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Articles
Segregated funds - An Alternative Investment to
Mutual Funds
October 2
Introduction
Investing in segregated or “seg” funds is similar to
buying into a mutual fund — a large number of individual consumers
purchase units in a fund, and the manager of that fund invests that
money directly into securities.
As with mutual funds, the investor simply chooses
the fund that best suits their particular goal or need (e.g., a
bond fund, a Canadian blue chip fund, a growth fund and so on).
By buying a fund rather than purchasing stocks and bonds directly,
you will benefit from professional money management and diversification.
Insurance Product
Seg funds, however, are an insurance product. They are called “segregated”
because the fund assets are kept separate from the insurance company’s
other assets. As such, they are able to offer a number of risk-management
features not available in traditional mutual funds.
Maturity Guarantee
Provided you leave money invested in a segregated fund for a minimum
of 10 years, the insurance company guarantees that you will receive
at least 75% (some companies offer as much as 100%) of your initial
investment.
For example, if $100,000 invested in 2000 dropped in value the consumer
could still count on receiving $75,000 in 2010 even if the markets
had plummeted and the actual market value was only $20,000 in 2010.
If the markets are up, on the other hand, you will receive the market
value.
Death Benefit
Seg funds also provide a death benefit should the investor die while
their investments are down. If you invest $100,000 but die when
your portfolio is only worth $20,000, your heirs will receive at
least $75,000. Unlike the maturity guarantee, which requires a minimum
10-year holding period, this feature is available throughout the
term of the contract.
If this were a non-registered investment, the payment of the $55,000
“top up” would be treated as a capital gain in the year
of death. However, in this example we also see a loss of $80,000
($100,000 investment reduced to $20,000 market value at death) which
would reduce this gain to zero for tax purposes.
Naming a Beneficiary
Because they are insurance products, seg funds also allow you to
name a beneficiary? which can help to reduce estate delays and fees.
If a mutual fund investor were to leave a $100,000 non-registered
investment portfolio to his nephew, those funds will first have
to pass through his will and would be subject to provincial probate
fees (in Ontario, for example, that would attract a $1,500 tax).
Holding seg funds allow money to transfer directly to loved ones
without facing the costs and delays normally associated with probating
a will.
Creditor Protection
Under insurance law, contracts where a “preferred beneficiary”
has been named (i.e.,
a spouse, child, grandchild or parent) may be protected against
the claims of creditors.
That’s not to say someone can transfer all of his assets into
a seg fund the day before he or she declares bankruptcy and expect
to avoid all claims, but there is legal precedent provided the arrangements
were made well in advance. For this reason, many small business
owners consider investing in seg funds as insurance against the
possible failure
of their venture.
Management Fees
These extra features mean there are additional costs to segregated
funds that are not present in mutual funds. The management expense
ratio (MERs) of a segregated fund may be one or two percentage points
higher than a mutual fund.
You might think of it as paying an insurance premium on your investment
portfolio. Realize, however, that of the more than 500 funds with
long-term track records, less than 40[1] have ever lost money over
a 10-year period — so if you are buying segregated funds for
the capital guarantee alone, you may be paying for insurance you
don’t really need.
Conclusion
Only you can decide how much your peace of mind is worth and if
your individual circumstances make segregated fund investing worthwhile.
If you have any specific questions or would like to discuss the
matter in greater detail, I’d be happy to help!
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[1]Source Globefund.com, as of January 31st, 2006.
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