Topic: How To Invest

Q: Pat: A substantial part of my portfolio is in U.S. equities. The U.S. withholding tax on the dividends results in considerable leakage of my returns. My question is, are there any ETFs that shadow, say, the S&P 500 and reinvest dividends internally and therefore bypass the dividend tax on my account? That would leave me with only the capital gains (or losses) to pay. By the way, the advice I get from the Wall Street Stock Forecaster has put me in a very good position over the years. Thank you.

Article Excerpt

A: We’ve long advised holding 20% or more of your portfolio in U.S. stocks. We see exposure to U.S. stocks, and the U.S. dollar, as a valuable form of diversification. It also gives you a hedge against a drop in the Canadian dollar, especially if you hold your stocks in a U.S.-dollar brokerage account. Canadian shareholders pay a 15% withholding tax on dividends from U.S. stocks. In most cases, however, if you hold the stocks outside your RRSP, you can get a Canadian income-tax credit to offset that tax. If you hold the stocks in an RRSP, the withholding tax is not withheld, period. In contrast, if you hold those U.S. stocks in a TFSA, the tax is withheld and cannot be recouped. In general, investors looking to hang onto high-yielding U.S. stocks should consider holding them in an RRSP account or a cash account instead of a TFSA. In contrast, U.S. stocks that pay very low dividends or no dividends at all…