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The $1M Club

179 members • $1/month

4 contributions to The $1M Club
Why I’m officially DITCHING traditional Index ETFs in 2026. 📉
I’ve made a final decision: I will not be holding any traditional index ETFs this year. If it’s not a Covered Call (CC) ETF or a specific Value Investment, I’m avoiding it. My primary focus is scaling this portfolio to $1M while creating a sustainable monthly distribution I can eventually live off, so my strategy is now split into three pillars: 1. CASH (Dry powder for opportunities) 2. Value Investments (My primary "Pure Growth" plays) 3. Covered Call ETFs (Income that acts as growth, like HDIV) This has been a long time coming. Ever since I first bought XUS, I’ve felt that my capital is more effective when buying conservative CC ETFs during dips or high-conviction Value stocks. The goal isn't just to track the market, it's to outperform it with intention.
Why I’m officially DITCHING traditional Index ETFs in 2026. 📉
1 like • 2d
@Harminder Jandu Just a thought.. remove the DRIP and buy the dip, that way your buying a red stock and not buying the green days..
Passive Income Portfolio
My goal is to generate a passive income where I can live off. My wife is unable to work so I'm trying to build this as fast as I'm able to. Currently I am attempting to add $500 a month. This is all in my TFSA. My current CC and Weighting of the portfolio is as follows: UTES 3% CALL 3% BANK 3% CANY 5% SIXY 5% BIGY 2% USCL 4% ENCL 4% HDIV 4% HYLD 4% CDAY 4.5% SDAY 4.5% QDAY 4% HHIC 4% HPYT 4% HHIS 2% PLTE 2% RDDY 2% CNYE 2% MSTE 2% CRCY 2% SHHI 1% IWMY 1% QQQY 2% USOY 1% TQQY 1% YSPY 1% BLOX 1% QDTE 1% WPAY 2% RDTE 2% AVGW 1% COIW 1% HOOW 2% NVDW 1% AMZW 1% PLTW 2% PLTY 1% CONY 1% LFGY 1% HOOY 2% MSTY 2% ULTY 2% I started back in June 2025 Making my first monthly dividend of $0.16 now I am currently making $122 a month. Only have 5k So far but trying to stay consistent. Any tips and tricks would greatly be appreciated
1 like • 2d
Not a financial advisor... I had a similar view when I first started this journey, I had a lot of different ETFs producing dividends, I came to the realization that I don't need 25 holdings when I could hold 6-7 that gave me the same return, it takes a bit of the stress off as well... just my two cents. Your on the right path !
My $9,000/Month Portfolio - CHECK BACK OFTEN - UPDATED WEEKLY
I am building a website that I can update the link in, here's what I have so far: https://garygillx.lovable.app/ I will turn this into an app/interactive website eventually where you can all upload your portfolio's as well, and share them here in the group the same way I am. It's just easier to view. ***NOTE*** This Cash Balance could easily increase by $200k+ in 2026, all depends on how much more cash I feel like allocating, how many ETF's I end up buying etc. ***NOTE*** This is part of my "Retirement Portfolio" so the Priority is Income + some growth.
0 likes • 2d
Your $400k could get you another $5k a month income, depends if you need that extra income? Everyone's situation and goals are different. Maybe that extra money becomes a travel budget or something else. Sitting in an account the money isn't really working for you, but you already know that :)
Transition to Retirement..
I’ve been a single-stock investor since I was 18 and only recently, at 56, discovered the world of passive income investing (PII). It’s been a major mindset shift for me moving from concentrated positions to building income-focused retirement planning. My big question is around RRSPs and the eventual RRIF conversion at age 71. From what I understand, when I convert my RRSP to a RRIF, I’ll be forced into minimum annual withdrawals, which could increase taxable income and potentially create a bigger tax burden than I’d like. I’m concerned about taking a significant financial “hit” during that transition. For those who’ve been through this or planned ahead well: - Is converting RRSP to RRIF itself a taxable event, or is the tax hit mainly from the mandatory withdrawals? - Are there smart strategies to reduce the tax impact before 71 (gradual drawdowns, partial RRSP withdrawals, RRSP meltdown, etc.)? - If you hold mostly income-producing ETFs or dividend-focused investments inside the RRSP, does that change the best strategy? - Is it smarter to begin strategically drawing down RRSP earlier in retirement to smooth taxes rather than waiting? I’m trying to avoid a scenario where decades of compounding gets unnecessarily eroded by poor decumulation planning. Would really appreciate hearing how others have optimized this transition without getting hammered on taxes.
1-4 of 4
Chris Kenney
1
1point to level up
@chris-kenney-7675
Looking to help and to learn..

Active 2d ago
Joined May 1, 2026