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BMO S&P/TSX Oil & Gas ETFZEO.TOWEAK BUYNov 27, 2013Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 17, 2026. Market Open.
He's in the camp that any advantage to the Canadian oil industry is transient, not long term. We need structural change in how the Canadian government looks at our ability as Canadians to distribute one of our best assets to the world. Until that happens, Canada will always trade at a discount to just about everywhere else in the world that sees O&G in a different light.
If your view is that the benefit is longer lasting, you'd move toward small caps. So equal-weight ZEO would potentially give you a better return than XEG. But that's not his outlook.
Since the war broke out, XEG is outperforming. The market sees recent moves as temporary, not permanent.
ENCC is the Global X oil and gas, covered call, income ETF. Compare to ZEO, which boasts 13% this year vs. ENCC's 12%; while over 3 years, it's 46% vs. 40%. The difference lies in the covered writing; you sell some of that future growth to create income now. That's neither good or bad. Also, gas and oil stocks are more volatile, though that makes call premiums higher but adds income.
Not devastating, but there are other things to do with capital. With the current macro economic situation, keep this allocation smaller. Follow through in the markets and some outperformance in energy would be encouraging. It's probably going to be a volume game, not a price game.
Challenge with buying US ETFs that participate in MLPs is that they're not favourable to a Canadian investor. Withholding tax of 15-30%. Be very, very careful on the MLPs. If you want gas exposure, think about XEG or ZEO. Most bang for the buck would be the HED, with small cap exposure. Small caps have more operating leverage if you're confident gas prices will rise. HOG is a bit more conservative.
An equal weighted ETF. He would buy equal weighted over market weighted any day. Looking at oil in North America, there are so many moving parts. There is a worldwide backlash against our oil sands. We have pipelines that need to go east, west and south and none of them are going anywhere. There are rail issues. There is a game changer that the US will be the world’s largest producer by 2015. He would not be taking a huge position in this. 3.2% yield. (See Top Picks.)