What Type of XEQT Investor Are You?
Answer six questions. Get a personalised reading list of the articles on this site most relevant to your situation right now.
How long have you been investing?
What is your biggest financial priority right now?
Which statement best describes your relationship with investing risk?
Which account question is most relevant to you right now?
How do you feel when XEQT drops 15% in a month?
What is your primary question about XEQT right now?
The First-Time Investor
You are at the start of a long journey. The most important thing you can do right now is understand what you are buying, open the right account, and automate your contributions before lifestyle inflation eats your savings. The articles below are your core curriculum.
Your Personal Reading List
Five articles chosen specifically for your situation. Start with number one.
The Confident Accumulator
You understand the fundamentals and you are building consistently. The questions you have now are about optimisation: contribution order, account location, the psychology of staying the course through hard markets, and whether XEQT alone is really enough.
Your Personal Reading List
Six articles chosen specifically for your situation. Start with number one.
The Approaching-Retirement Investor
You have done the hard part. Now the question shifts from accumulation to conversion: how much risk is appropriate, how to draw down registered accounts in the right order, and whether 100% equities still makes sense for your specific timeline.
Your Personal Reading List
Five articles chosen specifically for your situation. Start with number one.
The First-Time Home Buyer
You are navigating two competing goals simultaneously: saving for a down payment and building long-term wealth. The good news is the FHSA was designed precisely for your situation. The articles below will help you do both without sacrificing either.
Your Personal Reading List
Five articles chosen specifically for your situation. Start with number one.
The Debt-Conscious Investor
You are carrying debt that competes with your investing capacity. This is one of the most common and most emotionally charged situations in Canadian personal finance. The answer is less black and white than you might think, and it depends entirely on one number.
Your Personal Reading List
Five articles chosen specifically for your situation. Start with number one.