The investment industry has a great menu of options for people with lots of cash sitting in their accounts, but a new one stands out for something you don’t see a lot of in the financial world.
We’re talking here about clarity and clear-cut branding. That’s what you get in the growing selection of cash management exchange-traded funds. Really, these ETFs are nothing more than money market funds, which have been around for ages. What the cash management label does is inform investors that this is a product for holding cash, an asset of some importance right now because interest rates remain high.
TD Asset Management launched the TD Cash Management ETF (TCSH-T) last week. Existing competitors include the Evolve Premium Cash Management Fund (MCAD-T), the Purpose Cash Management Fund (MNY-T) and the BMO USD Cash Management ETF (ZUCM-T).
These funds for now have after-fee yields a bit above 5 per cent, which are generated by holdings in short-term corporate and government borrowings. There is only a tiny level of risk in these securities because they mature in the next 30 to 365 days. Unit prices are generally pegged at $50 or $100, with small increases in the price until the monthly income distribution is made. The price returns to the base level after the distribution, which is a good time to buy.
Money market and T-bill ETFs are quite similar, but the term “money market fund” went stale in the years when interest rates were low and few investors bothered to find parking places for the cash in their accounts.
High interest savings account ETFs are a highly successful product for holding investing cash, but their returns have edged down to a point where they are often below cash management and money market ETFs. HISA ETFs hold their assets in special big bank savings accounts offered to institutional investors as opposed to retail clients.
There’s a version of the HISA ETF that trades like a mutual fund: the investment savings account. ISAs offer deposit insurance, unlike HISA ETFs. But you give something up on yield, which usually comes in around 4.6 per cent.
You want more variety for parking cash? Guardian Capital recently introduced Canadian and U.S. versions of the Guardian Ultra-Short T-bill Fund (GCTB-T and GUTB-U-T, respectively). These funds hold treasury bills maturing in less than six months, a market niche that today offers strong yields.
Variety is great if you want to put some cash in your investment account to work, but simplicity is important, too. That’s why cash management ETFs are a good addition to the product mix as a go-to way to park cash in investment accounts that meet these requirements:
-The amount you’re investing is large enough to make any trading commissions inconsequential - some brokers charge as much as $9.99 to buy or sell stocks and ETFs;
-You have an account at digital brokers Desjardins Online Brokerage, National Bank Direct Brokerage or Wealthsimple, which charge no commissions;
-You use Questrade or CI Direct Trading, which charge nothing to buy ETFs and regular commissions to sell.
If brokerage commissions are an issue, investment savings accounts make a lot of sense.
-- Rob Carrick, personal finance columnist
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Stocks to ponder
BCE Inc. (BCE-T) The telecom’s underwhelming 2023 results have forced the company’s board to dial back its dividend growth to 3.1 per cent for 2024. But cutting the dividend, not increasing it, would be the responsible thing to do, argues David Milstead. He says BCE simply hasn’t been generating the cash to cover it.
The Rundown
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Where to find the best value in REITs
Real estate investment trusts have gone through a difficult and volatile period. Over the past five years ended in December 2023, the Canadian REIT Index returned 4.19 per cent, including distributions, annualized. This compares unfavourably with the S&P/TSX Composite Index five-year return of 11.30 per cent annualized, including dividends. But as fund manager veteran Tom Czitron reports, there are pockets of the REIT market now offering good value.
Wall Street hunts for more AI gold after Nvidia’s soaring rally
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With debt levels exploding, central bankers are in a Catch-22. We’re heading for trouble
Central bankers have some tough options to consider as debt levels surge and inflation remains elevated. For value investing professor Dr. George Athanassakos, nothing they can do will prevent the bursting of a bubble in equities and in consumption and borrowing.
U.S. bond giant PIMCO expects term premiums to rise again
U.S. Treasury term premiums, a measure of the compensation investors demand for holding long-term bonds, could shoot up again amid sticky inflation and rising fiscal deficits, U.S. bond asset manager PIMCO said on Thursday. And that has implications on how investors should be positioned in the bond market.
Why is it so hard to beat index funds?
The importance of randomness in investing has been recognized since at least the 1970s. However, because of a phenomenon known as the paradox of skill, randomness has become increasingly dominant: As the overall skill level increases, the relative importance of skill declines. Biff Matthews of Longview Asset Management explains.
Others (for subscribers)
John Heinzl’s model dividend growth portfolio as of Feb. 29, 2024
The highest-yielding stocks on the TSX, plus risk data
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Number Cruncher: 14 funds with a dividend focus
Monica Rizk: Bullish on Wajax Corp.
Ted Dixon: Paramount Resources insiders and short sellers go in opposite directions
Bitcoin sees biggest monthly rise since 2020
Friday’s analyst upgrades and downgrades
Thursday’s analyst upgrades and downgrades
Globe Advisor
Why this money manager is buying utilities and pipelines while cutting back on banks and tech
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Ask Globe Investor
Question: If one has made substantial gains on various stocks, is it better to cash in and take some profit or let it ride? I keep reading different answers to this question. Is there a general rule of thumb for this, or what does logic tell us?
Answer: The answer depends on many factors. If the stock has risen to the point that it accounts for a substantial portion of your portfolio – say, 10 per cent or more, just to pick a round number – trimming your position and deploying the cash elsewhere would help to control your risk. If the stock’s price-to-earnings multiple (or other valuation metric) has become excessively stretched, or if you have become less confident about the company’s growth prospects, these would be additional reasons to consider cutting back. You might also want to take into account the capital gains tax implications, if any, of selling. On the other hand, if you still like the company’s prospects, the valuation is reasonable and the stock doesn’t account for an outsized weighting in your portfolio, you may want to hang on. You won’t necessarily get it right every time – you might sell a portion of your position only to watch the share price continue to rise – but controlling your risk is the name of the game here.
--John Heinzl (E-mail your questions to jheinzl@globeandmail.com)
What’s up in the days ahead
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Compiled by Globe Investor Staff