Those 21,084.45 points of this past Friday left my non-registered portfolio closing at $136,771.07, my US portfolio at 4,886.92 US, my RRSP - stocks only - portfolio at $65,034.43 and my TFSA portfolio at $125,034.67. At a point, I don't if you had noticed, but the TSX went under the 21,000 points this past Friday and it killed me. I don't like to watch disasters in real-time. Luckily enough, the TSX saved the day all by itself, closing a bit high than the 21,000 points.
Currently, I am trying to see what can be done in a better way. There's always room for improvement with an investment portfolio. Even if I find that mine is very very close to perfection, I want to have a sense of what's going in there. For a reason or another, the month of June is always very good for me, and more specifically around June 24, which is a Quebec holiday. I always had great success around that time of year doing some trading operations, selling-buying stocks, and thinking about my finances. January is also a great time to look over a bit deeper into things.
For example, inside my RRSP portfolio, I have the following for a really long time:
Energy and Base Metals Term Savings (Indexed term savings)
Natural Resources Term Savings (Indexed term savings)
Those guaranteed investment certificates had now expired, leaving me with a bit over $1,100 to invest in something new, which I need to pick up. Also, a new year also means a new TFSA contribution. It's a new $6,000 that can be contributed over a TFSA portfolio, which represents quite a good sum of money
Over the years, I had used the "contribution in kind" system as a way to contribute to my TFSA portfolio. This is the main reason why I hold so many stocks inside my TFSA portfolio. It's because, over the year, I transferred stocks that I was holding inside my non-registered over my TFSA portfolio.
This is my way of doing it with the contribution in kind: I take stocks from my non-registered portfolio, and I transferred them "as is" over my TFSA portfolio. I learned the words "as is" just a few months ago while transferring my entire stocks investment portfolio from TD Direct over to National Bank Direct Brokerage. I try to pick stocks from my non-registered portfolio that are not experiencing an extremely good capital gain. It's because capital gain taxes need to be paid on stocks that you transferred from a non-registered to a TFSA portfolio.
At the present time, I only see one potential candidate inside my non-registered portfolio for a contribution in kind over my TFSA portfolio, and that's Saputo Inc. (SAP). My investment in Saputo Inc. (SAP) had been in my non-registered portfolio for quite a long time. I am on a capital gain of +17% on SAP. This specific capital gain represents less than $200. I am ok to pay a capital gain tax on this little sum. On the other hand, this, unfortunately, reveal that Saputo Inc. (SAP) is not a super performer, it's only an ok stock. I am however willing to keep in my portfolio because it brings on a bit of diversification.
Another thing I want to take care of is to switch the CIBC Emerging Markets Index Fund's units that I hold inside my RRSP portfolio for another CIBC mutual fund. I was thinking about CIBC Canadian Equity Value Fund.