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Stockchase Opinions

Greg NewmanBMO Ultra Short-Term Bond ETFZST.L.TOBUYMar 20, 2026

Where to park cash?

You want to put yourself in a strong position to be able to buy, because other people are late to the game and selling because they have to. You could go into a high-interest savings account with your financial institution. 

But he likes this BMO product. Pays you a bit more. Steady-eddy, 12-month basket of rolling, short-term, investment-grade bonds. Almost as safe as cash, with a slightly better yield.

$62.66

Stock price when the opinion was issued

$63.10

As of Jun 15, 2026. Market Open.

E.T.F.'s
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BUY
Safe and secure ETF to park profits in?

Nothing wrong with CBIL at all, especially in a registered account.

He very much likes ZST.L from BMO. The "L" unit gives you the ability to convert the growth in that money market holding into a capital gain. This is for a taxable account.

If you're talking millions and millions of dollars, the miniscule differences in the rate you get can really add up. If you're talking normal amounts, don't sweat the varying differences in yield.

COMMENT
No distribution, so more tax-efficient than plain ZST?

It depends on the holder. To make it more tax-efficient, you need to hold it in a taxable account. Let's say you bought at the beginning of the year, and you earned 3% (earned, but not distributed), the value will have gone up 3% by the end of the year. 

If you sell it before it reaches its tax date at the end of the year, then theoretically it will trigger a capital gain in the asset. Thereby turning fixed income returns into capital gains. Not the core purpose of the fund, but a very nice idea. But you have to be active to do it.

PAST TOP PICK
(A Top Pick Aug 07/24, Up 1%)

(Note the short timeframe.)
A substitute for cash when you're feeling a bit cautious. Slow and steady, conservative. When he chose it markets were selling off, presidential election was looming, seasonal weakness was upon us. And then the bull market resumed a week later.

TOP PICK

In his portfolios, he can go between 100% equity and 100% cash. When things go awry, he can sell equities and go to cash. For him, this means short-term money markets and bonds. This ETF holds bonds with maturities of less than 1 year. It's like cash that you earn a bit of money on. Yield is 4.9%.

A call on being conservative. He started to see a bit of weakness in some of his indicators; understandable given how fast markets came down, combined with seasonality, economic outlook, and political cycle. A place to go with so many uncertainties out there.

This pick is the ".L" version with accumulating units; reinvests proceeds as interest comes in. More tax-efficient for non-registered accounts, such as cash and margin accounts. The plain vanilla ZST is good for registered accounts.

BUY
De-risking 40% of a portfolio at age 59.

Likes the idea of PSA. TLT, he believes, is a leveraged play on the bond market and wouldn't do that. BNS high interest savings, for example, pays 4.75% for optionality and no risk. 

For an ETF filled with 1-year bonds that's very low risk, look at ZST.L. Pays a high dividend, though it's interest. Very competitive rate. If interest rates come down, you might even get a bit of capital appreciation.

BUY
Something safe to generate a nice income.

If you're looking for something safe, for 1-2 years and aside from GICs, he'd recommend ZST or ZST.L (this version accumulates the units). Yield would be ~4.9-5%. Very safe, very short-term with 3-4 month, investment-grade corporate bonds. Inexpensive. A way to get a diversified basket of bonds.

BUY
A 12-month duration product he likes, which pays a little bit more. Keep for 3-6 months, don't jump in and out. If markets are going to come down 5-10%, nothing wrong with parking money for a bit and having some dry powder.
TOP PICK
It reinvests the proceeds. The chart is a steady climb, rising 2.6% for the year, but it is sure and steady. Good for short-term cash. Fort he conservative income part of a portfolio. MER of 0.17%