If you want market growth without babysitting your portfolio, the Couch Potato approach is the cleanest path I’ve found while studying Canadian investing. It’s a rules-based, low-fee strategy built on broad-market index ETFs—no stock picking, no hot takes. Just own the market, keep costs microscopic, and rebalance once in a while.
What the Couch Potato Strategy Is (in plain English)
- Own everything: Buy a small set of ETFs that collectively hold thousands of stocks (and optionally bonds).
- Keep fees tiny: MERs ~0.05–0.25% instead of 1–2%+ for typical mutual funds.
- Rebalance occasionally: Return to your target mix annually or when allocations drift.
- Stay the course: Ignore headlines; let compounding do the work.
You can do this two ways:
- All-in-one asset-allocation ETFs (one-ticket solution)
- Examples: VEQT/XEQT/ZEQT (100% equity), VGRO/XGRO/ZGRO (80/20), VBAL/XBAL/ZBAL (60/40).
- Pros: one ETF auto-rebalances internally; simplest.
- Cons: slightly higher MER than DIY, but still low.
- DIY “three-fund” portfolio
- Canada Equity (e.g., VCN) + Global ex-Canada Equity (e.g., XAW or VXC) + Bonds (e.g., VAB or ZAG).
- Pros: maximum control, potentially lower MER.
- Cons: you must rebalance yourself.
Why This Works
- Diversification: Thousands of companies across sectors and regions reduce single-stock risk.
- Costs matter: Every 1% saved in fees is 1% more compounding for you.
- Behaviour beats brilliance: A boring, rules-based plan helps you avoid emotional timing mistakes.
- Time in market: Staying invested usually beats trying to predict the next move.
Pick a Mix (risk first, products second)
Choose an equity/bond split that matches your time horizon and sleep level:
Profile | Example Split | One-Ticket ETF | DIY (sample tickers) |
---|---|---|---|
Growth-max | 100/0 | VEQT / XEQT / ZEQT | 70% XAW + 30% VCN |
Growth | 80/20 | VGRO / XGRO / ZGRO | 56% XAW + 24% VCN + 20% VAB |
Balanced | 60/40 | VBAL / XBAL / ZBAL | 42% XAW + 18% VCN + 40% VAB |
Conservative | 40/60 | VCNS / XCNS / ZCON | 28% XAW + 12% VCN + 60% VAB |
Tip: A modest home bias (10–30% Canada) can help with taxes/liquidity while keeping global exposure high.
Accounts & Taxes (Canada quick guide — high level)
- TFSA: Gains and distributions are tax-free; ideal for long-term equity growth (and simple rebalancing).
- RRSP: Tax-deferred; can be efficient for income and US exposure (treaty benefits for some US-listed holdings).
- Taxable: Canadian eligible dividends and capital gains get preferential tax treatment; foreign dividends are fully taxable.
Keep it simple: if you’re early in the journey, start in a TFSA, then layer RRSP once you know your tax bracket. Place bonds in registered accounts when you can.
Hedged vs Unhedged, CAD vs USD (keep it simple)
- Currency-hedged ETFs reduce CAD/USD swings but add tracking noise and cost.
- Unhedged is fine for long horizons—currency tends to wash out over time.
- For most beginners, CAD-listed all-in-one ETFs are perfectly adequate; you can explore USD ETFs later if you want to optimize further.
Exactly How to Implement (10-minute setup)
- Pick your mix: e.g., VGRO (80/20) or VBAL (60/40), or define a DIY split from the table.
- Open/confirm account: TFSA first, then RRSP; taxable last.
- Fund it & automate: Set monthly/bi-weekly auto-deposits.
- Buy the ETF(s): Same day each month; ignore price noise.
- Rebalance rule:
- All-in-one: nothing to do.
- DIY: once a year or if any sleeve drifts >5 percentage points (or the classic “5/25 rule”).
- Document your IPS: One page stating your target mix, contribution plan, and rebalance rule—so you don’t improvise in a downturn.
Rebalancing Made Boring (and effective)
- New cash first: Direct fresh contributions to the underweight asset.
- Then swap if needed: If drift remains large after new cash, place a small trade to nudge back to target.
- Calendar it: One date per year (e.g., your birthday). Done.
What I Learned While Studying This (brief)
- The market doesn’t reward complexity you can’t stick with.
- The biggest driver of outcomes is your savings rate + time horizon.
- One-ticket ETFs are a gift for human beings with jobs, families, and limited time.
Common Mistakes (and easy fixes)
- Changing strategy every headline: Write an IPS and commit to it for 3–5 years.
- Over-weighting Canada (or any single sector like banks/energy) beyond comfort—keep global exposure strong.
- Forgetting fees: A low-fee ETF beats a shiny theme fund most of the time.
- Timing the market: Contributions on a schedule beat guessing games.
- Not using registered accounts: TFSA/RRSP tax shields compound quietly in your favour.
Mini-FAQ
How much do I need to start?
Whatever your broker’s minimum is; many allow purchases with a few hundred dollars.
Monthly or lump sum?
If you already have cash, evidence often favours lump sum; if you’re nervous, DCA monthly is fine—just get invested.
Which broker should I use?
Any reputable Canadian broker or robo with low commissions and good ETF access works. Pick one you find easy to use so you’ll actually stick to the plan.
Can I add small-cap or factor ETFs?
You can, but only after you’ve mastered the base portfolio. Keep the core simple.
A 60-Minute Starter Plan (checklist)
- Choose one-ticket ETF (VGRO/VBAL/etc.) or DIY split from table
- Set up TFSA (then RRSP when ready)
- Automate deposits on payday
- Buy the same ETF(s) on a fixed schedule
- Annual rebalance reminder
- Track contributions in a simple spreadsheet
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