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Originally Posted by TurnedTheCorner
I don't want to derail this thread, but can this be elaborated on more? I thought that dollar cost averaging by making regularly timed contributions was a solid foundation for building savings?
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You're right, but when you buy a stock you pay a fee on that transaction and that's way more than the MER on a mutual fund (which is what people don't like about funds, to generalize). There are other factors though:
- if you're buying stocks you should buy a board lot at a time, which is 100 shares or 1000 if it's under $1.00. Most people are not saving a monthly amount that makes that feasible.
- theoretically you could save up for a few months and buy stocks, which makes sense....except that you lose the effect of dollar cost averaging, and that savings account is basically paying nothing during that time.
That doesn't mean that there aren't some exceptions and special cases, and I do work around these things with clients. It's just that the "mutual funds are bad" argument is largely propagated by companies selling other financial products, and frankly you have to take that with a grain of salt for that reason.