IMAX: A World of Opportunity for International Equity ETFs

Image source: Hamilton ETFs

By Hamilton ETFs

(Sponsor Blog)

International equities continue to be in focus. As global market leadership broadens, Canadian investors are paying closer attention to geographic diversification and opportunities beyond North America. International stocks, which outperformed the U.S. stock market in 2025, have continued to attract attention as the geopolitical landscape evolves.

So far this year, Canadians have poured $22.8 billion into international equity ETFs, according to National Bank of Canada Capital Markets[1]. In contrast, they directed just $13.4 billion to Canadian equity funds and $11.3 billion to U.S. equity funds, over the same period.

Recent market performance has helped reinforce this trend. Since December 31, 2024, the MSCI EAFE Index rallied 40.5% compared to 24.6% for the S&P 500[2].

This combination of improved relative performance and more attractive valuations has helped bring international equities back into focus for investors looking to broaden exposure beyond North America. This shift has also been reflected in market commentary. Yardeni Research began recommending a “Go Global” approach in December 2025, after more than a decade of favouring a “Stay Home” allocation. “So far this year, the U.S. has been among the laggards in the global performance derby,” he wrote in a research note published April 27, 2026.

Canadian investors have plenty of options for accessing international equity exposure. Yet for those seeking attractive, tax-efficient monthly income from developed markets outside North America, the available solutions have been far more limited. That’s why we’re closing that gap with the Hamilton International Equity YIELD MAXIMIZER™ ETF (IMAX).

Introducing IMAX

IMAX is designed for investors seeking diversified international equity exposure paired with attractive, tax-efficient monthly income. To achieve this, IMAX holds ETFs that provide exposure to both the MSCI EAFE Index and MSCI EAFE IMI Index and overlays a covered call strategy on a portion of the portfolio. The MSCI EAFE Index captures developed markets outside the U.S. and Canada.

International and global covered call ETFs remain relatively limited in Canada. The few available strategies often have significant geographic concentrations, such as Europe or the U.S., or provide exposure to a narrower group of companies through concentrated portfolios. By contrast, IMAX offers broad developed market exposure specifically outside North America. Through this approach, investors gain exposure to more than 2,500 large-, mid- and small-cap equities across markets including Japan, Britain, Switzerland, France, Germany and Australia.

To help generate monthly income, IMAX employs an actively managed covered call strategy overseen by our experienced options team. Like the other ETFs in our YIELD MAXIMIZER™ suite, IMAX utilizes an income first approach that primarily writes at-the-money call options in an effort to generate higher option premiums to provide enhanced cash flow potential. The strategy also maintains a flexible coverage ratio, allowing the portfolio management team to balance monthly income generation with long-term capital appreciation potential.

Importantly, IMAX helps provide tax efficient income, as options premiums are generally taxed as capital gains and/or return of capital.

Going Global with IMAX

Diversification is one of the most important principles of portfolio construction, and it applies not only across asset classes (stocks, bonds, commodities etc.), sectors and market capitalizations, but also regions. Continue Reading…

Vanguard Canada launches two new Dividend ETFs

 

ETF TSX Symbol Management Fee1
Vanguard Developed ex-North America Dividend Appreciation ETF VIGG 0.28%
Vanguard U.S. High Dividend Yield Index ETF (CAD-Hedged) VUDH 0.28%

On Monday (June 1),  Vanguard Investments Canada Inc. announced two new income-focused Dividend ETFs. The same day, they started trading on the Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX):  Vanguard Developed ex-North America Dividend Appreciation Index ETF (TSX: VIGG) and Vanguard U.S. High Dividend Yield Index ETF (CAD-Hedged) (TSX: VUDH).

The two new funds are focused on high-dividend yield and dividend growth respectively, said Sal D’Angelo, Head of Product and Marketing, Vanguard Canada, in a press release.   VIGG tracks  a market cap-weighted index focused on companies located in developed markets excluding Canada and the U.S., with a history of increasing dividends over time.  Management fee is 0.28%. The Vanguard fact sheet describes VIGG as being medium risk.

VUDH tracks a market cap-weighted index focused on common stocks of U.S. companies with higher-than-average dividend yields, hedged to Canadian dollars; management fee is 0.28%. It is also rated medium risk.

In March, Vanguard also launched the Vanguard U.S. High Dividend Yield Index ETF  (VUDV, TSX).

In a backgrounder released with the ETFs, Vanguard said Dividend Income ETFs account for $42 billion or 5.4% of total ETF assets in the Canadian market. They include passive funds, fully active mandates and covered call options.

Dividend-focused ETFs have historically shown resilience across many market environments, the document says: “They can also provide stability in uncertain and inflationary environments through reliable cash flows which can partially offset inflation. The companies included in these portfolios tend to be more defensive during periods of market volatility, supported by steady earnings and stronger balance sheets.”

The backgrounder focuses on two main types of Dividend ETFs: those that generate high Dividend Yield, and those that grow their Dividends over time.

High-Dividend Yield ETFs

Vanguard says High-Dividend Yield ETFs are best suited for “investors looking for more immediate income including retirees drawing from their portfolios or those supplementing current cash flow.”  Higher starting yields provide more immediate income as the portfolio invests in mature, stable and value-oriented companies, with a higher allocation to sectors like energy, utilities and financials. Continue Reading…

Small ETF Fees matter more Near Findependence

By Callum Melville, WealthRadiant.com

Special to Financial Independence Hub

Most Canadian ETF investors already know that fees matter. The harder question is how much attention they deserve.

Early in the Accumulation years, the honest answer is often less than people think. If someone has a $15,000 portfolio and is still building the habit of investing every month, the difference between a 0.06% ETF and a 0.20% ETF is not the main thing deciding their future. Saving rate, asset allocation, behaviour, and simply staying invested usually matter more.

But the math starts to feel different as a portfolio approaches retirement size.

A 0.14 percentage point fee gap sounds tiny. On $25,000, it is about $35 per year before compounding. On $1,000,000, it is about $1,400 per year before compounding. Over a long retirement or semi-retirement period, that difference can become large enough to be worth a second look.

That does not mean every investor should chase the lowest possible MER. It does mean investors near Financial Independence (Findependence) should translate fee percentages into dollars before deciding that a small-looking fee difference is irrelevant.

Why MERs are easy to ignore early on

Management Expense Ratios are strange because investors rarely pay them as a separate bill. The fee is embedded in the fund’s return. You do not log in and see a line item saying, “ETF fee paid today.”

That makes MERs easy to underweight. A 0.20% fee looks almost invisible beside the normal movement of the market. One ordinary trading day can move an equity ETF by more than the annual MER.

For newer investors, this is not always a bad thing. The biggest investing mistakes at the beginning are often behavioural: waiting too long to start, holding too much cash for no clear reason, changing strategy every few months, or building a portfolio that is too complicated to maintain.

If an All-in-One ETF helps someone invest consistently, rebalance automatically, and avoid tinkering, the slightly higher MER can be a reasonable price for simplicity. A cheap portfolio that someone cannot stick with is not really cheap.

Why fees feel different near retirement

Near Findependence, the same fee percentage applies to a much larger base.

Consider a simple example. A 0.20% MER on a $1,000,000 portfolio is roughly $2,000 per year before compounding. A 0.06% MER on the same portfolio is roughly $600 per year. The gap is about $1,400 in the first year.

That is not life-changing by itself, but it is no longer abstract. It might be a month of groceries, a short trip, part of a property tax bill, or simply money that could stay invested.

The compounding effect is what makes the check worth doing. Using a simplified 25-year projection with a 6% gross annual return, a $1,000,000 portfolio at a 0.06% MER grows to about $4.23 million. The same portfolio at a 0.20% MER grows to about $4.09 million. The difference is roughly $138,000 over 25 years.

That example is deliberately simplified. It ignores taxes, trading costs, changing returns, withdrawals, and Asset Allocation differences. Real life will not move in a smooth 6% line. But it shows why a basis-point difference that looked harmless early on can deserve attention once the portfolio is large.

What a recent Canadian ETF fee snapshot showed

I recently reviewed MERs and historical fee anchors for 30 popular Canadian-listed ETFs across Vanguard, iShares, BMO, and Global X. The goal was not to find the “best” ETF. It was to see where fees have compressed, where they remain higher, and where investors may be paying for convenience or product structure.

The broad pattern was clear:

  • Canadian total-market ETFs in the sample were extremely cheap, with VCN, XIC, and ZCN all at 0.06%.
  • S&P 500 index ETFs were also tightly clustered, with VFV, VSP, XSP, and ZSP all around 0.09%.
  • The all-in-one ETF category was more expensive, with the funds in the sample sitting roughly between 0.17% and 0.24%.
  • More specialized products, such as covered-call or sector ETFs, could be meaningfully more expensive.
  • Fee compression has not been even. Some plain index categories already look highly competitive, while other product types still carry a visible cost.

The average MER across the 30 ETFs was 0.178%, with a median of 0.140%. That is already low compared with many traditional retail mutual fund fee levels, but the spread still matters when applied to large portfolios.

For example, an all-in-one ETF charging around 0.20% may be perfectly reasonable for an investor who values simplicity. But compared with a plain Canadian equity ETF at 0.06% or an S&P 500 ETF at 0.09%, the dollar cost of convenience becomes visible as portfolio size grows.

The All-in-One ETF tradeoff

All-in-one ETFs are a good example because the fee conversation can easily become too rigid.

An investor can often build a lower-MER portfolio by holding separate Canadian, U.S., international, and bond ETFs. But the all-in-one fund handles asset allocation, rebalancing, and ongoing maintenance in one product.

That can be valuable. Retirees and near-retirees may not want more moving parts. Some investors do not want to rebalance manually. Others know that if the portfolio becomes too fiddly, they are more likely to second-guess it.

So the right question is not, “Is this ETF the cheapest?” Continue Reading…

Why Secular Trends beat Market Indicators

Forget about market indicators–picking up on secular trends is a much better way to spot top stocks

TSInetwork.ca

Investors sometimes ask how I learned about investing and the stock market. The answer is that I started early, read a lot, and learned how to write so that readers understand what I’m saying.

I got started as a teenager, with a part-time job for an investment writer. My job was to gather and organize information on public companies and the economy. This called for a lot of reading, but I was always an avid reader.

Learning how to write easy-to-read material is also a plus. After all, you have to understand information to be able to explain it to others.

During my first full-time decade in the investing business, I learned that many factors influence market trends. Naturally, I tried to learn about or create market indicators that could tell me how these factors could help my investing. Gradually it dawned on me that most market indicators turn out to reflect the fact that random events tend to occur in bunches.

Some of these bunches are big enough and last long enough that you can mistake them for sure signs that the market is headed in a particular direction.

The four-year U.S. Presidential Election indicator is different. It’s the most valuable market indicator I know of because it takes advantage of recurring cycles in the U.S. Presidential Election cycle. It’s still far from perfect. However, you might say that every few years, it gives investors a helpful nudge in the right direction.

The four-year rule is of little interest to many investors, particularly those who are new to the game. They lack the patience for it. Over the years, I’ve talked to many young investors who seem more interested in short-term trading than in our long-term Successful Investor approach.

From their point of view, they don’t need to obsess about risk because they don’t have enough investment capital to worry about losses. They say they’ll switch to our approach when they’ve made a windfall in something that works out as they hoped. When they have more money to risk, they’ll be more careful with it.

The trouble is that since they disregard risk, they may never acquire the gains they hope for. All too often, they get sucked into one bad investment after another. These include short-term trading (particularly in so-called meme stocks), dabbling in stock options or IPOs or SPACs or cryptocurrencies or NFTs. Dabblers fail to see that the big gains in these opportunities go to those who sell them to the investing public.

Secular trends beat market indicators

In the 1980s, I lost interest in market indicators and began to focus on secular trends. These are economic trends that last longer (sometimes much longer) than the typical prosperity/recession cycle.

Back then, for instance, goldbugs were sure that federal deficit spending was responsible for the high inflation of the period. It seemed to me that they were paying too little attention to the economic changes going on, particularly the impact of the baby boomers’ entry into the workforce. When employers hired boomers, it raised costs, since these newcomers needed training (particularly women who were going to work in higher numbers than previously). Continue Reading…

Can Millennials become Financially Independent?

Image Pixabay/iStock

By Billy and Akaisha Kaderli

Special to Financial Independence Hub

Millennials, those born roughly between 1980 and the year 2000, face a different future than Baby Boomers did at their same age. In terms of Wealth Building and saving for Retirement their challenges are wage stagnation, unemployment, underemployment and a seeming sense of entitlement. Because they came of age during the Great Recession, their faith in brokerage firms, Wall Street and global banks has been bruised.

Being optimists, we believe the financial future of this generation can still be bright, but with loads of student debt and lack of investment understanding they need to get started learning about finances and money management now.

Time is on your side and is your greatest asset

One thing Millennials have today that Boomers don’t is great stretches of time before Retirement. It is their greatest resource and this fact needs to be made clear to them. Time cannot be replaced, and if you are a Millennial, then knowing about the power of compounding will change your financial life. $10,000 – the cost of a used car – invested today in the S&P 500 Index and based on market historical returns from 1950 to March 2023 could grow to US$1,000,000 or more throughout your career, thereby building a solid foundation for your retirement needs. This return is without adding another dollar to your investment.

S&P Market Return Chart

If you do nothing else for your retirement, scrape and scrap to make this investment into SPY (S&P 500 Index ETF) or VTI (Vanguard Total Stock Market ETF) and you will be handsomely rewarded, since you have this time on your side.

Just get Started

A new investor with limited funds can utilize an online, no-frills brokerage account and — depending on which brokerage you pick —  you can open an account with less than $1,000. Not every house requires initial investments of more than $2,500, and as of this writing, Fidelity is offering a no minimum for opening an account. Continue Reading…