The interest rate published in the table above already takes into account
the trailer fees paid to the dealer.
When you say refer to
the trailer fees paid to the dealer directly, that's a totally separate fee that I won't actually see then in my statement?
The interest rate published in the table above already takes into account
the trailer fees paid to the dealer.
The trailer fee pays the salesperson for providing the investor with ongoing investment advice and services.
Not exact matches
A
trailer fee is a commission a mutual fund company
pays to an adviser for selling its funds.
You'll notice that the Investment Savings Accounts
pay a typical
trailer fee of 0.25 % to the dealer.
Advisers who get a
trailer fee will generally suggest investment which
pays commission as opposed to investments which don't generate commission.
Will generally never suggest
paying down debt, instead, some adviser would suggest borrowing more money to invest more so that he can get more
trailer fees.
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Trailer This new The House trailer depicts an unusual way for parents to pay for their child's tuitio
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fees.
All proceeds from the auction go to the Pediatric Brain Tumor Foundation, including the usual
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Trailer.
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trailer.
Is it because it
pays better commissions and / or
trailer fees?
In that case, they should sell you «F - class» mutual funds which don't
pay trailer fees and thus have much lower MERs.
If you buy mutual funds through a broker who charges an asset - based
fee, he should sell you the low - MER «F - class» versions which don't
pay trailer fees.
Your overall cost may be similar, but at least you'll know that the adviser is selecting funds based on your best interest, not the ones that
pay higher
trailer fees.
And if those investors are
paying a 1 %
trailer fee, how many are receiving good advice?
While both industries covet financial advisers to help sell their products, Sphere president and CEO Lewis Bateman says the firm will «never»
pay advisers
trailer fees.
Even if an investor does read about
trailer fees and rate of return, they would still need to know what the numbers mean and if they are
paying an amount appropriate to the service they are getting.
Cdn Equity) I calculate the amount
paid as MER and
trailer fees, and the average annual return of these funds over the past 5 years.
Costs are kept down by using fancy computer algorithms to do the work a normal financial advisor would do, which means investors aren't stuck
paying the 1 %
trailer fees which are built into the expense ratios of most mutual funds.
Trailer fees are ongoing
fees which are taken out of each mutual fund you own and
paid to the company your advisor works for.
@Cameron: Yes, CIBC index funds would
pay both MER rebate to you and
trailer fees to the brokerage.
I know of the MER rebate on the index funds, but does anyone know if these funds will
pay out
trailer fees?
That is much lower than regular advisor based mutual funds that
pay.25 % (for Money Market Funds) to 1.25 %
trailer fees.
I think brokerages would not allow you buy mutual funds without transaction costs unless the funds
pay some form of
trailer fees.
And I definitely take issue with your comment that
trailer fees come out of the MER, so you really are not
paying it.
Particularly not since the
trailer fees are 0.5 % of the portfolio yearly, which also comes out of the MER, so you really are not
paying it.
Investors may not even realize they are
paying trailer fees because they are embedded with other fund expenses and not usually disclosed separately, except in the fine print of the prospectus.
Trailer fees on conventional funds are typically 1 % for equities (about 1.1 % including taxes) and 0.5 % for bonds (0.55 % including taxes), and you
pay them for as long as you hold the fund.
For do - it - yourself investors interested in mutual funds, there may be no industry practice that's harder to swallow than having to
pay a lot of money in hidden «
trailer fees.»
If do - it - yourself investors are told exactly how much they are
paying in
trailer fees — in hard dollars, rather than percentages — that might cause them to scrutinize what they receive in return.
Qtrade Investor uses a different approach: it offers a limited number of F - series mutual funds, which don't
pay trailer fees because they are usually available only through
fee - based advisers.
But they generally do not offer funds
paying a
trailer fee less than 0.25 %, according to Michael MacDonald, vice-president of strategy at RBC Direct Investing.
If you invest in a portfolio of equity funds that
pay trailers of 1 %, for example, Questrade will rebate these
fees on holdings that exceed $ 36,000.
1) The put you in a
fee - based account (AKA you don't
pay the 1 %
trailer).
A
trailer fee is a
fee that a mutual fund manager
pays to a salesperson who sells the fund to investors.
The
trailer fee is
paid to the advisor annually for as long as the investor owns the fund.
An investment account in which the advisor's compensation is from trading commissions or
trailer fee commissions
paid from a mutual fund.
And of those, he'll recommend the ones that that
pay him the highest
trailer fees.
What is the maximum
trailer fee you are willing to
pay?
If the
trailer fee becomes optional, numerous fund investors might choose not to
pay it.
So, the rebates will start
paying back if your mutual fund holdings is worth more than $ 36,000 (based on a 1 %
trailer fee).
You'll notice that the Investment Savings Accounts
pay a typical
trailer fee of 0.25 % to the dealer.
Because they are traded on exchanges, investors often need to
pay trading
fees, and Gosal said that some ETFs are now adding commissions, known as
trailer fees, of up to 0.75 per cent.
On the fund level, the report found that the relationship — of better past performing funds generating higher sales — is less strong for funds that
pay trailers compared to
fee - based funds.
A: A
trailer fee, or trailing commission, is designed to
pay advisors for the ongoing service they provide their clients.
Investors» capital is less likely to be taken out of funds with poorer performance among funds that
pay higher
trailer fees, and;
Here's the problem in a nutshell: The incentive for the adviser to recommend a fund
paying him or her a
trailer fee as opposed to one that doesn't at the onset is a given.
Claim: Canadian mutual funds contain «
trailer fees» that are used to
pay for distribution costs, while funds from many other countries do not.
I'd be very interested in having a DIY IPS, I think this would be a very valuable service to offer some value - add
fee only services for DIY investors who need a little bit of advisor help for planning purposes but still want to manage investments themselves and not
pay an annual
fee or
trailer commission.