Q: Thank you for your May 10 response to my question on Insured Annuities. As a follow-up for clarification, is a pre-tax GIC-equivalent yield of 5.2% a reasonable return (without the benefit of a crystal ball looking ahead 20 years)? Again, the annuity is not indexed.
Your are correct that our income exceeds our expenses from our Cash accounts. An income stream from our RRSPs and TFSAs has not been included yet. Annual RRSP withdrawals are directed towards our Cash accounts for future investments. Capital gains/losses are not factored in.
The second option under consideration was to add to the mortgage sector, specifically Capital Direct. For clarification, what maximum weighting in the "mortgage plus REIT" sector would be appropriate? I currently have 5% in Sentry REIT and 15% in Fisgard Capital, totaling 20%.
Bond-GICs yielding 1-2-3% barely cover inflation, but do provide portfolio stability. If the current relatively low interest rate environment stays this way for another 5 years, we are right back to the annuity being the better choice. Your thoughts?
Thanks for your help,
Steve
Your are correct that our income exceeds our expenses from our Cash accounts. An income stream from our RRSPs and TFSAs has not been included yet. Annual RRSP withdrawals are directed towards our Cash accounts for future investments. Capital gains/losses are not factored in.
The second option under consideration was to add to the mortgage sector, specifically Capital Direct. For clarification, what maximum weighting in the "mortgage plus REIT" sector would be appropriate? I currently have 5% in Sentry REIT and 15% in Fisgard Capital, totaling 20%.
Bond-GICs yielding 1-2-3% barely cover inflation, but do provide portfolio stability. If the current relatively low interest rate environment stays this way for another 5 years, we are right back to the annuity being the better choice. Your thoughts?
Thanks for your help,
Steve