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From our Canadian Bureau:
The Retirement
Fund Shell Game
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By Christian Chensvold, Contributing Writer
Think Canada's only known for its hockey players?
Well get a load of this hat trick.
RRSPs (Registered Retirement Savings Plans) are the
Canadian equivalent of America's tax-free IRAs. Trouble
is, in Canada the government requires you to own 75
percent of your holdings in Canadian companies. This
is intended to provide appropriate diversification
opportunities for RRSP holders while ensuring that
the bulk of their tax-assisted retirement savings
is invested domestically. But investors have found
a way around this with a neat little shell game involving
index funds and "clone" funds that allow the portfolios
of Canadians to grow without borders.
A key aspect of the loopholes is understanding that
the bulk of money in the fund is not actually held
in stocks.
Certain index funds offer Canadians RRSP-eligible,
foreign-exposure funds that track the performance
of a foreign index, such as the S&P 500. In general,
the managers of these funds put over 90 percent of
their money in domestic treasuries, and then use futures
contracts on the index being tracked in order to replicate
its performance. "That gets around the rule because
technically the fund is mostly Treasury bills, and
the rest is foreign," says the mysterious Mr. Bylo
Selhi (that's "buy low, sell high"), who operates
a financial Web site at bylo.org. "But because they
lever it, they get the same return as if they were
buying the S&P index directly."
And because futures are involved, it's possible to
hedge currency. So you can buy an index fund that
tracks the S&P 500 and which is also impervious to
changes in the U.S. dollar. "I don't think that's
a good thing," says Mr. Selhi, "but some people are
really concerned when the Canadian dollar rises. If
it goes up 10 percent and the S&P goes up 20, then
they're really upset because their fund really only
went up 10 percent and it's supposed to track the
S&P." In fact, they may be sacrificing some of the
diversification benefit of owning equities exposed
to another currency while paying a heavy price to
hedge.
Altamira has
a number of funds that track U.S. indexes with the
combination of underlying treasuries and futures contracts.
Its latest funds aimed at RRSP investors looking to
skirt the 25 percent cap are the RSP e-business Fund,
RSP Science and Technology Fund, and RSP Japanese
Opportunity Fund.
Clone funds are the copy cats of the industry. They
aim to mimic an underlying foreign fund. This can
be done in a number of different ways. Templeton
Management Ltd. was one of the first to offer
these funds, and they generally work like this: If
you invest $1,000 into the clone fund, 25 percent
at most (the amount of the current cap) will go into
the underlying fund. The rest is deposited with a
counterparty, typically a chartered bank. The bank
then writes a forward contract to the clone fund in
which it agrees to pay the same return as the underlying
fund. In a nice dramatic twist, the bank then actually
puts the $750 into the underlying fund to ensure it
will be able to fulfill its contract with the clone
fund.
Many Canadian investors are wary of using index and
clone funds for their RRSPs, not because of the derivatives
behind them (options, futures and forward contracts),
but the fees tacked on because of the contracts involved.
The fees can be up to 60 basis points higher than
what an investor would pay for a plain vanilla foreign-content
or index fund.
Many investment advisers believe that at least 30
percent of your portfolio should be in foreign holdings.
As the Canadian government keeps raising the amount
of foreign holdings it allows in its RRSPs, perhaps
someday the cap will be dropped entirely. The fact
that people have found ingenious ways of getting around
it is one argument for dropping the cap. Another is
recent research which found that the cap doesn't matter,
as when foreign-content limits were dropped in the
U.S., U.K. and Japan, investors still remained primarily
in their home markets.
08/08/2000
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