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RoRo
@roro313
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ETFs Β· 2m

VFV all time high
$VFV all time high ~~~$189.5CAD
Post media

+0.69%

10.8% held

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Carlos L@retirement_rants
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Passive Income Β· 4d

More LIRA to LIF conversion tidbits!
Understanding the Timing of a LIRA to LIF Conversion: Why You Can’t Withdraw Right Away

Many Canadians approaching retirement are surprised to learn that converting a Locked-In Retirement Account (LIRA) to a Life Income Fund (LIF) doesn’t always mean immediate access to their money. While a LIF is designed to provide retirement income, the timing of your conversion can have a significant impact on when you can actually begin making withdrawals.

What Is a LIRA?

A LIRA is a retirement savings account that holds funds transferred from a pension plan when you leave an employer. Unlike an RRSP, the money remains β€œlocked in,” meaning it is intended to provide retirement income rather than be accessed at any time.

When you’re eligible under your pension legislationβ€”typically beginning at age 55, though this varies by jurisdictionβ€”you can convert your LIRA into a LIF.

So Why Can’t I Take Money Out Right Away?

This is where many people are caught off guard.

In several jurisdictions, if you convert your LIRA to a LIF late in the calendar year, you may not be able to make regular LIF withdrawals until the following year. That’s because the annual minimum and maximum withdrawal limits are calculated on a calendar-year basis.

When a LIF is established, the financial institution must determine how much you’re allowed to withdraw for that calendar year. Depending on the governing pension legislation and the timing of the conversion, there may be little or no available withdrawal room remaining for that year. As a result, many retirees don’t receive their first LIF payment until January of the following year.

For someone who was expecting immediate retirement income, this can create an unexpected cash flow gap.

Planning Around the Calendar

If you’re relying on your LIF to fund your retirement, timing matters.

Before initiating a conversion, consider:

* Whether you’ll need income immediately after the conversion.
* If it makes sense to convert earlier in the year rather than waiting until the fall or winter.
* Whether you have other savings available to bridge the gap until LIF withdrawals begin.
* The specific rules that apply to your province’s pension legislation, as these vary across Canada.

A little planning can help ensure your retirement income starts when you expect it to.

Don’t Assume Every Province Has the Same Rules

LIRA and LIF rules are governed by pension legislation, not tax law, so they differ depending on whether your pension falls under federal or provincial jurisdiction. Minimum ages, withdrawal limits, unlocking options, and timing rules can all vary.

Before converting your LIRA, it’s worth reviewing the rules that apply to your specific plan and discussing the timing with your financial advisor or institution.

Converting a LIRA to a LIF is an important milestone in retirement planning, but it’s not always as simple as flipping a switch and accessing your savings immediately. Understanding the calendar-year rules and planning your conversion accordingly can help you avoid unexpected delays in receiving retirement income and make your transition into retirement much smoother.

This is why you must have a cash wedge for any unforeseen issues like this…plan ahead. I went late summer and by the time everything was flipped over, I was able to start withdrawing in the following calendar year.
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Brad Brunton@bradbrunton
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Beginner Investors · ⭐ Featured

Summaries of some of my favorite investing Books πŸ’―
For those who don’t have the time
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Brayden Schwartz
@schwartzyfinance
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Market News Β· 8m

$NVDA is a $300 stock trading at $195

$META is a $800 stock trading at $582

$ZETA is a $40 stock trading at $20

$SOFI is a $35 stock trading at $18

$SPCX is a $50 stock trading at $160

$CELH is a $50 stock trading at $33

Am I wrong??πŸ‘‡

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-4.90%

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+2.83%

0.0% held

+4.05%

3.1% held

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Ashton Invests
@ashton_1nvests
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Beginner Investors Β· 12m

Build a 5-Stock Portfolio

You can only choose one stock from each row:

$AMZN or $META
$AMD or $AVGO
$SOFI or $HOOD
$UBER or $DASH
$NOW or $ADBE

What does your portfolio look like?

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10.4% held

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-4.26%

25.1% held

-2.41%

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Maxwell
@maxstocks
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Community Β· πŸ”₯ Hot

Accredited Investors Can Still Invest in Blossom!
😎 Quick PSA that we have <$400k in allocation room left for accredited investors to invest in Blossom! To be accredited, you need either >$200k in annual income or over $1M in net worth. If that’s you, here’s the link if you want to invest - https://www.frontfundr.com/blossomsocial2026

πŸš€ We’ve already had $1.1m invested from accredited investors alongside the $1.5m invested from non accredited that filled in 2 hours 🀯

πŸ€— Huge warm welcome to all our new shareholders and shoutout to all our existing shareholders who increased their position. I noticed a few shareholders who invested all the way back in 2022 (before Blossom even launched) reinvested in the round which was pretty cool to see πŸ”₯

🎁 Will get all the perks sorted this week, make sure you’ve filled out the form with the same email as your Frontfundr email!

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ For US folks stay tuned as we’re working with some US platforms to do a similar opportunity for you all to also invest!
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Richard Verhaeghe
@ravonar
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Personal Finance Β· 6d

The Pension Income Tax Credit: ⬆️$$⬆️
The Pension Income Tax Credit: A Hidden Gem in Canada’s Tax Code

How a $2,000 tax creditβ€”and the right pension planβ€”can save you hundreds, or even thousands, in retirement.

βΈ»

Most Canadians spend decades building their retirement savings, carefully choosing between RRSPs, TFSAs, and pension plans. But far fewer pay attention to what happens on the other side of retirementβ€”how that income is taxed, and how to legally reduce that tax bill.

Enter the Pension Income Tax Credit (also called the Pension Income Amount): one of the most overlooked and misunderstood tax credits in Canada’s tax system.

Here’s what every Canadian should know.

βΈ»

What Is the Pension Income Tax Credit?

The Pension Income Tax Credit is a federal non-refundable tax credit available to Canadians who receive eligible pension income. It allows you to claim a credit on up to $2,000 of eligible pension income each year.

At the federal rate of 15%, that translates into a tax reduction of up to $300 annually. Most provinces also offer their own pension income credit, increasing the total tax savings depending on where you live.

While the credit alone may not seem substantial, it can provide valuable tax savings every year throughout retirement. When combined with pension income splitting, the overall savings for many couples can be significant.

βΈ»

Who Qualifies?

Eligibility depends not only on how much pension income you receive, but also on what type of income it is and how old you are.

Under Age 65

If you’re between ages 55 and 64, eligible pension income is generally limited to:

* Lifetime pension payments from a Registered Pension Plan (RPP), including defined benefit and defined contribution workplace pensions
* Certain qualifying annuity payments, including annuity payments from the Saskatchewan Pension Plan (SPP)

Importantly, RRSP withdrawals and RRIF income generally do not qualify before age 65, even if you have retired.

βΈ»

Age 65 and Older

Once you reach age 65, the list of eligible pension income expands considerably to include:

* Registered Pension Plan (RPP) income
* RRIF withdrawals
* Eligible annuity payments purchased with RRSP or DPSP assets
* Other qualifying pension and annuity income

This is one reason why the timing of converting an RRSP into a RRIFβ€”and when you begin drawing retirement incomeβ€”can have meaningful tax consequences.

βΈ»

The Saskatchewan Pension Plan Advantage

One feature of the Saskatchewan Pension Plan (SPP) surprises many Canadians.

SPP is Canada’s only voluntary, government-backed defined contribution pension plan that is open to Canadians with available RRSP contribution room.

Unlike RRIF income, SPP annuity payments qualify for the Pension Income Tax Credit beginning at age 55.

That means Canadians who retire before age 65 may be able to access the pension income tax credit up to ten years earlier than if their retirement income came solely from an RRSP or RRIF.

For Canadians considering early retirement, this feature can make the Saskatchewan Pension Plan an attractive complement to a traditional RRSPβ€”not necessarily a replacement.

βΈ»

Pension Income Splitting: Where the Real Savings Can Be

The Pension Income Tax Credit becomes even more valuable when paired with pension income splitting.

Canadian tax rules allow eligible couples to allocate up to 50% of eligible pension income to a spouse or common-law partner for tax purposes.

If one spouse has significantly more retirement income than the other, splitting pension income can reduce the household’s overall tax bill by shifting income into a lower tax bracket.

Example

Suppose you receive $40,000 of eligible pension income each year while your spouse has little retirement income.

Without pension splitting, you report the full $40,000.

With pension splitting, each spouse reports $20,000.

Depending on your province and your other sources of income, this strategy can reduce your combined tax bill by hundreds or even thousands of dollars annually.

Keep in mind that only eligible pension income can be split. Employer pension income often qualifies before age 65, while RRIF income generally becomes eligible at age 65 (subject to certain exceptions).

βΈ»

What This Means for Alberta Retirees

If you live in Alberta, the federal Pension Income Tax Credit is complemented by a provincial pension income amount.

Together, these credits can reduce your annual tax bill by several hundred dollars. For retired couples, combining the pension income amount with pension income splitting may produce meaningful tax savings over the course of retirement.

βΈ»

How to Claim the Credit

Claiming the Pension Income Tax Credit is straightforward.

1. Report your eligible pension income on your annual T1 Income Tax Return.
2. Claim up to $2,000 on Line 31400 – Pension Income Amount.
3. The federal credit is calculated automatically at 15% of the eligible amount.
4. If you are splitting pension income with your spouse or common-law partner, complete Form T1032 – Joint Election to Split Pension Income.

Depending on the source of your retirement income, you’ll generally receive a tax slip such as a T4A, T4RIF, or another appropriate pension information slip to assist with filing your return.

βΈ»

Key Takeaways

* The Pension Income Tax Credit provides a federal tax reduction of up to $300 annually, with additional savings available through provincial pension income credits.
* Eligibility depends on both your age and the type of retirement income you receive.
* Before age 65, eligible income is generally limited to employer pensions and certain qualifying annuities.
* At age 65, RRIF withdrawals and many additional forms of retirement income become eligible.
* The Saskatchewan Pension Plan is unique because its annuity payments can qualify for the credit beginning at age 55, potentially providing tax savings up to ten years earlier than RRIF income.
* Eligible couples may also split up to 50% of qualifying pension income, potentially saving hundreds or even thousands of dollars in taxes each year.
* Planning how you withdraw retirement income can be just as important as planning how you save it.

βΈ»

This article is intended for general informational purposes only and should not be considered financial, legal, or tax advice. Tax rules can change, and individual circumstances vary. Before making retirement income decisions, consult a qualified financial advisor or tax professional.
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Fraser McGuire
@frasermcguire
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Beginner Investors Β· 13m

The 3 Biggest Myths in Buying and Renting a Home
In the endless anecdotes of Canadian real estate, we are conditioned to follow a very specific, predictable script. Rent a sketchy apartment in your twenties, stretch your finances to the absolute breaking point to buy a starter home, and then spend the rest of your life aggressively upgrading until you land in your "forever" home, which obviously include marble countertops!

I know this script by heart because I spent two decades living it and eventually rewriting it.

Since 2008, I have been a renter, a first-time homebuyer, a divorcΓ© executing a forced sale, a small-town transplant, an accidental landlord, and a multi-property investor. I have owned property in Toronto, London, St. Thomas, and Port Stanley, Ontario. I’ve ridden the waves of rock-bottom interest rates and sweated through the historic post-pandemic hiking cycles.

Looking back on a twenty-year journey, the lessons I’ve learned run completely counter to the conventional wisdom peddled by arm chair real estate quarterbacks and experts alike. Here is exactly what two decades in the trenches actually teaches you about housing.

My journey started in Toronto 2008. I was a graduate student moving out of my parents' place, renting a tiny, damp basement apartment in the city. My total rent, including utilities, was a staggering $650 a month.

For the next six years, my lifestyle was defined by steady frugality. My partner and I lived in modest, unglamorous walk-ups with noisy window AC units. These were nothing fancy, basically just the best accommodations we could find at the cheapest price point. We didn't know anything about index funds or the stock market, so we did what most twenty-something Canadians do: we hoarded cash in a basic savings account, determined to buy a piece of the city.

By 2016, we made our move, purchasing a modest bungalow in Toronto’s east end for $500,000. We scraped together a 20% down payment, aided by a generous leg-up from my partner’s parents, which allowed us to avoid mortgage insurance. Instead of burning extra cash on aesthetic overhauls, we funneled our remaining money into unsexy but vital upgrades: a new roof, new siding, exterior paint, and basic landscaping.

Two years later, real estate reality collided with personal reality. My partner and I separated, got divorced, and sold the house for $750,000. I took my share of the proceeds and plunged right back into the rental market. It was 2018, and I landed a modest one-bedroom apartment close to my work on Bay Street for $1,650 a month (plus utilities).

About six months into that downtown rental life, I was hired by the London Police Service. I packed my bags for my hometown, two hours west of Toronto, and walked straight into a housing market that was just beginning to heat up. For a staggeringly low price of $275,000, I bought a fully updated, two-story, three-bedroom old Victorian home with a nice backyard, located just a two-minute drive from work.

Fast forward to 2020. As we all remember, the global pandemic hit. Everyone lost their minds and froze in place, doom scrolling and watching the CNN death count on their televisions. Nobody in those early days was looking at real estate. They were terrified to even venture outside their house, God forbid go into somebody else's house.

In May of 2020, with my wife working fully remote, we bought what was our "dream" house in Port Stanley, Ontario, close to the beach, for $650,000. Financially, we were able to finance the down payment entirely from savings, allowing us to keep the London home as a rental property, which was our very first one.

By late summer, we moved to this half-acre property in a rural township and became landlords for the first time, finding a lovely family to rent our home to, who are still tenants to this day with zero issues.
A year later, the country's collective fog lifted. People woke up to the fact that real estate suddenly was an amazing investment because we were spending a shit tonne of time at home, and the housing market went insane.

I was on the lookout for an additional rental property, given that my first rental had appreciated considerably. In late 2021, I conducted a cash-out refinance on my first rental property to fully finance a down payment and renovation cost of a second rental, which I purchased for under asking in St. Thomas, Ontario for $375,000. After a few months of renovation, I rented this house out for $2,300 a month.

After generous COVID subsidies to individuals and businesses, inflation skyrocketed, and mortgage interest costs went right along with it. As is standard with many investors, my properties were on a floating-rate variable mortgage, since mortgage interest is fully deductible. Over time, variable mortgages generally outperform fixed mortgages 80 to 90% of the time, but this was clearly not the case here. Even with the historical hiking cycle, collectively my two rentals were still cash flow positive, just barely.

As inflation proved cyclical, mortgage rates and interest rates came down, and cash flow from my rentals accelerated.

In 2025, after five years of commuting 40 minutes back and forth to work, and after the birth of my first daughter and in preparation for a second child, my wife and I decided to sell our "dream home" and move back to the city.

This went against all of the popular depictions of housing, which say that you must constantly upgrade over time. The prevailing theory is that once you become comfortable with a certain standard of living, you can't possibly downgrade until much, much later in life because of hedonic adaptation, or whatever that bullshit is all about.

We sold the Port Stanley home for $200,000 more than we paid for it and moved into a neighbourhood I grew up in, buying a modest three-bedroom, two-bathroom home for just over $620,000. The proceeds of the sale went entirely into our registered retirement accounts.

Through this long backstory of renting a basement apartment, a dilapidated apartment, a nice modern apartment, and owning homes in a major city, a mid-sized city, a small city, and a rural township, I have learned three undeniable truths about Canadian housing.

Lesson 1: Renting is Cheaper Than Owning (But Only in the Major Leagues)

There is a glaring geographic asterisk to the argument that "renting is a waste of money". In Canada's largest, most populated urban centers like Toronto, renting is almost always the obvious cheaper option. However, that gap starts to shrink as you move from large cities to mid-market cities, and it disappears completely in many small cities and townships where rental accommodations are scarce, meaning owning can actually be the cheaper option.

But there is a massive psychological trap to renting when you live in the bigger cities. When you are a 20-year-old renter, it is incredibly difficult to save and invest when the city provides endless opportunities for entertainment, food, drink, cultural, and sporting events. As a young person who feels like they are being completely priced out of the housing market, it is easy to just spend the difference in housing costs on additional experiences, telling yourself, "I may not own a house, but I am living my best life."

This phenomenon is true in many aspects of life across different socioeconomic statuses because our life is ultimately run by layers of hierarchies. If we feel like we are falling behind in one area, we will overcompensate in another. It's a tale as old as time.

- The rich compete on what their yachts and vacation homes look like.

- The upper middle class will compete on how big and nice their home may be.

- Those folks who can't afford to own a home will then compete on how nice their car is.

If you choose to rent in a major city to reap the economic benefits, you have to possess the rare discipline to actually invest the difference, rather than blowing it on status compensation.

Lesson 2: Frame the Purchase Like an Investor and Build a "Buy Box"

This lesson usually divides people, and I have heard many smart people repeat the platitude, "I don't think about my house as an investment."

But is this psychological trick actually helpful? When people say this, they are usually speaking to how they view their home as a place to live, raise a family, and create memories. If you carry this kind of intense emotional priming into a buying decision, is it any wonder why people constantly overspend on housing? After all, if your house isn’t an investment, who can possibly put a price tag on happiness and memories?

But what if you viewed buying a primary residence exactly like an investor buying an investment property?

As an investor, I use something called a buy box, which details the core characteristics that work for me in purchasing a property. I personally like buying detached homes, typically two-storeys with at least 3 bedrooms, that require cosmetic upgrades like paint and new flooring. This is just enough work to scare off most emotional homebuyers, but it offers cheap renovations that create a great ROI.

These homes attract a tenant profile I enjoy working with, and they will appeal to a large group of emotional homebuyers when I eventually sell. For whatever reason, folks will pay a premium for the same square footage spread out over two levels. I guess they just like hearing their kids stomp around on top of them.

Lesson 3: The "1% Maintenance Rule" is Crap

For homeowners, home maintenance is perhaps the least understood aspect of the entire game. Many people will argue that you should estimate annual maintenance costs as 1 to 2% of the value of your home.

Just on the face of it, this claim makes absolutely no sense. If your home value goes up 15% to 20% in a single year, the inflation on fixing a pipe or replacing shingles in that house does not automatically jump by 15% to 20% the same year. Yes, the cost will go up but they are not directly proportionate.

If you purchase a new build or a home that is still under a builder's warranty, your effective maintenance cost for any repairs is virtually zero. What about if you bought a house that was recently renovated with quality upgrades?

When we talk about maintaining a home, there's a clear divide between required capital upgrades and aesthetic upgrades. Capital upgrades are the things required to maintain the structural integrity of the property over time, like a new roof, new windows, HVAC, furnace, air conditioning, and major appliances.

The other half of home maintenance is aesthetic upgrades, like putting in nicer floors, marble countertops, nicer cabinets, and designer light fixtures. These types of cosmetic upgrades are becoming a disproportionate part of the total maintenance cost of a house.

In all of the houses that I have owned, I have never approached even a 1% maintenance number based on my home value because I focus strictly on capital upgrades, not cosmetics.

So what does this actually mean for the average Canadian? It means that renters typically have an economic advantage in larger cities, but they must exercise immense discipline to invest all of their extra disposable income and avoid lifestyle creep in areas like food, travel, and entertainment. We know from the data that this is simply not the case for the majority of renters. The behavioural advantage of forced savings through a monthly mortgage is a incredibly tough hill to beat.

That said, homeowner can squander any financial advantage if they continue to view housing with so much intense emotion. Remember, it is a place to live, raise a family, and create memories, all of which can be achieved in a modestly sized home completely absent of marble countertops. Buying a house with an investor’s mindset will stop you from buying too much house and over-renovating.

In closing, I plan to enjoy my 90s bathroom title and beige vinyl flooring for a few more decades, or at least until my girls are done breaking stuff!
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Elite Capital@elitecapital
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Community Β· 25m

🧠
Nobody talks enough about how mentally exhausting this game can be.

Making decisions under uncertainty every day wears on you.

That’s why routines matter.

A good process protects more than your account.

It protects your mind.
For me, I just take multiple mental vacations.

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Maxwell
@maxstocks
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Community Β· πŸ”₯ Hot

πŸ₯³ BlossomCon in-app experience is live!!!
Pretty cool update yesterday - we now have the full in-app experience live for Toronto BlossomCon! Make sure you update and you’ll see the option in your profile menu tab.

You can see which of your friends are attending and even leave questions for the panels 😎 We’ll pull a few of the top questions for each of the panels on the day on top of the moderated questions! Coming soon for Vancouver/NYC as well.

πŸ‡ΊπŸ‡Έ Also this deserves it’s own post, but folks in US can now buy/sell directly on Blossom through our partnership with Public 🀯

Note Gold/Silver/Cash unfortunately got delayed until July 20 but pumped for that one too! πŸ₯²

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Canadian Investor@canadianinvestor
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Beginner Investors Β· 11d

Uncertainty Among Canadians About Retirement
CAAT research points to growing uncertainty among Canadians about retirement. Many Canadians are worried about how long their savings will last, the impact of inflation and whether they may need to delay retirement.

The research also shows a gap between expectations and reality. Many non-retired Canadians expect personal savings to be their main source of retirement income, while retirees today are less likely to rely on savings alone.

A major challenge is that Canadians are often expected to make long-term decisions about saving, investing and eventually turning those savings into reliable retirement income on their own. Without strong structures and support, those decisions can be difficult to navigate.
That is why greater access to practical retirement tools matters. Many Canadians see workplace pensions as part of the solution. Retirees with workplace pensions also tend to report higher monthly household income, which suggests these plans can play an important role in supporting financial stability over time.

Workplace pensions may also encourage stronger retirement planning habits. Canadians with pensions are more likely to use a broader mix of retirement tools, while those without pensions are less likely to be actively planning.





1,192 views
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Ian Lopuch
@ppcian
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Dividends Β· 28m

No Fear
Dividends can take away a lot of fears from life. πŸ’‘ Fear of having to work until the day you die (my greatest fear). Fear of not having enough money to pay bills. Fear of not enjoying life. Fear of not seeing the world. Fear of not doing what really matters. The list goes on. I aspire to live a β€œno fear” life as my dividend portfolio scales. πŸ“ˆ (Disc: Not investment advice.)
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Chinoboy @mannylou
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Beginner Investors Β· 38m

100$ each
Bought these during their 52 week low. Should I hold? Or sell all in few months? πŸ€” $NFLX $MSFT $META $PLTR

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Nate @hoodnate
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ETFs Β· 40m

πŸ’° What dividend ETF are you holding for the long
I'm always interested in seeing what everyone owns for dividend growth. Are you in $SCHD, $VIG, $DGRO, or something else?
My personal favorite is $VIG.
Here's why:

πŸ“ˆ Focuses on companies with a long history of consistently increasing their dividends, not just paying the highest yields.
πŸ† Holds high-quality businesses with strong balance sheets and durable earnings.
πŸš€ Offers a great balance of dividend growth and capital appreciation, so I don't feel like I'm sacrificing long-term returns for income.
⏳ Perfect for a long investment horizon where growing dividends can compound year after year.
I'd rather own companies that can steadily grow their dividends than chase the highest yield.
What's your favorite dividend ETF, and why? πŸ‘‡

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Ronan
@ronan
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ETFs · ⭐ Featured

Complete ETF/Sector/Asset Investment List
Since so many people ask how to invest in this sector, or this country, or this asset, I’ve decided to make a comprehensive guide on how you can invest in specific areas. This is NOT portfolio advice, simply information about tickers that you can research yourself. Save this for later so you have a list of ETFs to come back to!

Canada:

$XIU $XIC $ZCN All expose you to the TSX in Canada. These ETFs consist of all top Canadian companies and access to our national stock exchange.

$VCB $VGV $VLB $VAB $VSB $VSC $XBB $XCB Expose you to Canadian bonds; whether it be long-term, short-term, corporate, government, etc.

$VDY $XEI $CDZ Expose you to Canadian dividend companies

$XRE $ZRE $VRE Give access to Canadian REITs

$ZEB $XFN $RBNK Lets you buy the Canadian banks


USA:

$VFV $ZSP $XSP $XUS $HXS Lets you buy the S&P 500 (learn about hedged vs. unhedged in my other post)

$XQQ $HXQ $ZQQ All give you access to the NASDAQ 100

$IWR $VO $VOE $VOT $IJH $SCHM Lets you buy US Midcaps

$IJR $IWM $VB $VBR $VBK $SCHA Lets you buy US Smallcaps

$DIV $SPYD $RDIV $DHS $VIG $SCHD $VYM $DGRO $SDY Give access from small to high dividend US companies

$VTI $ITOT Lets you buy the whole US market

$TLT $IEF $VGIT $GOVT $SHY $VGLT Give access to US bonds

$XLC $XLY $XLP $XLE $XLF $XLV $XLI $XLB $XLRE $XLK $XLU All give you access to each sector in the S&P such as financials, energy, healthcare, etc.


International:

$XEQT $FEQT $VEQT $ZEQT Give you an all-in-one exposure to Canada, US, emerging and global markets.

$VEA $IEFA $SCHF $SPDW $EFV $EFA Give access to general international exposure

$EWJ $EWU $EWC Gives direct access to developed international countries

$INDA $MCHI $EWT $EWY $EWZ $EWW $EIDO $EWM Gives direct access to emerging international countries


Assets:

$KILO $PHYS $CGL Let’s you buy gold directly through ETFs

$SVR $HUZ Let you buy silver through ETFs


Savings/Interest:

$CASH $HISA $PSA $HSAV Access to Canadian savings and interest payments

$HSUV-U $PSU-U $HISU-U Access to US savings and interest payments


There’s so many ETFs I didn’t go into with dozens of categories, but this should give you some basic starting point to look into your ETF investments. This is simply the starting point, when choosing your investments always research the ETFs, what they provide to you, their fees, your goals, your risk, and what you’re looking to get out of investing.

As always do your research and happy investing!

Subscribe to the newsletter: relatablefinance.substack.com

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Christopher J
@cjs033
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Rate my Portfolio Β· πŸ”₯ Hot

It’s Verified and Official. 🀩
Thank you @blossom
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CrtVlu @cromagnon
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Passive Income Β· 52m

Secured puts
Sold Secure puts doing it again, on $RKT 2 weeks out. Rinse and repeat.

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Stocks @stocksetfsbonds
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Community Β· 2h

Is AI due for a correction? Or are we buying?
ETFS such as $DRAM and $SMH and single stocks such as $SNDK $MU $LRCX have been on a downturn the past two days πŸš¨πŸ“‰

Is this a good chance to buy? Or a larger downturn for AI πŸ˜³πŸ‘‡

Let me know what your doing below πŸ‘‡πŸ’°πŸš€

-7.94%

0.0% held

-4.54%

10.9% held

-14.13%

0.0% held

-5.49%

0.0% held

704 views
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Paul Santori
@paulsantori
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Passive Income Β· 12d

Income And Growth!! πŸ€‘
No Nav Erosion ❀️

Great for American’s and Canadians (RRSP)

https://youtu.be/neZiJXXs3W4?si=Y2GeTuk_EZOGziS_
2,970 views
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Tati Trades@tati_trades
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Beginner Investors Β· 2h

HOW I FIND HIGH-PROBABILITY WATCHLISTS
Many traders look at a green day and buy whatever is moving fast out of pure emotion. That is exactly how you get caught at the top of a correction.

I do not guess where the money is going. I run my quantitative scanning system, which I call the Ferrari. It is built strictly as a risk management tool to isolate real institutional accumulation and eliminate human bias.

This week, while the crowd was busy trying to catch the bottom on former tech leaders, my scanner executed an unyielding filter. It sent names like $NVDA , $MSFT , and $MU straight to the automatic skip list. The algorithms do not lie: their relative strength scores collapsed to near zero, and their 20-day performance confirmed severe structural weakness. It is not the time to guess reversals.

Instead, the Ferrari ordered the watchlist based on pure mathematical edge. It ranked $LRCX as the number one top setup with a 73.0 final score, backed by a real 23.6% volume expansion and a flawless relative strength profile. In healthcare, it flagged a brutal mathematical asymmetry in $UNH , isolating an exceptional 4.23 reward-to-risk ratio with a highly precise technical invalidation level.

Whether you use an algorithmic scanner like mine or a strict checklist on a piece of paper, you need unshakeable rules. Trading is not about excitement; it is about executing the math only when it is in your favor and always reading the chart before any entry.

Let the crowd chase the noise. Not investment advice 🐝"

-1.39%

26.3% held

+1.62%

3.4% held

-5.49%

0.0% held

-1.73%

0.0% held

56 views
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Real Blush@thereal_blush
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ETFs Β· 2h

Here are the current largest holdings in the most popular ETFs in the world:

πŸ₯‡ $VOO Vanguard S&P 500 ETF
- NVIDIA $NVDA 7.89% weighting
- Apple $AAPL 7.05%
- Microsoft $MSFT 5.14%
πŸ₯ˆ $IVV iShares Core S&P 500 ETF
- NVIDIA $NVDA 7.43% weighting
- Apple $AAPL 6.71%
- Microsoft $MSFT 4.43%
πŸ₯‰ $SPY SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust
- NVIDIA $NVDA 7.44% weighting
- Apple $AAPL 6.72%
- Microsoft $MSFT 4.44%
4. $VTI Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF
- NVIDIA $NVDA 6.70% weighting
- Apple $AAPL 6.30%
- Microsoft $MSFT 4.60%
5. $QQQ Invesco QQQ Trust
- NVIDIA $NVDA 7.61% weighting
- Apple $AAPL 6.88%
- Micron Technology $MU 5.11%

-0.09%

0.0% held

-1.73%

0.0% held

854 views
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Joe Money@thejoemoneyshow
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ETFs Β· 3h

Are we going to see a nice 10% dip on $XEQT this year my father in-law got cash to put to work! My boy Tom Lee said $SPY to hit $780 then drop back down to $700

+0.00%

0.0% held

-0.13%

0.0% held

1,412 views