TSE:ZEB

BMO EQUAL WEIGHT BANKS INDEX ETF (ZEB.TO)

70.63
-0.07 (0.10%)
as of Jun 10, 2026, 1:36:04 pm Market Open.
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Investor Insights
star iconJun 9, 2026, 12:00 am

This summary was created by AI, based on 12 opinions in the last 12 months.

The BMO Equal Weight Banks Index ETF (ZEB) has generally received positive feedback from various experts, highlighting its strong long-term performance and resilience as a choice for Canadian banking exposure. Many experts appreciate its equal-weight structure, allowing for diversified protection against bank-specific risks. However, sentiments around the current market environment indicate caution, with several experts suggesting that potential economic slowdowns may impact bank performances adversely. Some recommend holding onto the ETF but not adding new investments at this time, emphasizing the importance of buying during dips. Overall, the ETF is seen as a stable investment benefiting from dividends and a potential tailwind from resource sector growth and technology advancements, although immediate bullishness is somewhat tempered by broader economic concerns.

consensus icon
Consensus
Cautious
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Valuation
Overvalued
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RY-T
BUY

Basket of Canadian banks, no covered call. Past year's total return is nearly 14%. As well, better return over 3 years than ZWB.

Over the past year, total return for ZWB was ~9.5%.

COMMENT

The caller's question was on which of these ETF's to buy for a start-up portfolio for his 20-year-old daughter. He prefers more sectors to be covered in this situation so he suggested XEI. There are more multi-asset solutions as well. He also suggested lowering the risk tolerance for a beginner investor.

BUY

Banks in general are entering a normal level. Concerns about high interest rates and defaults are mostly in the past. Banks are good to hold here if you want some dividend-paying stocks. This one has a good strategy, holding the banks in equal weight.

HOLD

Good long-term hold for the past 20 years, even through all the ups and downs of markets.

BUY
ZEB vs. ZWB

Equal weight of the 6 Canadian banks. Very simple, fees have been cut. Over the long haul, outperforms ZWB. ZWB gives you more yield in the present, but diminishes upside participation in a growth market.

To choose, he asks clients about yield requirements and time horizon.

BUY

Great option to get exposure to Canadian banks. Excellent option for long term investors. 

BUY

Basket of Canadian banks, equal weight, no covered call. One-year return is 13.3%. Whereas the ZWB, which applies a covered call strategy, has a one-year return of 9.1%

PAST TOP PICK
(A Top Pick Jun 29/23, Up 10%)

(The March 2023 US regional bank meltdown was shocking, and how it happened was stupid.) He sold this recently.

BUY
ZWB question

Buy ZEB (no covered call) if you believe the banks will recover.

PARTIAL BUY

Low MER, but not a good performance the past few years. Banks hit by rising interest rates. Good time to buy given low valuation. Would recommend adding slowly. 

HOLD

Only the big 6, nothing simpler. Bellwether, the biggest. BMO did cut the fee a bit to 28 bps, but there are cheaper ones. If you're considering starting a new position, try HBNK, which has a fee waiver for the next little bit. No need to swap out of ZEB if you already hold it.

Before jumping in to either, consider how much bank exposure you may already have in your other index funds.

BUY

Attractive prices for Canadian banks. Believes price levels of banks becoming attractive. Good time to buy. 

WEAK BUY

Not a bad idea to start nibbling at the Canadian banks now. Doesn't know the MER offhand, but it is relatively low. You're better off owning the banks themselves, which will eventually rebound to new highs. Prefers TD and RY.

BUY
For a beginner's TFSA?

6 largest Canadian banks on a fairly equal weight basis. Likes the Canadian banks, decent growth rate. Canadian banks have cheap valuations, especially on price to book. Not as exciting as tech or cyclical names, but you'll get more of a stable ride. Pretty good yield of 5.1%.

HBNK is an alternative. Pretty much the same makeup as ZEB, but offering 0% management fees until next summer.

TOP PICK

Banks are down 20%+. This is what he'd buy, without the covered call, because he wants the growth at this point. Yield is around 3.5%, instead of 6%, but he doesn't care as he wants the growth, and we're going to see that with the Canadian banks despite headwinds in terms of US real estate. Canadian banks have all kinds of buffers in place. Loan loss problems in Canada are actually pretty small.

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