Topic: How To Invest

Q: Hi, I want to hold a S&P 500 exchange traded fund in my TFSA, but I understand in holding it in that account, I won’t be able to recoup the withholding taxes I pay to the U.S. government. I’m thinking of purchasing Horizons HXS ETF as there are no dividends, only capital gains; I understand it uses return swaps to accomplish its goal. What are the disadvantages and advantages of using this type of ETF as opposed to the more-standard SPDR S&P 500 ETF? Thanks.

Article Excerpt

A: Canadian shareholders pay a 15% withholding tax on dividends from U.S. stocks. If you hold the stocks in non-registered cash accounts, you can then get a Canadian tax credit to offset all or part of the tax you paid to the U.S. Better still, thanks to rules in the U.S./Canada tax treaty, the U.S. does not withhold the 15% from U.S. dividend income that comes to you from U.S. stocks you hold in an RRSP. If you hold those dividend-paying U.S. stocks in a TFSA, on the other hand, the 15% tax is withheld. The U.S. wants its tax, and the latest U.S./Canada treaty doesn’t mention TSFAs, since they had not yet been created when the treaty was last updated. As a result, you lose the 15% withholding tax, but you don’t get an offsetting Canadian tax credit since Canada doesn’t tax earnings from TSFAs. That means you will not want to hold high-yielding U.S. stocks, or the ETFs that hold…