Update: 7 years later...
Since 2012 this review has floated to the top of the stack. I'm glad people have found it useful!
I wanted to edit in this update to answer an unasked question: "Is this book still relevant and useful?" The answer is a resounding
yes
!
What I learned in Millionaire Teacher is every bit as relevant for me today as it was 7 years ago. Banks and are still trying to take advantage of our ignorance and sneak in fees. The strategies in this book have formed the foundation of our household's retirement plan and to date, the results have been great: we're getting steady returns, at low cost, and low risk (due to the split of funds).
My advice is take advantage of the lowest-cost index funds you can find, and STICK. TO. YOUR. PLAN. Don't fiddle. I forget if this tip is in the book, but I want to also add that some of the lowest-cost index funds available to you may be through your employer's group RRSP or pension (through a provider like Sunlife, Manulife, etc). Definitely check those rates as you create your plan.
Original review (2012) is below.
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Probably the most important book about finance I've read.
First, if you don't have RRSPs, go read the Wealthy Barber first - it's a good general financial information book.
Millionaire Teacher focuses on investing. I think this is a very important book for anyone who's started an RRSP or is thinking of buying stocks to read.
If you are (were) like me and felt pretty good about yourself by walking into an RBC or a Scotiabank and having a financial adviser tell you which mutual fund you should invest in for your RRSP, chances are you're "donating" anywhere from 2-3.5% of your retirement earnings to the bank's team of traders, researchers, and "financial advisers" (in quotes because often their advice is not so good).
If you add up the bank's seemingly-small fees on your investment, it can cost you hundreds of thousands of dollars over a lifetime, thanks to compound interest. Millionaire Teacher highlights the importance of something called Index Funds - when you invest in one, you essentially buy a tiny piece of every stock that's currently traded, so your investment grows with the market. These funds are passively managed (they can be run by a computer) so their fees are extremely low (0.09% to 0.5%).
Over long periods of time, markets grow - on average - about 10% per year. Coupled with very low management fees Index Funds can make you more money over time then managed (ie, by humans) mutual funds, like RBC's Select Balanced Portfolio, upwards of 90% of the time. Some managed funds do indeed make big returns, but they are inconsistent. The evidence: a small minority of managed mutual funds last a decade.
The book was packed with statistics, references, and quotes from experts in finance - Nobel Prize winners, Warren Buffett, etc. It backed up its theories with real data, which did not have a cherry-picked feel (ie, it seemed very credible).
I think this is a very important book for young people (and old people!) to read.