
TSE:ZWH
This summary was created by AI, based on 1 opinions in the last 12 months.
The BMO US High Dividend Covered Call ETF (ZWH-T) is appreciated for its non-leveraged approach, focusing on well-known, stable household names. While the fund offers a yield ranging from 6% to 6.5%, the payout from US stocks tends to be modest. The primary returns on investment are derived from premium income generated through covered calls, highlighting a strategy centered on capital gains rather than high dividends. Since April, the fund’s performance has stalled, partly due to its lack of exposure to high-performing technology stocks that have dominated market gains recently. Investors should consider the risk of slower growth while valuing reliable income from a well-diversified portfolio of blue-chip stocks.
A very controversial part of the US market right now. The dividend market, which has been a darling for a very, very long time, may start encountering a little bit of stumbling when rates start moving back up. This is generally an excellent investment, but it is going to cause you a bit of grief in the short term. When you add on the covered call side of it, that is fine in a very volatile kind of sideways moving market. It will probably hold its own for a little while, but you are going to have a lot of people telling you that you shouldn’t own it. He would keep your weighting at about 4% of your portfolio.
This is a basket of high dividend payers in the US. On days when the Fed talks about rising interest rates, those stocks tend to drop. That is his concern about high dividend payers. Look for ETF’s or companies that are growing their dividends, or have those dividend attributes. In a rising environment, you will do better just holding the individual or underlying holdings, rather than having a covered call strategy. (See Top Picks.)
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.
Generally everything that has a high dividend tends to not suffer the seasonal fluctuations that the broader market does. This is a basket of dividend paying stocks. It also tends to benefit from a covered call write strategy which increases the yield to above the dividends that are being paid out. Right now the dividend is about 5.6%, which is quite healthy.