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Vanguard S&P 500-CAD HedgedVSP.TORISKYJun 11, 2026Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 15, 2026. Market Open.
Gives you the S&P with a currency hedge. If you think about where the CAD is now, it's a bit below 70 cents. If you're going to hold this for the next decade, he'd argue that the CAD will be a little bit stronger. So may not be a bad idea to buy one with the currency hedge.
There's an annual cost to the currency hedge that's not part of the MER. Today it's about 1.75%. If the CAD is weak, you want your exposure hedged. If it's expensive relative to the US dollar, you probably want exposure to the USD. You can switch between the two in your RRSP.
BMO and other providers also have hedged vs. unhedged versions. They're all very good.
VSP is a hedged version for the S&P index, for those wanting exposure to the S&P but using Canadian dollars. XSP is fairly similar. MER costs are quite low for both. He prefers the market-weighted over the equal-weighted right now. Large and mega-caps will continue to perform well.
His mid-term target for the S&P 500 is 5500, then maybe a pullback in September-October, and then go on to hit 6000 in the first quarter of 2025. Good opportunities in it, even though the market's performed well.
VSP-T vs. ZSP-T. Both are fine holdings. The BMO version contains individual holdings while these two put wrappers around the US versions. There are tax considerations in holding US investments if you hold more than $100,000. He has increased US dollar exposure recently to play the currency short term.
VSP is hedged, VFV is not. CAD has has some weakness over the long term, and has been weak so far this year. So it really depends on outlook of USD vs. CAD. He'd rather hold the US version where there is no hedging; long term, the USD can remain pretty firm against the CAD.
He'd be cautious around owning a passive index like this, just because valuations are a bit high. About 45-50% of this ETF is in tech or tech-related stocks. Could make sense for a portion of your portfolio. However, he'd rather go with something more equal weight and where the exposure to tech/growth is a bit more muted.