Not at all, there's a fair amout of overlap, not negative that I can say, in all diversifying is a major factor as regards positive results, its gotten my 120k initial deposit multiplied at least five times in eight months.
It's been quite an ordeal for me chasing individual stocks and I feel pretty stupid for not understanding how investing works. I major in economics but I’ve been trying to make sense of the market. Well done on profits!!!
in my opinion you'd want to buy what you understand while keeping it simple, I work with Amelia Sophie Woledge, a reputable CFA, understanding its no game of luck and the need for appropriate technical know how would get you on the right side of the market. Don't shoot the lights out taking unnecessary risks.
For your upcoming high yield ETFs vid, I'd love for you to at least mention (Canadian) Hamilton ETFs (HMAX, UMAX, etc.). Their 14+% yield has been treating me really well and have allowed me to invest into those extremely high yield (American) YieldMax ETFs that pay 100+% yield (CONY, AMDY, TSLY, etc.). Thank you.
FIE is a good one !!! Present dividend yield 5.8% but had you bought the stock during the pandemic yield was at 9%. Dividend payout constant at .04 monthly since 2010.
NVHE higher monthly dividend then all mentioned, pays 22 cents a share at only about $13 per share atm. Carries more risk but so much more bang for your buck. Your welcome.
What's the benefit of Canadian HY ETFs over US ones? They yield way less compared to US ones, so even after SEC non residential tax, it is still better to invest in US ones over Canadian ones. Is it because of eligible dividend with unregistered investment account?
I have 15 good dividend paying stocks in my portfolio and save a lot of money on fees. I noticed many of these funds show a much lower dividend payout than what I am earning. I then reinvest my dividends quarterly and select which stock(s) to reinvest into. One other person mentioned CRT-UN, gret REIT. I personally know the past VP as I sail with her father.
I hold about $26,000 across 7 individual REITs which are yielding me about 5.64% in dividends. Does it make any financial sense to consolidate that same $26,000 into a lower yielding (4.5%) ETF like ZRE?
All of this depends on your objectives. Are you looking for high cash flow? Dividend growth? Consistency of raising dividends? It also depends on your tax bracket in non registered account re div tax credit. There are many variables to consider. I think investors who want dividends should buy high quality Canadian stocks. Stocks that have a proven track record of raising dividends as their growth rises. High dividend yields do not mean quality or risk free - think BCE. Buy 10 or 12 of these stocks and hold for the long term. If the fundementals of the company or the industry change, reconsider your position. Don't overeact if there is 2 or 3 bad quarters, as over 25 or 35 years , it is insignificant. Ry, fts, enb, atd, wcn, L, trp, cnr, bn, cu are all divy payers, they all have different yields. They all have a diffrent purpose in your account based on your goals. What they have in common is that they are quality companies that will be around in 10 or 25 years.
100%. Some people get caught up in the numbers and forget the big picture of what investing really is at it's core: you're taking a chance that a company will still be around decades down the line.
great video Brandon!!! i love this view finance. a good trustworthy, stable investment style. i love these videos!! good luck on your interview with a Dragon!!!
Many better choices in my opinion if you are looking for dividend income, most of which pay 2 to 3 times as much as the ones you mentioned, with essentially the same amount of risk. The affect on the bottom line is tremendous.
I just spoke about that with my Dad today actually. It's almost the exact same as VDY but underperformed by 4% over the past 5 years, so essentially the same.
Should mention REITs are better suited for a registered account as their dividends are taxed at your marginal rate if in a cash account. Lots of savings to be had, especially in a TFSA.
BMOs selection is absolute garbage in my opinion let alone a REIT from them. I personally wouldn’t ever invest in any of these selections. Besides, if you’re gonna subject to yourself to a withholding tax, make it worth your while (more than single digit percentages)
@ the performance on a lot of their offerings lags behind competition and other options. Did some BMO ETFs in my infancy of investing only to be burned by them.
…There’s tons of options …Look for ETF’s that have a buy in with less than $10 per share with a monthly payout …I did name one company in a previous reply but it was taken down 🤷♂️
My core holdings are VDY , XEQT , HYLD ,
The Trump Effects has got a number of stocks and assets doing well, I want to get in on ETFs, looking on VDY, SCHD or XLK.
These are good picks madam. You can say I love VDY and SCHD equally...
It wouldn't be crazy getting both, would it ?
Not at all, there's a fair amout of overlap, not negative that I can say, in all diversifying is a major factor as regards positive results, its gotten my 120k initial deposit multiplied at least five times in eight months.
It's been quite an ordeal for me chasing individual stocks and I feel pretty stupid for not understanding how investing works. I major in economics but I’ve been trying to make sense of the market. Well done on profits!!!
in my opinion you'd want to buy what you understand while keeping it simple, I work with Amelia Sophie Woledge, a reputable CFA, understanding its no game of luck and the need for appropriate technical know how would get you on the right side of the market. Don't shoot the lights out taking unnecessary risks.
For your upcoming high yield ETFs vid, I'd love for you to at least mention (Canadian) Hamilton ETFs (HMAX, UMAX, etc.). Their 14+% yield has been treating me really well and have allowed me to invest into those extremely high yield (American) YieldMax ETFs that pay 100+% yield (CONY, AMDY, TSLY, etc.). Thank you.
Just buy HYLD it holds SMAX, QMAX, LMAX, FMAX, AMAX, EMAX. I also hold TEC
Instead of ZRE, consider CRT-UN instead which pays you monthly 7% yield and it is as stable as Canadian Tire store.
FIE is a good one !!! Present dividend yield 5.8% but had you bought the stock during the pandemic yield was at 9%. Dividend payout constant at .04 monthly since 2010.
Yes, please do a video on the high dividend ETF's.
Canadian dividend etfs pretty much hold the same few companies, just pick one
That's a little oversimplified
The wealthy barber is the first book I read about investing in canada, I ll be there for the live :)
Hi people! what you think about MREL reit etf?
Please do a video on Canadian high monthly dividend ETFs
Follow the passive income investing channel. That’s what he specializes in for Canadians.
VDY, EIT.UN, XEI
NVHE higher monthly dividend then all mentioned, pays 22 cents a share at only about $13 per share atm. Carries more risk but so much more bang for your buck. Your welcome.
What's the benefit of Canadian HY ETFs over US ones? They yield way less compared to US ones, so even after SEC non residential tax, it is still better to invest in US ones over Canadian ones. Is it because of eligible dividend with unregistered investment account?
I have 15 good dividend paying stocks in my portfolio and save a lot of money on fees. I noticed many of these funds show a much lower dividend payout than what I am earning. I then reinvest my dividends quarterly and select which stock(s) to reinvest into. One other person mentioned CRT-UN, gret REIT. I personally know the past VP as I sail with her father.
I'd love to add those, but as someone who can't contribute to RRSP this year, my top pic has been XEQT for my TFSA.
Thank you for the video, interested in a video about high div yields etfs, please.
I hold about $26,000 across 7 individual REITs which are yielding me about 5.64% in dividends. Does it make any financial sense to consolidate that same $26,000 into a lower yielding (4.5%) ETF like ZRE?
Thanks for the Great content 👍Could you please share what are you holding in your TFSA ?!
Greatly appreciated 🙏
All of this depends on your objectives. Are you looking for high cash flow? Dividend growth? Consistency of raising dividends? It also depends on your tax bracket in non registered account re div tax credit. There are many variables to consider. I think investors who want dividends should buy high quality Canadian stocks. Stocks that have a proven track record of raising dividends as their growth rises. High dividend yields do not mean quality or risk free - think BCE. Buy 10 or 12 of these stocks and hold for the long term. If the fundementals of the company or the industry change, reconsider your position. Don't overeact if there is 2 or 3 bad quarters, as over 25 or 35 years , it is insignificant. Ry, fts, enb, atd, wcn, L, trp, cnr, bn, cu are all divy payers, they all have different yields. They all have a diffrent purpose in your account based on your goals. What they have in common is that they are quality companies that will be around in 10 or 25 years.
100%. Some people get caught up in the numbers and forget the big picture of what investing really is at it's core: you're taking a chance that a company will still be around decades down the line.
interested in the high dividends
XDU, an ETF similar in concept to SCHD but in Canadian funds and low mer cost.
and SCHD 🤘🏼
Let's go. Do the vid on the high octane high yield ETFs please. Thank you.
I go with utilitie etfs like Zwu or the Hamilton equivalent. They pay a higher yield than those you propose here.
How does this ETF strategy (high dividend) score vs a dividend growth strategy?
I like snowball effect
I would like a video about high income divident REITS and ETFs
Yes to high income What about harvest?
Thoughts on Xei ?
great video Brandon!!! i love this view finance. a good trustworthy, stable investment style. i love these videos!! good luck on your interview with a Dragon!!!
Many better choices in my opinion if you are looking for dividend income, most of which pay 2 to 3 times as much as the ones you mentioned, with essentially the same amount of risk. The affect on the bottom line is tremendous.
Examples...
Let’s see you next video!
Im shocked XDIV wasn't mentioned 😒
Agreed😊
I just spoke about that with my Dad today actually. It's almost the exact same as VDY but underperformed by 4% over the past 5 years, so essentially the same.
Nice choices ;-)
Do that high yielding etf div vid!
VDY ftw
Damn, didn't realize VDY lowered their div from last month :( Sucks, just recalculated and brought my monthly divs down by so much.
YTSL
bet on red at the roulette table
Is anyone holding BK?
Should mention REITs are better suited for a registered account as their dividends are taxed at your marginal rate if in a cash account. Lots of savings to be had, especially in a TFSA.
ZPAY
BMOs selection is absolute garbage in my opinion let alone a REIT from them. I personally wouldn’t ever invest in any of these selections. Besides, if you’re gonna subject to yourself to a withholding tax, make it worth your while (more than single digit percentages)
Why is BMO's selection garbage? Interested in hearing your thoughts
@ the performance on a lot of their offerings lags behind competition and other options. Did some BMO ETFs in my infancy of investing only to be burned by them.
whats your portfolio look like?
@@realbeetlejuicenothing from BMOS offerings that’s for sure 😉 financials and crypto mostly
we want you to analyze individual stocks
…These are all mediocre picks…
What are your picks?
Name your top picks, then.
…There’s tons of options …Look for ETF’s that have a buy in with less than $10 per share with a monthly payout
…I did name one company in a previous reply but it was taken down 🤷♂️
How bout having a bottle of water handy, Brandon?
I think I'll wait for the worldwide stock markets to drop at least fifty percent before going long anything.
only Canadian stocks guys. get VDY. , EIT.UN... maybe XEI and XDIV. and no!, absolutely no US stocks, guys. with all respect to this young fella
You are not allowed to keep US stocks in your TFSA.
@@見義wrong
@@stephenhotchkiss8452 You are right. I am wrong.