Dream Spa

How much are you down this year?

How much have you lost this year?

  • None, I am up

    Votes: 24 24.7%
  • About even

    Votes: 6 6.2%
  • Less thann10k

    Votes: 7 7.2%
  • 10-50k

    Votes: 24 24.7%
  • 50-100k

    Votes: 14 14.4%
  • 100-300k

    Votes: 13 13.4%
  • 300k-700k

    Votes: 4 4.1%
  • 700k-1M

    Votes: 0 0.0%
  • 1-2M

    Votes: 3 3.1%
  • More than 2M

    Votes: 2 2.1%

  • Total voters
    97

CameronP

New member
Jun 7, 2025
11
1
3
just go bitcoin and look back in 5 years at this thread. even at ATHS im extremely confident that there will be at bare minimum 100%
 

K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
28,968
10,133
113
Room 112
I've got about 15% of my RRSP holdings in oil and mineral based. I may look at upping that to 25%. Overall portfolio is still down about 7% YTD.
 
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K Douglas

Half Man Half Amazing
Jan 5, 2005
28,968
10,133
113
Room 112
I've got about 15% of my RRSP holdings in oil and mineral based. I may look at upping that to 25%. Overall portfolio is still down about 7% YTD.
I made a mistake here I was looking at my Jan 31, 2025 value as the basis for the 7% decline. I should have been looking at Dec 31, 2024. According to my June 30 statement my portfolio is actually up 0.95% YTD. I saw a 2.4% gain in the month. I've increased my holdings of oil based securities from 16% to 24%. Gold ETF's are about 7% of the portfolio book value I may increase that to 11%. Cash and money market instruments of 15%. The other 54% in a range of mid cap ETF's. I'm going to talk to my adviser about reducing that exposure if he sees the same volatility in the 4th quarter that I do.
 

stinkynuts

Super
Jan 4, 2005
8,465
2,804
113
I made a mistake here I was looking at my Jan 31, 2025 value as the basis for the 7% decline. I should have been looking at Dec 31, 2024. According to my June 30 statement my portfolio is actually up 0.95% YTD. I saw a 2.4% gain in the month. I've increased my holdings of oil based securities from 16% to 24%. Gold ETF's are about 7% of the portfolio book value I may increase that to 11%. Cash and money market instruments of 15%. The other 54% in a range of mid cap ETF's. I'm going to talk to my adviser about reducing that exposure if he sees the same volatility in the 4th quarter that I do.
Now would probably be the best time to start allocating more to stocks. Trade war drama is gone, Fed will finally start cutting rates, and global liquidity is surging. Between now and early next year, stocks should do well.
 

Gators

Well-known member
Apr 9, 2023
492
453
63
Now would probably be the best time to start allocating more to stocks. Trade war drama is gone, Fed will finally start cutting rates, and global liquidity is surging. Between now and early next year, stocks should do well.
YTD I am up 14%. RCI.B has been a great surprise as well renewables . I think we might we be looking for further gains but you never know.
 
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Ponderling

Lotsa things to think about
Jul 19, 2021
1,725
1,412
113
Mississauga
From my perspective you never know where the cylinders all firing on an individual stocks, and when that might happen.
So we hold ETF's for bonds and international equity, and a smallish slice of preffered shares.
But mostly abot 80 different equity positions for the US and CDN side of our holdings.

Just updated this am, and our overall last 12 months annual return average has been 14%.
Our 10 year average has been about 7.5%.

So equity returns despite a short term dip for us are currently doing ok.
 
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