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RBC Direct Investing accounts
March 7, 2014
12:19 pm
xxxx
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Are there
1. any fees for this Royal Bank Direct Investing Investment Savings Account?
2. is it cashable anytime or is it locked in for a fixed term?

March 7, 2014
4:32 pm
GS1
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Brian said

Are there
1. any fees for this Royal Bank Direct Investing Investment Savings Account?
2. is it cashable anytime or is it locked in for a fixed term?

Brian:

Here is a portion of the fee schedule page which can be found here:

FEES:
MAINTENANCE FEE Fee
Clients with combined assets of $15,000 or more in all of their RBC Direct Investing accounts No Fee
Clients with combined assets of less than $15,000 in all of their RBC Direct Investing accounts $25/
quarter6
The fee is also waived if a client meets any one of the following criteria:

Has signed up for a Pre-Authorized Contribution(s)7 (i.e. automatic regular savings transfers) for a combined total of $100/month ($300/quarter) or more in their RBC Direct Investing account(s) (registered and non-registered), or
Has been an RBC Direct Investing client for less than six months (this allows new clients sufficient time to transfer assets into RBC Direct Investing), or
Has a combined total of three or more commission-paid trades8 during the quarter in all RBC Direct Investing accounts (registered and non-registered), or
Has a group RRSP account with RBC Direct Investing, or
Has qualified for the RBC Direct Investing Royal Circle® program9 or
Has an RBC Student Banking package — current or within the last five years10 , or
Has an RBC VIP Banking® package

As to the RBF2010 High Interest Savings quasi mutual fund, there is a minimum initial purchase requirement of $500 or above and then subsequent purchase requirement of $25 or above.

There are no fees to buy or to sell. It is cashable any time. Orders placed on day zero (today) trade on day 1 (known as T+1) or tomorrow. Full details are here. (T+1 is more fully explained here.)

I am not associated with RBC other than as a long time customer.

If you have more questions feel free to ask.

Greg

March 7, 2014
5:02 pm
AltaRed
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Greg, I think RBF2010 can also be bought via Royal Bank Asset Management, with no fees, or early redemption charges. One would have to ask the financial advisor in a Royal Bank branch.

That would not necessarily be the case if RBF2010 was bought via other discount brokers (not associated with RBC). Those discount brokers MAY charge an early redemption fee, e.g. if held less than 90 days, in order to compensate themselves for the lack of a trailer fee (for RBF2010 held less than 90 days). One would have to ask each brokerage that question.

March 7, 2014
9:46 pm
GS1
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AltaRed:

I have a PDF copy of the Offering Document I can make available if there is interest. This is NOT a prospectus as this is "an account" as opposed to a mutual fund.

A small section of the document says:

"2. The Arrangement
You wish to deposit funds in the Account, either Canadian dollar
funds into the RISA or U.S. dollar funds into the U.S. RISA, and
have entered into a contractual relationship with your Dealer for
this purpose. If this is a RISA, you have selected your RISA
Provider from among the Bank, RBMC, RTCC or RTC and
communicated your choice to the Dealer."

There does not appear to be any mention of "frequent trading" as one is not trading, one is depositing funds.

I just looked on the TD Waterhouse site and RBF2010 appears to be a valid symbol there but I would suspect most every bank's discount brokerage would have a similar offering using their own facilities.

I also suspect if one walked into an RBC retail branch and asked to buy RBF210 one would be steered to the branches HISA.

It is a little confusing and I have done it here - one does not "buy" RBF2010, one "deposits fiunds" and RBF2010 is used to account for them. RBC further confuses it as they send trading statments and those read BUY or SELL.

Greg

March 7, 2014
10:01 pm
AltaRed
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I think Brian was asking if there are any fees for RBF2010 and whether cashable at any time. The appropriate answers were given with respect to buy/banking-scam-email, i.e. T+1 settlement - put in a buy or sell order during business hours before 4pm Eastern time and the account will settle at the close of the next business day.

However, the fee question is trickier. RBC itself, whether Royal Bank or RBC Direct Investing do not charge any fees to buy/banking-scam-email, even if done frequently, e.g. daily or weekly. That is not necessarily true if that fund is bought/sold via other discount brokers. Other discount brokers do sell RBF2010, but they do not necessarily tell you that some of them will charge an early redemption fee if sold within 90 days of purchase.

Real life example I experienced a year or two ago: In Scotia iTrade, buy 1000 units of RBF2010 on Feb 1. Then sell 500 units of it on Mar 1. Scotia iTrade will charge an early redemption fee.....and that is because they have NOT collected the 90 day trailer during that time. They are not a charity for other institutions' HISAs. I would bet that at least a few other discount brokers would also charge a redemption fee for early sale. Brokers treat these exactly the same as mutual funds.

March 7, 2014
10:01 pm
Loonie
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Greg, I am looking at your RBC investment, and trying to understand it all. It looks to me that it really IS covered by CDIC, although you thought the opposite in your post above (March 6 @ 9:49 a.m.).
http://www.rbcroyalbank.com/pr.....RISA_E.pdf , Note 10, appears to say clearly that such accounts are covered by CDIC. Am I looking at the wrong thing?

March 7, 2014
10:03 pm
GS1
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AltaRed and others:

I was wrong -- RBF2010 is CDIC eligible which is a nice surprise.

I started looking at other bank's offerings and found that the Canadian Capitalist blog has an excellent writeup here and would point you there rather than my trying to restate what has already been well covered by Canadian Capitalist.

Greg

March 7, 2014
10:05 pm
AltaRed
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You are looking at the right thing, The CAD versions, e.g. RBF2010, are CDIC insured. The USD ones are not.

March 20, 2014
5:25 pm
gaspr
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I have a few questions about RBF2010.
1) Although there is a minimum purchase amount of $500, does anyone know if there is a minimum account balance?
2) Is this money directly available to purchase securities etc. or does it have to be "cashed" out first?
3) Are there any fees or trading commissions applied for any purchases or sales of RBF2010?

March 20, 2014
5:33 pm
AltaRed
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If you hold RBF2010 within an RBC Direct Investing account, then:
1) I believe the minimum account balance is $500. Some brokerages require account minimums with their in-house ISAs and some may not. You have to ask (but I would bet you do).
2) The funds have to be cashed first, or in time, to settle to fund your securities. A sale of RBF2010 units settles in T+1 while securities settle in T+3. With a new customer, RBC DI may require you to cash in RBF2010 units first before being able to buy a security. With established customers, RBC DI may let you buy a security today, on the premise that you will sell enough RBF2010 units tomorrow to fund the purchase.
3) There are no commissions or fees to buy/banking-scam-email RBF2010 units within RBC DI.

March 20, 2014
9:41 pm
GS1
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You CAN have a tiny balance of RBF2010 in an RBC DI account.

I currently hold RBF2010 at RBC Direct Investing in 2 TFSA accounts, 2 RSP accounts and 1 trading account.

The TFSA accounts currently have 0.24 shares for a value of $2.40. I used to sell out the balance and then had to wait till I got $500 free cash to buy it back. Last time I executed a sell in the TFSA accounts it worked out I would be left with 0.007 shares after I sold what I needed to pay for an equity trade. I was going to raise the trade value by 7 cents but the trader suggested it made sense to leave 7 cents there so I could add any loose cash that later arose from odd amounts after dividend reinvestment on equities.

Ater the 7 cents sat there for much of February, they pad the month end dividend and that is how those accounts are now all the way up to 0.24 shares.

NOTE: I do have some 1293 shares of RBF2010 sitting in the trading account so they may be taking that into consideration. I don't think so, but am not 100% sure.

Last time I was buying something and had no cash in an account the trader offered up the opinion that I was probably going to sell some RBF2010 to pay for the trade. I was and we then executed a trade for the exact cash needed to pay for the previous purchase. As AltaRed said RBF2010 settles T+1 and equities and bonds settle T+3.

Greg

March 21, 2014
7:23 am
gaspr
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Thanks for the info.

July 21, 2019
6:43 am
Bill
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Had an interesting experience with RB Direct Investing recently. Had a bunch of GICs maturing over a few days, so when all had matured I reinvested the total funds, not paying attention to the redemption details, amounts, etc. Got my paper statement for June a week or so later and the account balance appeared a bit low, so I investigated and found they had deposited $25K (plus interest on $50K) into my account on the redemption of one of my $50K GICs (don't know if it's significant but it happened to be a GIC from a credit union, first time I'd reluctantly bought a GIC from my not-favourite type of institution, RB DI offers a few credit union GICs sometimes). Anyway, I called and told the rep to look at my June transactions, does he see anything funny?, and he picked it out. Called me the next day and said they're not sure what happened (I doubted that, maybe it was employee fraud, in any case they weren't going to tell me, not that I cared) but that another $25K has now been put into my account. When I suggested a treat for their error he gave me 10 free trades, I said thanks, and off we go. We've had our 4 accounts with RB DI for over 2 decades, never an error of any kind during boomer years, so I guess you should always check now that millennials, etc are running the show (gratuitous swipe at the young folks!).

July 21, 2019
4:53 pm
Loonie
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In over 50 years of banking with both CUs and banks, the only error I've encountered was the failure to credit a student loan payment once many years ago. It was either CIBC or BMO. I only dealt with Big Five in those days.
It sure pays to review your statements though, if only to be sure of where you're at. Glad you got it sorted out.

July 21, 2019
5:04 pm
Doug
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Loonie said
In over 50 years of banking with both CUs and banks, the only error I've encountered was the failure to credit a student loan payment once many years ago. It was either CIBC or BMO. I only dealt with Big Five in those days.
It sure pays to review your statements though, if only to be sure of where you're at. Glad you got it sorted out.  

I've had an error on one of my Scotia iTRADE accounts that had to do with crediting the monthly distribution payment for, I believe, my American Hotel Income Properties REIT L.P. (TSX: HOT.UN) holding. It might've also been another holding had undergone a reorganization or name change of some sort. At any rate, they initially credited me the payment and, in the narrative, used a Scotia iTRADE account number that was not mine. They reversed it the same day before I even had to phone them and credited my account with what I presumed was the correct amount (and the correct account number).

Cheers,
Doug

April 28, 2023
7:34 am
kesa
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RBC DI fixed income pricing is one of the worst. eg I can buy MM at 4.35%+ at iTrade, same instruments at RBC DI ~2.2%

April 28, 2023
8:06 am
AltaRed
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kesa said
RBC DI fixed income pricing is one of the worst. eg I can buy MM at 4.35%+ at iTrade, same instruments at RBC DI ~2.2%  

I think you mean ISA @ 4.35%? If so, did you know that iTrade will let you buy F class DYN6004 @ 4.5%?

Most, if not all, of the major bank brokerages will only let you buy their in-house ISAs. That does not stop you from foraging for actual Money Market mutual funds that currently yield somewhat higher at RBC DI.... assuming RBC DI will let you buy from a wide range of MMFs.

April 28, 2023
8:18 am
Norman1
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At RBC Direct Investing, one should be able to place funds in an RBC ISA, like RBF2010, for 4.05%.

April 28, 2023
9:37 am
Norman1
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One should be careful with fixed income quotes at Scotia iTRADE. Their quotes do not include the commission. That $1 per $1,000 bond, minimum $24.99, commission will make a significant difference in the actual yield with small orders and short term money market instruments.

In contrast, at RBC Direct Investing, the fixed income quotes include the commission and the quoted yield is the net yield:

3) For Treasury bills, bonds, strip bonds, debentures and other money market instruments, the commission is included in the quoted price. The minimum commission is $25 per transaction ($43 minimum commission for orders placed using an Investment Services Representative) and the maximum commission is $250 per transaction for all orders. Commissions for exchange-listed debentures are charged according to the Stocks Commission Schedule.

April 28, 2023
10:53 am
kesa
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kesa said
RBC DI fixed income pricing is one of the worst. eg I can buy MM at 4.35%+ at iTrade, same instruments at RBC DI ~2.2%  

Screenshot-2023-04-28-at-1.52.20-PM.pngScreenshot-2023-04-28-at-1.52.00-PM.png

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