
TSE:ZWB
This summary was created by AI, based on 9 opinions in the last 12 months.
The BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF (ZWB) has received a mix of reviews from various experts, highlighting both its benefits and drawbacks. The ETF, which is concentrated in Canadian banks and designed to generate income through a covered call strategy, has seen a notable increase of approximately 52% over the last year, albeit less than the equal-weighted counterpart, ZEB, which rose by 63%. While many experts appreciate the extra layer of yield that the covered call provides, they also caution against investing heavily at this stage in the economic cycle due to potential downturns affecting bank performance. Concerns about underperformance relative to the underlying banks, and the inherent trade-offs of call writing, such as capping upside potential, were also articulated. Overall, ZWB is seen as a long-term holding for those looking for income, but caution is advised regarding new investments given current market conditions.
Great long-term exposure for Canadians in taxable accounts. Our banks have withstood so many business cycles over the years. From time to time, they will go down a lot; for example, during tariffs last year.
If we get close (and he thinks we are) to an economic environment in Canada where we're worried about recession and job growth, Canadian banks will underperform and go down more significantly than the broader market decline.
A way to play defense, and the covered call overlay adds another layer of defense via the extra yield. But to put new $$ in now after the run they've had? Absolutely not. But loves them for the long term.
Possibly, the day before the date quoted that the NAV closed a penny or two higher, so the ETF might have closed a little higher than it should have on the last trade. Sometimes a couple pennies here or there adds up to 10-20 basis points. Also, when a market declines, you short volatility on a covered call ETF, which erodes your NAV a little. Day to day, it's not a perfect tracking. Don't offer as much defence as structured ETFs.
You have to like the covered writing. Always remember that when you sell calls against your position, you're giving up some upside to get that return premium. Some of the "dividend" you're getting is actually a return of capital.
US banks are a lot bigger and a lot more robust. They'll probably do better than Canadian banks by a little bit. US banks are innovative and will be able to take advantage of opportunities in the crypto space. US banks are also involved in the global economy.
But Canada has rocks, trees, oil, and gas -- part of how we develop over the next number of years. The spat with the US will be resolved because it's too important not to. We need to grow our GDP to support all our benefit programs, and natural resources are part of that.
Incorporating both is a wonderful way to go.
Have to make sure you understand what you get with call-writing on various indices. Compared to an equal weight, unwritten bank portfolio, in the type of market we've been in (trending upward), the total return for the covered call one is lower. You get income, but give up some of the upside. It's not good or bad, it's just a fact.
It does hedge to the downside, but not a lot. So if there's a large drawdown, you're going to feel most of that.
Why not put some in ZWB and, for the upside, some in an equal weight bank ETF with no call-writing?
Depends on your asset allocation, risk tolerance, and whether the GIC is in a registered account or not. He likes the BMO lineup for ETFs a lot. With lower interest rates and the thirst for data centres, thinks there's more to go in the utility space.
He himself writes covered calls on stocks. So he doesn't like ETFs that, as a mandate, have to write covered calls. It looks enticing, but the miracle of stocks is the growth you get from not selling calls or only selling them selectively as a tool.
These are covered call ETFs for banks, US (ZWK) or Canadian (ZWB). If tariffs and such are going to be negative for the economy, typically banks would underperform broader markets. He'd be cautious. Don't go out and sell right now, but be wary.
You'll probably get a better chance to buy in the next couple of months, when banks get a bit cheaper. In the meantime, ZST is a good place to park your cash.
They're popular, because people want the extra yield, but they work only in some environments. Better when you expects markets to go down for 6-12 months (a correction). In rapid declines, like Covid, you get only some protection. But in a strong market, you give you the upside and lag the market a lot. Just owning ZEB since 2011, you would have made 10.71% annualized; ZWB 8.34%. SO, use ZWB defensively at some point after a correction, say 10% or 15% down. Use ZEB in a strong rally. During strong declines, both ETFs fall roughly the same, but during the recent strong rally, ZEB was 16.98% and ZWB 14.85%.
That's a very specific question about one investor and their financial circumstances, risk tolerance, etc.
If we're going into an environment of slower economic conditions, then ZWU is likely to do a bit better. This would be due to the Canadian banks pulling back. He loves them both, great exposures. A bit concerning if all a retiree's portfolio is in just those two vehicles; there's not much diversification either within or outside of Canada.
Consider adding ZPAY, which gives you some US exposure to big banks and tech, and with a lower risk profile.
BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF is a Canadian stock, trading under the symbol ZWB.TO (previously ZWB-T on Stockchase) on the Toronto Stock Exchange (ZWB-CT). It is usually referred to as TSX:ZWB or ZWB.TO
In the last year, 7 stock analysts published opinions about ZWB.TO (previously ZWB-T on Stockchase). 5 analysts recommended to BUY the stock. 1 analyst recommended to SELL the stock. The latest stock analyst recommendation is HOLD. Read the latest stock experts' ratings for BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF.
BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF was recommended as a Top Pick by Larry Berman CFA, CMT, CTA on 2024-12-16. Read the latest stock experts ratings for BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF.
Earnings reports or recent company news can cause the stock price to drop. Read stock experts' recommendations for help on deciding if you should buy, sell or hold the stock.
7 stock analysts on Stockchase covered BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF in the last year. It is a trending stock that is worth watching.
On 2026-06-05, BMO Covered Call Canadian Banks ETF (ZWB.TO) stock closed at a price of $28.91.
A fine ETF. MER is 71 bps. Up ~52% over last 12 months; compare to ZEB (equal weight, no covered calls) is up 63%. Again, a tradeoff of upside for income. Very concentrated in one sub-sector of a sector of the Canadian market. Yield is ~5.6%.