Updated: April 2025  |  bremo.io financial guides

Passive Investing in Canada 2025 — Why Less Is More

Passive investing is the strategy of holding broadly diversified index funds rather than trying to pick winning stocks or time the market. It's not flashy, and it requires almost no action once set up. Yet decades of evidence show it outperforms the majority of active strategies after costs and taxes.

Active vs. Passive Investing

Active investing involves trying to outperform the market through research, analysis, and trading — picking stocks believed to be undervalued or selling those expected to decline. Passive investing holds the whole market through index funds, accepting market returns rather than trying to beat them.

The evidence: The S&P SPIVA Canada Scorecard consistently shows 80–90% of actively managed Canadian equity funds underperform their benchmark index over 10-year periods. After fees, the odds of active management outperforming are low and the downside (underperformance + high fees) is significant.

Why Passive Investing Wins

Lower Costs

A passive ETF like XEQT charges 0.20% MER. An actively managed mutual fund charges 2.0%+. This 1.8% annual cost gap must be overcome by the active manager just to break even. Year after year, this drag compounds against active managers.

Market Efficiency

In liquid public markets, prices reflect available information rapidly. Consistently finding mispriced securities is extremely difficult — and the professionals trying to do so are competing against each other with vast resources. Individual investors have no edge.

Tax Efficiency

Index ETFs have low portfolio turnover — they rarely sell securities, so they generate fewer taxable distributions. Active funds that trade frequently generate ongoing capital gains even if you don't sell the fund.

Simplicity

A passive investor needs to make one or two decisions: which ETF, and how much to contribute monthly. No ongoing research, no earnings calls, no analyst reports. Time spent on investment decisions returns to zero.

Behavioural Advantage

Passive investors tend to make fewer decisions, which means fewer opportunities for behavioural errors — panic selling, chasing hot sectors, overtrading. The biggest threat to any investor's returns is their own behavior. Passive investing structurally minimizes decision-making and the damage it can cause.

Implementing Passive Investing in Canada

  1. Open a TFSA at a discount brokerage (Wealthsimple Trade, Questrade)
  2. Choose one ETF: VGRO or XGRO for most investors
  3. Set up monthly automatic contributions
  4. Rebalance annually if using a multi-fund approach (single-fund investors don't need to)
  5. Ignore short-term market noise

Free Banking While Your Money Grows

KOHO offers free banking with no monthly fees. Use code 45ET55JSYA for a bonus when you sign up.

Open KOHO Free — No Fees — Code 45ET55JSYA