I’d Put My Entire TFSA Into This 3.5%-Yield Dividend Giant

I’d invest my entire TFSA in the BMO Canadian Dividend ETF (TSX:ZDV).

| More on:

Would you invest your entire portfolio into a single security?

Conventional wisdom – and much academic research – indicates that it is not such a good idea. When it comes to shares of single companies, the popular notion is probably correct: unless you have insider-like knowledge of a company, you probably don’t know it well enough to make it your sole holding.

But with exchange-traded funds (ETFs), it’s a different story. Many high quality ETFs have broad enough diversification and low enough fees to merit being an investor’s entire investment portfolio. A classic example would be a global index fund built on the FTSE All-World Index, which is more diversified than many investors’ portfolios.

For most investors, having such a fund as their entire portfolio – or at least the equity portion of it – wouldn’t be such a bad idea. In my case, I think I can identify an ETF that’s much less diversified than that, that I would invest my entire TFSA in. In this article, I reveal that fund and explain why I’d be comfortable having my entire TFSA invested in it.

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks

Source: Getty Images

BMO’s Canadian Dividend ETF

The BMO Canadian Dividend ETF (TSX:ZDV) is a diversified Canadian exchange traded fund focused on high dividend stocks. Because of its dividend focus, the fund mainly holds stocks in high-yielding sectors like banking, energy, and utilities. Some large tech names like Shopify (TSX:SHOP) are left out, but for the most part, the fund’s largest holdings look pretty similar to those of a broad market TSX Index fund. Nevertheless, ZDV still sports quite a bit more yield than such funds do.

Income potential

The BMO Canadian Dividend ETF has roughly a 3.5% dividend yield at today’s price. That’s calculated by summing up the fund’s monthly dividend payouts ($0.07 each month or $0.84 in a year). All of these payouts divided by ZDV’s unit price ($24.22) equal roughly 3.5%. So, you can get about $3,470 in annual dividend income if you invest in ZDV and the dividend payout doesn’t change.

COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESDIVIDENDTOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCY
BMO Canadian Dividend ETF24.224,129$0.07 per month ($0.84 per year)$289 per month ($3,468 per year)Monthly

As you can see, you can get quite a bit of dividend income coming in with a $100,000 investment in ZDV. A similar investment in the TSX Composite Index would provide much less yield.

Diversification

Next up, we can look at the level of diversification in ZDV’s portfolio. Diversification is important because, when done correctly, it reduces risk. ZDV has 55 holdings, which is a significant amount of numerical diversification. The fund has additional diversification in its varied sector exposures. Numerical “diversification” doesn’t mean a lot if all of the assets move together in the same direction. What you need is uncorrelated assets, and with the many different sectors represented in ZDV’s portfolio, this fund has plenty of them.

Fees and other costs

Last but not least, we need to look at ZDV’s fee structure. The fund isn’t exactly dirt cheap by ETF standards, with a 0.39% management expense ratio (MER). That means fees and execution costs combined. Other funds have these as low as 0.04%. So, ZDV isn’t best in class on cost, but it has enough things going for it that I would be comfortable having my entire TFSA invested in it if I had to.

Fool contributor Andrew Button has no positions in the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has positions in and recommends Shopify. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.

More on Dividend Stocks

House models and one with REIT real estate investment trust.
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks That Turn Any Investment Into a Passive Income Payday

Two TSX REITs are delivering steady 4%+ yields by collecting rent from apartments and grocery-anchored shopping centres.

Read more »

Warning sign with the text "Trade war" in front of container ship
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Stocks Worth Owning When a Trade War Hits

These TSX grocery stocks have a lower beta and could be more insulated from tariff volatility.

Read more »

Piggy bank with word TFSA for tax-free savings accounts.
Dividend Stocks

This Is the Average TFSA Balance for Canadians at Age 60

The average TFSA balance for Canadians at 60 is under $45,000. Here's why that may not be enough – and…

Read more »

Fed Chairman Jerome Powell speaks with U.S. president Donald Trump
Dividend Stocks

The U.S. Economy Is Slowing Down — These 3 Canadian Stocks Look Built to Keep Delivering

Fortis (TSX:FTS) can keep on paying dividends even with the economy slowing down.

Read more »

money goes up and down in balance
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks That Look Like Obvious Buys Right Now

These dividend stocks have solid fundamentals, a strong history of dividend growth, and the financial strength to grow their payouts.

Read more »

Real estate investment concept with person pointing on growth graph and coin stacking to get profit from property
Dividend Stocks

A Practical Way to Use Your TFSA to Generate $300 a Month – Tax-Free

Generate $300 a month in tax‑free TFSA income using a balanced mix of stocks such as this high-yielding trio.

Read more »

pumpjack on prairie in alberta canada
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Oil Stocks Built for Volatile Crude Prices

How to invest in oil stocks when crude prices swing $20 in just two days.

Read more »

holding coins in hand for the future
Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Stocks Built for Investors Who Want to Be Paid First

These three Canadian dividend stocks are some of the best and most reliable businesses to buy and hold for consistent…

Read more »