocks and he joke around. I didn’t talk about it too much. I don’t want to take openly about my portfolio and my money, this being to protect myself. The world we live in being what it is, you better careful, especially with Quebeckers. So told me why you don’t study accountability to understand more of what you do? I told him: “yeah, that’s a great idea. But you know, I only look at the index because I love everything related to finance. That’s really all.” I am such a liar. But you know, I might not have the big diplomas in finance, but I perfectly know what I am doing. The 50 198$ in my non registered stocks + units portfolio of yesterday is the living proof of that. I am just that good. One day you’ll have to stop reading this blog because if not, you’ll catch all the tips and tricks all for free and BMO Bank of Montreal financial planners will all be laid off. Just like that. I just have to get over it one of those days you know but Bank of Montreal + Quebeckers + me = a lot of shit. That’s all I have to say. Just one beer and I am already drunk. It’s all what it take me. ONE BEER. :)
Monday, August 9, 2010
About BMO Bank of Montreal ETFs
This week is going to be quite busy because I had accepted to work full-time at my daytime job. I will be working some terribly long and painful hours. I decide to do it to accommodate them, as they had accommodated me quite well during the past couple of months. I just wish they won’t forget about this one if it happen I had to request a schedule change for whatever reason.
Nothing done regarding job searching at this time, but I am looking forward to seek for something maybe in September or so. I gave myself the summer off for that part. I had been quite lazy and I have to say, my laziness had paid well – in the sense that my investment portfolio is stronger than ever (remember I am now at more than 90 000$ in assets).
My portfolio is not perfect but I like the crazy diversification. One of my favorite hobby is to calculate my dividend income money over and over again. In result, I had been searching ways on how to increase my dividend income. Without counting my RSP dividend earning, on date of July 19, I am at 4 229.47$ in yearly dividend income. Nice little income that represent a 352.46$ per month.
Whenever I want, I have the possibility to increase my dividend income to more than 500$ per year. How? Really simple, just by selling my mutual fund units hold in the Sprott Canadian Equity Fund and RBC O’Shaughnessy Canadian Equity Fund. Currently, my investment in the Sprott Canadian Equity Fund exactly worth 5103.76$. I could sell my Sprott Canadian Equity Fund units and get a 5 000$ from the sell. As for the RBC O’Shaughnessy Canadian Equity Fund, I could make around 2 700$ from the sell of its unit. This represent close to 7 000$ in cash. With this money, I could purchase 500 units of Enbridge Income Fund (ENF.UN). And those units could provide me more than 500$ in dividend income. This is quite tempting but I won’t sell anything now. I am confident that those 2 mutual funds will gain more value in the upcoming months so I am in a big rush to sell. But just the taught of earning 500$ more in dividend, just like that, is quite a magical taught. This is a future project and I just can’t wait to get ride of the Sprott Canadian Equity Fund. Good thing that Eric Sprott had called for retirement. I have enough him for all of my life. As well as for BMO Bank of Montreal. It make me laugh you know when I learned that BMO Bank of Montreal was waiving the management fees to their ETFs to their customers. I don’t know too well about that offer but anyhow, fact is that BMO Bank of Montreal ETFs are not great performer. If I look at the ETFs top performers for the past year, we find stuff like:
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Gold Bullion Bull Plus ETF (HBU) at a fantastic +64.49%;
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Silver Bull Plus ETF (HZU) at +55.95%;
iShares S&P TSX Capped REIT Index Fund (XRE) at +37.74%;
iShares S&P TSX SmallCap Index Fund (XCS) at +36.85%;
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Silver ETF (HUZ) at +31.44%;
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Gold ETF (HUG) at +30.37%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P/TSX Global Gold Bull Plus ETF (HUG) at +29.77%;
iShares S&P TSX Completion Index Fund (XMD) at +28.17%;
Horizons BetaPro NASDAQ 100 Bull Plus ETF (HQU) at 27.60%;
iShares S&P TSX Income Trust Index Fund (XTR) at +27.52%.
As you notice, no sign of ETFs of BMO Bank of Montreal.
And what about the latest 6 Month Performance? Well, here they are:
Horizons BetaPro S&P/TSX Global Base Metals Bear Plus ETF (HMD) at +26.12%;
Horizons BetaPro US 30-yr Bond Bull Plus Fund (HTU) at +25.51%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P Agribusiness North America Bear Plus ETF (HAD) at +24.96%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P/TSX Global Gold Bull Plus ETF (HGU) at +24.36%;
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Gold Bullion Bull Plus ETF (HBU) at +23.91%;
Horizons BetaPro NYMEX Natural Gas Bear Plus ETF (HND) at +22.85%;
Horizons BetaPro NYMEX Crude Oil Bear Plus ETF (HOD) at +19.10%;
iShares S&P TSX Global Gold Index Fund (XGD) at +14.63%;
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Gold ETF (HUG) at +12.29%;
Claymore Gold Bullion ETF (CGL) at +12.02%.
Take a look at this: My very precious Claymore Gold Bullion ETF (CGL) is making the list, but of course, none of BMO Bank of Montreal ETFs! Ok, let’s give BMO Bank of Montreal a chance and let’s take a look at the latest 3 month performance of the best ETFs. Here they are:
Horizons BetaPro S&P/TSX Global Base Metals Bear Plus ETF (HMD) at +47.28%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P/TSX Global Gold Bull Plus ETF (HGU) at +43.76%;
Horizons BetaPro NYMEX Crude Oil Bear Plus ETF (HOD) at +36.04%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P Agribusiness North America Bear Plus ETF (HAD) at +32.79%;
Horizons BetaPro COMEX Gold Bullion Bull Plus ETF (HBU) at +23.06%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P 500 Bear Plus ETF (HSD) at +22.90%;
Horizons BetaPro S&P TSX Capped Financials Bear Plus ETF (HFD) at +21.65%;
iShares S&P TSX Global Gold Index Fund (XGD) at +21.38%;
Horizons BetaPro US 30-yr Bond Bull Plus Fund (HTU) at +21.36%;
Horizons BetaPro NASDAQ 100 Bear Plus ETF (HQD) at +20.98%.
Still no sign of one of BMO Bank of Montreal ETFs! Do you need any more proof? I am telling you, BMO Bank of Montreal is going a great deal of marketing over some ETFs who had no good values for investors. I decide to play it smart and not to invest in any of BMO Bank of Montreal ETFs. My results? Extraordinary. They speak by themselves. I am using a 37 000$ and something in debt over a 90 200$ in assets. My leverage plan is working extremely well because I know now how to invest and how to avoid bad investments like the one being represent by BMO Bank of Montreal ETFs. You have to play smart to make big bucks. There’s no easy way, but you can easily avoid bad investment if you do some simple very easy search, simple as 1-2-3. The ETFs of BMO Bank of Montreal? They don’t worth it. That’s why you can get them without any management fee. That’s really all. No big secret to be hide.
You might ask yourself, why is she talking about ETFs? Well, it happens that Claymore Investments had listed a new ETFs this last Friday. It’s the Claymore China ETF (CHI). Most of my assets are concentrated into Canadian stocks. Adding the Claymore China ETD (CHI) in my investment portfolio will help to add a great diversity and will bring international exposure to my portfolio. Now you know my secret.
Also, I am looking forward to open a discount broker account with Questrade. Even while having 70 000$ with TD Waterhouse, I am paying 29$ in commisssion per trade. This restric my trading movements a lot. Enough is enough I decide, time to move on. What I have at TD Waterhouse will stay there, I am just looking to start a new fresh broker account with Questrade. So Questrade, here I am! This is going to be fun, trading at 9.99$ instead of 29$, the saving are huge is this will allow me to diversify my portfolio even MORE. So it will become extra-diversify. Fun time ahead! I am still thinking about David + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN) as next investment.
Tuesday, August 3, 2010
I am now at 90 275.29$
I hit the 90 000$ because of today TSX gain. My overall portfolio had follow the TSX gain and here I am, at more than 90 000$. I was surprised to see Corby Distilleries Limited (CDL.A) at less than 15.30$ today. Otherwise, everything else is looking great, if not that Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN) that had slide to less than 6$ per unit. I had been lucky, at the time, I had purchased YLO.UN under 5$ per unit but I wouldn’t invest again in Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN).
As for my next investment, I was thinking about 100 units of Davis + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN). I currently hold 100 units only of Davis + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN), so it will be nice to add up an extra 100 units in order to benefit from the DRIP, even just a bit.
Otherwise, I want back to work on Monday and it went well. I am just trying to do my best but I kind of lost the speed a bit. Very strange isn’t, especially knowing I had doing what I am doing for more than 2 years now lol. Anyhow, I am back on track and surprise, I won’t have to work full-time to cover up on a co-worker who wanted to switch to a part-time shit. This is very nice because working there 6 hours per day at that job is pretty much what I can handle right now. I plan to discipline myself a bit more on my online projects with the free time a 6 hours daily shift is giving me and also focus more on my frugal living. I purchase a Second Cup coffee on Monday and today I buy myself some sushi. So I am cheating all the way here but my objective is to spend less, not to stop spending.
My stock investment portfolio in date of August 3, 2010
1 000$
Non registered Investments:
Stocks and Units investment portfolio
Sprott Inc. (SII): 1 761.30$
Timminco (TIM): 118$
Blue Note Mining (BNT): 40$
Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS): 5 504.08$
Hanwei Energy Services (HE): 129$
Methanex Corporation (MX): 2 411.23$
Fortis (FTS): 3 117.46$
Pembina Pipeline Income Fund (PIF.UN):
7 881.12$
Just Energy Income Fund (JE.UN): 9 926.48$
Yellow Pages Income Fund (YLO.UN):
2 578.50$
Bell Aliant Regional Communications Income Fund
(BA.UN): 2 562$
Pengrowth Energy Trust (PGF.UN): 2 094.56$
Enbridge Income Fund (ENF.UN): 4 364.60$
Corby Distilleries Limited (CDL.A): 3 010$
Davis + Henderson Income Fund (DHF.UN):
1 757$
Premium Brands Holdings Corporation (PBH):
2 650$
Cash: 0.32$
TOTAL: 49 905.65$
Tax-free savings account (TFSA):
RBC O’Shaughnessy Canadian Equity Fund:
2 658.85$
The Consumers’ Waterheater Income Fund
(CWI.UN): 1 872.72$
Sprott Canadian Equity Fund:
5 036.64$
Dumont Nickel Inc. (DNI): 388.13$
Cash: 60.78$
TOTAL: 10 017.12$
RSP investment portfolio:
Claymore Gold Bullion ETF (CGL): 3 616.60$
EnCana Corporation (ECA): 3 149$
Emera Incorporated (EMA): 5 369.16$
Cash: 30.26$
CIBC Dividend Growth Fund: 501.18$
CIBC Emerging Markets Index Fund: 420.27$
CIBC Monthly Income Fund: 996.48$
Energy and Base Metals Term Savings (Indexed term savings):
503.46$
Natural Resources Term Savings (Indexed term savings):
502.06$
GIC National Bank: 1 192.64$
GIC Plus: 500$
TD Canadian Bond: 116.01$
TD Monthly Income: 105.45$
TD Emerging Markets: 82.52$
TD Energy: 82.12$
TD Precious Metals: 106.68$
TD Latin American Growth: 95.63$
TD Entertainment and Communications: 106.51$
TD Dividend Growth: 197.19$
TD U.S. Mid-Cap Growth: 98.66$
Maritime Life International Equity Fund
(Templeton): 627.89$
Manulife Simplicity Growth Portfolio: 847.46$
Maritime Life CI Harbour Seg Fund: 989.79$
Maritime Life Fidelity True North Seg Fund: 946.39$
Maritime Life Trimark Europlus Seg Fund: 589.37$
Great-West – various: 1 753.62$
RBC Canadian Dividend Fund: 508.61$
RBC U.S. Mid-Cap Equity Fund C$: 1 721.83$
RBC Global Resources Fund: 845.11$
RBC O’Shaughnessy International Equity Fund:
598.35$
RBC O’Shaughnessy All-Canadian Equity
Fund: 1 027.64$
GIC Canadian Market: 1 000$
TOTAL: 29 227.94$
Social Capital at Desjardins Membership share
for 3 accounts: 40$
Savings + Stocks, units, mutual funds + Tax-
free Savings account + RRSP + Online Income
(84.58$):
90 275.29$