Learn how to start investing | Scotiabank Canada (2024)

Step 1
What is investing?

Investing means putting your money to work towards your personal financial goals and ambitions.

Learn how to start investing | Scotiabank Canada (1)

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Our Scotia Advisor Farah El-Masri talks through the fundamentals of investing.

Step 2
What are your investment goals?

In order to accomplish your financial goals, an investment strategy is essential.

What are you saving for?

  • Retirement
  • Education
  • A big purchase such as a home
  • Keeping your funds secure
  • Generating immediate income from your investments
  • Funding travel or vacations

Understand the basic elements of investing

Here’s a cheat sheet to help you get comfortable with some more common investment terms.

Assets

An asset is a resource or value that generates cashflow. The home you own is an example of a personal asset, while bonds, stocks, and cash are some assets that make up your investment portfolio.

Mutual Fund

In a mutual fund, your money is pooled with other like-minded investors and invested on your behalf by qualified investment professionals.

Registered Education Savings Plan (RESP)

An RESP is designed to help you save for a child's post-secondary education. Any money deposited into this plan will grow tax deferred

Diversification

Having a diversified portfolio means having a variety of investments. This reduces the overall investment risk. Think of it as the opposite of putting all of your eggs in one basket.

Portfolio

A portfolio refers to all of your investments. It can be made up of stocks, bonds, and other assets.

Registered Retirement Savings Plan (RRSP)

An RRSP is a government-regulated investment account with special tax benefits to help you maximize your retirement savings.

Guaranteed Investment Certificate (GIC)

A GIC is an investment product that protects your principal investment safe and may have a guaranteed rate of return.

Pre-authorized Contribution (PAC)

A PAC is a regular contribution that helps you build your savings easily and automatically. Even small increases can help you reach your long-term goals faster.

Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA)

A TFSA is a registered account that lets you grow your investments tax free. You don’t even pay tax when you withdraw funds.

First Home Savings Account (FHSA)

The government launched the First Home Savings Account in 2023. It’s a tax-free savings account allowing contributions up to $8,000 per year, for a lifetime contribution total up to $40,000, to help Canadians looking to save towards their first home.

High-Interest Savings Account (HISA)

This is a type of savings account that earns you more interest than a regular account.

Step 3
Some of the tools you will use with your advisor

When you start investing, your advisor will help you draw up a concrete plan for your money based on leading industry tools. Here are some examples of what you might look at together.

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Your advisor will talk with you about your attitudes to investing, and help you understand some key topics using our Investing Essentials tool. This page helps you see how different asset classes perform very differently over the years, and how a diversified portfolio helps you benefit from each year’s top performers

Investing Essentials

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Portfolio Analyzer

If you have an existing portfolio held elsewhere, it’s often good to get a second opinion. Your advisor will use our Portfolio Analyzer to determine if you currently have a suitable risk profile, sector weighting and regional exposure for your timeline, objective and risk profile.

Step 4
Understanding risk

Risk is almost always a part of investing.Understanding risk is key for new investors to guide your investment strategy.

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How to navigate market volatility

Your Scotia advisor will help you through the process of managing risk by working through some key questions:

  1. What’s your attitude to risk in your personal finance?
  2. Which types of investments match your risk profile?
  3. How does your investing timeline affect your risk tolerance?
  4. How do you balance your portfolio to get the right blend of risk and security?
  5. How much time do you have to invest?

These charts help explain how staying invested over the long term is a solid strategy for growing your money over the long term.

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The big picture

This chart shows how $1,000 invested in various asset classes over the past 84 years would have grown. Having a diversified portfolio across various asset classes and a long-term perspective has historically worked to the investor’s advantage

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Investing keeps you ahead of inflation

Investing lets you grow your money beyond inflation. If you only keep your money in cash and savings, the impact of inflation could mean you’ll actually lose value in the long term.

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Small contributions add up to big gains

Investing on a regular basis through regular Pre-Authorized Contributions can help you build your savings easily and automatically.This example shows how saving $100 every two weeks, and increasing that amount of money only 10% per year, leads to a huge growth in your savings if you stick with it for 20 years.

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Growth after market downturns

Canadian stocks have consistently bounced back after major stock market downturns. While it’s normal to worry about market fluctuations, investors should be reassured that a balanced portfolio created by you with your advisor will balance risk and growth according to your risk tolerance.

Step 5
Book an appointment

Your financial plan can start with a simple conversation.Book an appointment with a Scotia advisor near you.

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Learn how to start investing | Scotiabank Canada (2024)

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