Topic: How To Invest

Hi, Pat: I am 54 years old, and because of extra income over the next few years, I stand the chance of paying quite a bit of tax in retirement. My banker has suggested a mutual fund: it’s called CI Signature High Income Fund. Can you tell me your thoughts on this fund? Many thanks.

Article Excerpt

The CI Signature High Income Fund is a balanced mutual fund, holding a mixture of stocks and bonds. It holds 47% of its assets in bonds; 40% in Canadian, U.S. and foreign stocks; and 13% in cash. Its MER is 1.60%. We don’t generally recommend balanced funds. Bonds are unlikely to perform well over the next few years, if only because interest rates will likely hold steady or rise. That means the fund would only earn interest income on its bonds; instead of capital gains, its bond holdings could produce capital losses. The CI Signature High Income Fund holds mostly corporate bonds. Corporate bonds are riskier than government bonds, and their risk levels vary widely. Some corporates are almost as safe as government bonds and offer only slightly higher yields. Others offer higher yields but are much riskier. We don’t recommend the CI Signature High Income Fund. Fund. …