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Nervous markets await NvidiaXAW-T vs. VXC-T. Both are good ETFs. XAW-T is cheaper. They are great one-ticket solutions. He has an extremely high bias in Canada.
This would effectively be Canada, US, Asia and the Far East. In this you are probably going to have 300 shares in the underlying ownership, and you will have the top performing companies in those markets. He is concerned that it is very weighted towards technology and you are not getting any exposure to the parts of the market that have not performed. You are not going to have any exposure to commodities and very little exposure to energy, which are the segments that have done very poorly in the last couple of years.
TFSA vs RRSP, and examples of ETF’s that would be more suitable? For the large majority of people, the TFSA money is the money that you can be a little more aggressive with because there is more flexibility because the growth you have will be pulled out tax-free. If you want things that are going to grow, and hopefully will be a little more aggressive as a result of seeking that growth, he would use things like iShares MSCI World Index Fund (XWD-T) or Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada (VXC-T), both global broadly diversified equity positions that are trying to get you exposure around the world.
Best ETF in a child’s RESP? Assuming the child is fairly young and has a long ways to go, he would recommend an equity ETF, and his favourite is Vanguard FTSE All World EX-Canada (VXC-T). Recommends this because he is kind of bearish on Canada because of its oil exposure. This gives you stocks from around the world.
This is a FTSE ex-Canada product. He doesn’t like this kind of thing. It’s sort of an omnibus “Let’s throw the money in this and see what happens.” ETF. Basically a dog’s breakfast of currencies, countries and REITs. You have to be a lot more strategic when investing as to which market you want to be in and which ones you want to avoid.
(A Top Pick Nov 5/14. Up 13.1%.) There is a need to minimize home bias, and this is a product that gets you stocks globally, and conspicuously and deliberately avoids the 4% of the world that is Canada. Something he would recommend for people who have a TFSA or an RESP for a young child. If you have only enough money to put into one thing, this is an example of the one thing you would buy.
He would urge anybody to try to get more money out of Canada. Thinks people are woefully over invested in our domestic economy. This has a great MER of about 25 basis points, but keep in mind that this has close to 3000 names in it. It is the most passive you could possibly buy. It’s up 10% year-to-date, outperforming both US and Canadian markets. You have to be fully committed to investing in something like this, because there is no protection on the downside. If you are going to buy this, you should have a time horizon of 5 years or more.
Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada is a Canadian stock, trading under the symbol VXC-T on the Toronto Stock Exchange (VXC-CT). It is usually referred to as TSX:VXC or VXC-T
In the last year, there was no coverage of Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada published on Stockchase.
Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada was recommended as a Top Pick by on . Read the latest stock experts ratings for Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada.
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0 stock analysts on Stockchase covered Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada In the last year. It is a trending stock that is worth watching.
On 2025-04-01, Vanguard FTSE All-World ex Canada (VXC-T) stock closed at a price of $63.44.
For an RESP, you would want to be more aggressive. He recommends VXC, which is a multi-asset ETFs. They are 60-40 allocations. He likes XGRO as well. He uses these funds for his clients for their children. VXC is more aggressive and it also gets rebalanced quarterly.