Toronto-Dominion Bank

ISHARES S&P/TSX 60 INDEX FUND $16.56 (Toronto symbol XIU; buy or sell through a broker; ca.ishares.com) is a good, low-fee way to buy the top stocks on the TSX. The units are made up of stocks that represent the S&P/TSX 60 Index, which consists of the 60 largest, most heavily traded stocks on the exchange. Expenses are just 0.17% of assets. Most of the stocks in the index are high-quality companies. However, as it must ensure that all sectors are represented, it holds a few we wouldn’t include. The index’s top holdings are Royal Bank, 6.7%; TD Bank, 6.4%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 5.5%; Barrick Gold, 4.8%; Suncor Energy, 4.1%; Potash Corp., 3.9%; Goldcorp, 3.8%; Bank of Montreal, 3.7%; Canadian Natural Resources, 3.2%; CN Railway, 3.2%; BCE Inc., 3.0%, TransCanada Corp., 2.9%, CIBC, 2.9%; Enbridge, 2.6%; Cenovus Energy, 2.3% and Manulife Financial, 2.1%....
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) may have a place in your portfolio. That’s because, unlike many other financial innovations, they don’t load you up with heavy management fees, or tie you down with high redemption charges if you decide to get out of them. Instead, they give you a low-cost, flexible, convenient alternative to mutual funds. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Prices are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You’ll have to pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell ETFs. However, ETFs’ low management fees still give them a cost advantage over most conventional mutual funds. As well, shares are only added or removed when the underlying index changes. As a result of this low turnover, you won’t incur the regular capital-gains bills generated by the yearly distributions most conventional mutual funds pay out to unitholders. Below, we update our advice on six ETFs — five buys and one we don’t recommend....
iShares S&P/TSX Capped Financials Index Fund, $20.99, symbol XFN on Toronto (Shares outstanding: 38.9 million; Market cap: $816.5 million; ca.ishares.com), aims to mirror the performance of the S&P/TSX Capped Financials Index, which is made up of the largest-capitalization financial-sector stocks on the Toronto exchange. The fund currently holds 26 stocks. The weight of any one company is capped at 25% of the index’s market capitalization, regardless of how big the stock is in relation to the index. The fund’s MER is 0.55%. It yields 3.2%. The fund’s top holdings are Royal Bank of Canada at 18.6%; TD Bank, 18.4%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 15.5%; Bank of Montreal, 10.2%; CIBC, 8.0%; Manulife Financial, 6.2%; Sun Life Financial, 4.0%; National Bank, 3.1%; Power Corporation, 2.1%; and Fairfax Financial Holdings, 2.1%....
BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA, $53.11, Toronto symbol BNS, continues to benefit from its growing banking operations in the Caribbean, Latin America, South America and Asia. In the three months ended July 31, 2011, the bank’s earnings rose 19.1%, to $1.2 billion from $1.0 billion a year earlier. Earnings per share rose 13.3%, to $1.11 from $0.98, on more shares outstanding. If you exclude certain one-time items, the bank would have earned $1.14 a share in the latest quarter. That beat the consensus estimate of $1.12 a share. Revenue rose 13.6%, to $4.3 billion from $3.8 billion. Bank of Nova Scotia continues to set aside less money to cover bad loans: loan-loss provisions fell 12.0%, to $243 million from $276 million a year earlier....
PowerShares Canadian Dividend Index ETF, $18.44, symbol PDC on Toronto (Shares outstanding: 250,000; Market cap: $4.6 million; www.investco.ca), aims to replicate the performance of the Indxis Select Canadian Dividend Index. PowerShares Canadian Dividend Index ETF was launched on June 16, 2011. The units began trading at $20. However, the fund duplicates the PowerShares Canadian Dividend Index mutual fund, which started up in November 2009. The fund holds 35 stocks, eight real estate investment trusts (REITs) and two income trusts. It has an expense ratio of 0.50%, and yields 3.6%. Its top 10 holdings are Royal Bank, 10.0%; TD Bank, 10.0%, Bank of Nova Scotia, 9.7%; Bank of Montreal, 7.4%; CIBC, 5.6%; TransCanada Corp., 5.4%; Thomson Reuters, 5.2%; Enbridge, 4.6%; Great-West Lifeco, 4.4%; and Power Financial, 3.9%....
TORONTO-DOMINION BANK, $71.10, Toronto symbol TD, has agreed to buy MBNA’s Canadian credit card operations from Bank of America (New York symbol BAC). This purchase will add 1.8 million customers to TD’s roughly 4.0 million credit-card accounts. MBNA is also the largest issuer of MasterCard cards in Canada, which will diversify TD’s Visa cards. TD will pay $8.5 billion for MBNA’s Canadian credit-card operations when the deal closes, probably early next year. To put that in context, TD earned $5.2 billion, or $5.77 a share, in its 2010 fiscal year, which ended October 31, 2010....
ISHARES S&P/TSX 60 INDEX FUND $19.21 (Toronto symbol XIU; buy or sell through a broker; ca.ishares.com) is a good, low-fee way to buy the top stocks on the TSX. The units are made up of stocks that represent the S&P/TSX 60 Index, which consists of the 60 largest, most heavily traded stocks on the exchange. Expenses are just 0.17% of assets. Most of the stocks in the index are high-quality companies. However, as it must ensure that all sectors are represented, it holds a few we wouldn’t include, such as Yellow Media Inc. The index’s top holdings are: Royal Bank, 6.9%; TD Bank, 6.3%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 5.4%; Suncor Energy, 5.2%; Potash Corp., 4.1%; Canadian Natural Resources, 3.9%; Barrick Gold, 3.9%; Goldcorp, 3.2%; CN Railway, 3.1%; Bank of Montreal, 3.1%; Manulife Financial, 2.6%; CIBC, 2.6%; BCE, 2.5%; TransCanada Corp., 2.5%; Cenovus Energy, 2.3%; and Teck Resources, 2.2%....
ISHARES DOW JONES CANADA SELECT DIVIDEND INDEX FUND $21.64 (Toronto symbol XDV; buy or sell through a broker; ca.ishares.com) holds 30 of the highest-yielding Canadian stocks. Its selections are based on dividend growth, yield and payout ratio. The weight of any one stock is limited to 10% of assets. The fund’s MER is 0.50%. It yields 2.7%. The fund’s top holdings are CIBC, 6.4%; Bonterra Energy Corp., 6.0%; National Bank, 5.2%; Bank of Montreal, 5.2%; TD Bank, 5.1%; Telus, 4.6%; IGM Financial, 4.5%; AG Growth International, 4.2%; Royal Bank, 3.9%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 3.8%; BCE, 3.7%; and TMX Group, 3.6%. The fund holds 51.8% of its assets in financial stocks. Utilities are next, at 24.0%. The top Canadian finance stocks have sound prospects. However, if you invest in this ETF, be sure to adjust the rest of your portfolio so it won’t be overly concentrated in the financial sector....
ISHARES MSCI CANADA INDEX FUND $31.84 (New York symbol EWC; buy or sell through brokers; ca.ishares.com) is like a market-cap-based index fund, but its managers try to improve performance by tinkering with the index-fund formula. They do this through their Morgan Stanley Capital International Canada Index. The fund has an MER of 0.50%. The index’s top holdings are Royal Bank, 6.0%; TD Bank, 5.4%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 4.8%; Suncor Energy, 4.7%; Potash Corp., 3.6%; Canadian Natural Resources, 3.4%; Barrick Gold, 3.4%; Goldcorp, 2.9%; Bank of Montreal, 2.6%; CN Railway, 2.6%; CIBC, 2.4%; Manulife Financial, 2.3%; TransCanada Corp., 2.3%; and Teck Resources, 2.2%. If you want to own a Canadian index fund, you should buy the iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index Fund. You’ll pay about a third of the management fees....
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) may have a place in your portfolio. That’s because, unlike many other financial innovations, they don’t load you up with heavy management fees, or tie you down with high redemption charges if you decide to get out of them. Instead, they give you a low-cost, flexible, convenient alternative to mutual funds. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Prices are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You’ll have to pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell ETFs. However, ETFs’ low management fees still give them a cost advantage over most conventional mutual funds. As well, shares are only added or removed when the underlying index changes. As a result of this low turnover, you won’t incur the regular capital-gains bills generated by the yearly distributions most conventional mutual funds pay out to unitholders....