50% off Premium Yearly
Vanguard FTSE Cdn High Div Yd.VDY.TOBUYNov 05, 2014Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 12, 2026. Market Open.
Better places to be. Dividend growth is more interesting than high dividend payers, especially in an inflationary world. He wants companies that grow their dividends more quickly, even if the dividend is lower to begin with. A rising stream of income offsets a rising cost of living.
Take a look at RDVY.
As long as you have 4-5 years before the home purchase, you can be in an equity strategy. Equities can be volatile.
For Canadian exposure, VDY or XEI makes sense -- high dividends tend to do well in Canada. Lots of options in the US, but he'd stick to equal-weight (not market-weight) ETFs. S&P 500 is still 45% tech and communications, and that's a bit risky at this point. Consider RSP.
For European exposure go for a broad-based approach such as in VIDY.
Resources required to build those data centres and energy sources are booming. That's why Canada is doing so well. Broad diversification and a good dividend yield. Canadian dividends are eligible for the tax credit, so it's more tax-efficient if outside a registered account.
Sees a broadening of the market rally after a very strong few days. Rotation out of tech into other names.
Buys companies with high dividends. You need to look at each underlying company to see if the dividend is sustainable. Often the dividend yield goes higher because the stock price collapses. That's not a good thing. Telus would be an example of that. Be careful.
Up 20% in one year, great. Overall, getting safer companies with a lot of cashflow. Just watch for companies that may cut their dividend. Great vehicle for people looking for dividend income, especially in a non-registered account.
Basket of high-dividend-paying stocks. Very heavy in Canadian banks, about 46%. Depending on your outlook for the banks, you need to decide if this holding makes sense for you. Choose this one if you're looking for yield. Yield is about 3.3%.
XIC will be much more diversified, as its focus is not juicy dividends. Dividend is lower. Banks make up only 21%. Yield is ~2.3%.
A preferred share ETF with a good deal of 4% plus? A yield of 3.2% would be perfectly fine and he would rather have more diversification, so for that he would recommend this one. It will be probably as volatile as most. There will be some in it that will not have as great a yield, but it will have more names, and those 2 things will offset each other. This is low-cost and broad diversification. In terms of the kind of performance you are going to get, you will see that it did very well until the market had its selloff.