this post was submitted on 04 Apr 2025
34 points (97.2% liked)
Personal Finance Canada
1572 readers
1 users here now
Come and discuss anything related to personal finance, directly or indirectly, with other Canadians!
founded 2 years ago
MODERATORS
you are viewing a single comment's thread
view the rest of the comments
view the rest of the comments
No, a mutual fund with 1-2% MER is not the same as an ETF with 0.25% MER. One of them steals half your money while the other does not.
Believe it or not it is very financially lucrative to drain up to half of people’s retirement funds while disguising it under opaque language they know people won’t understand (like MER, brokerage fees) while “”justifying”” their fees with hopes that they would outperform the market (which they don’t).
Sorry to break it to you but your parents were raised in a world where we had less data on these things. We now know their work over the years drained people of their money and siphoned it up to banks.
They didn’t need to be conscious of it for that to be the effect. That’s simply what happens. And because these are risk adjusted opportunity costs people don’t know better.
Moreover your parents worked in a market when 0.25% MER All in One ETFs didn’t exist. So it’s a moot point.
Ok well I'm afraid we're going to have to disagree here.
In any case, I appreciate you taking the time to reply to me and explain your point of view.