Stock price when the opinion was issued
MER of XSU is 0.36%. Around for a dog's age. Replicates small-cap index well. Doesn't have the same valuation challenges as with the S&P 500 and concentration of the Magnificent 7.
Also consider XMC for more mid-cap exposure, MER of 0.16%, has done a bit better.
(Don't forget to incorporate foreign, developed areas from EMs ;)
Exposure to the Russell index, hedged to CAD, listed on the TSX so you don't have to go into US dollars. Market breadth is improving, so more companies are participating in the rally. This will continue for the next year or more as the bull market marches on.
Gives you exposure to names that you wouldn't want to own on their own because of the risk. Good way to get diversity without the correlation to the overall market that you get with the large-cap names.
Not too worried, given the short timeframe. In more volatile markets, small caps are going to move down more. Ideally, they play catchup later in the year. Prefers the mega-caps, but this is a way to not have all your eggs in one basket. Good place to be if there's another broad rally over the next 6 months or so.
If an accommodative Fed is more worried about employment than inflation, and the economy is going to run a bit hot for a while, then the market will broaden to the remaining 493 of the S&P. And you can see this in the chart for the Russell 2000. This assumes tariff impact is a one-time inflationary, rather than persistent, issue.
Infrastructure buildout will lead to pervasive growth and increasing breadth in the market. That's where small caps, EMs, and Canada come in. Already seeing some real economic growth under the surface. On this one, though he doesn't always own the ETF itself, his team trades the futures contracts.