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iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index ETFXIU.TOCOMMENTMay 01, 2014Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 19, 2026. Market Open.
An ETF to buy? There are so many ETFs, so it depends what you're looking for. XIU offers growth and income for retirees. This is a core holding for any investors. There's also a BMO utilities ETF offering a yield and upside. Also, a Canadian bank ETF from any vendor will give you income and growth, like ZWB-T. An ETF reduces volatility vs. owning individual stocks.
HXT-T vs. XIU-T. They have basically identical holding but one pays a dividend so has different tax treatment. He is indifferent. In a TFSA, there is no reason to not to use the XIU-T.
How to increase dividends. These are all the same thing. You get exposure to Canadian large caps. There is no diversification by being in all three. ZWU-T should replace one of them to get utilities including pipelines and telcos and less reliance on the banks. Still Canada so you need international. ZWE-T is the best international dividend payers yielding 7% with a covered call overlay. ZWS-T is the best in the US. These are the two to add to the three. These should be in a registered portfolios if you are retired because there is no divined tax credit.
For a TFSA account? This is the largest ETF in Canada by a large margin and it’s cheap. Most large-cap stocks get dividends. He wouldn’t worry much about dividends in an ETF. The dividend tax credit is more of an opportunity cost that you forgo. Any dividends that you earn in a TFSA are tax-free. If you had them in a taxable account you get tax preferred income but in a TFSA you don’t pay any tax at all.