Stock price when the opinion was issued
Right now, this is his preference. Going over the history of this ETF, the extreme was $1.50-1.60 CAD to euro. So anything above $1.50-1.55, you'd want to be hedged. Anything lower than $1.35-1.40, you want to be exposed to the foreign currency.
Recently we got back above $1.50. If it keeps going higher, that's fine. When you're hedging the CAD relative to Europe, their interest rates are lower than ours, and so you actually earn extra doing it.
If you're really looking for enhanced yield out of Europe, he really likes ZWP (high dividend payers, covered call, currency exposure) or ZWE (high dividend payers, covered call, currency hedged). The charts don't show a lot of gains, but that's because they pay out a pretty significant dividend (much bigger than ZDI, which is just dividends without the covered calls).
If you're conservative and you want more tax-efficient income in a taxable account, he likes these ETFs with the covered calls a lot better than ZDI.
The answer is both, because the securities holdings underneath them are identical. ZWE is currency hedged, ZWP is not. The choice depends on your view of the CAD relative to the euro. If you don't want to trade, buy the hedged version; it'll be your better holding in the long run. Huge distribution (from selling calls), but not a lot of growth (as calls sell some of the upside).
Loves them both, uses them in his sleep-at-night portfolios. He goes back and forth, depending on his view of CAD vs. euro.
BMO Europe High Dividend Covered Call Hedged to CAD (ZWE-T) or BMO US High Dividend Covered Call (ZWH-T)? He has a thesis that the US’s outperformance of the equity and currency markets is over. We have had 7 years of a structural US$ Bull market, and their equity market is expensive with headwinds on earnings. Europe has the unique situation where everybody recognizes the structural problems, but those are already priced in.