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Investment Q&A

Not investment advice or solicitation to buy/sell securities. Do your own due diligence and/or consult an advisor.

Q: Good afternoon,

I'm planning to sell BNS for tax loss selling and will buy BAM.A with the funds. I'm also planning to sell a put (about 3-6 months out) on BNS for the purpose of collecting the premium. From what I can tell, this would not be an issue on the tax loss side given that I don't necessarily get to buy the shares, correct? I'd also be ok with having to rebuy if called.

Please let me know if there's anything else I should consider wrt this idea.

Thank you for this service, as usual,
Lisa
Read Answer Asked by Lisa on October 11, 2022
Q: Hi 5i:

I am concerned about the proposed taxation changes for REITs that are tabled in the government (Canadian). How do you think these changes will affect investment in the REITs and their equities?
Read Answer Asked by Jim on October 07, 2022
Q: Hi, if I were to move shares, which have incurred a capital loss at the time of the move, from my cash account to my rrsp, would I be able to claim that capital loss? Thanks.
Read Answer Asked by Keith on October 06, 2022
Q: hi,
do you know if there is a limit on the number of times one can sell a given equity for a tax loss in a given year, and get the tax advantage?
cheers, chris
Read Answer Asked by chris on October 06, 2022
Q: Hi...further to my recent questions regarding Eric's NRGI ETF, I just want to make sure I understand the tax treatment of this ETF before I purchase it.

According to his website, NRGI is 82% USA and 18% Cdn as of Aug 31/22.

Please correct me if I am wrong:
1. Any share price appreciation will obviously be taxed as Canadian capital gains.
2. Any dividends from a Canadian company will be taxed as Canadian dividends and received the dividend tax credit.
3. Any dividends from a USA company will be taxed as interest income.
4. Any "covered call" dividends from either a USA or Canadian company will be treated as Canadian capital gains (not 100% sure on this one).

So, ignore the share price appreciation aspect for now. Eric has stated the target distribution is 7%.

My conclusion is that the distribution could then be split into roughly 5% dividend (82% of which would be taxed as interest income) and 2% covered call (taxed as capital gain).

Q#1 = So, is it safe to say that the ETF would be taxed with roughly 4% being interest income tax, a negligible amount of Canadian dividends, and the vast majority being taxed as capital gains (share price change plus CC-dividend impact)?

Q#2 = So, I believe it still makes sense to buy this in a Cash Account...do you agree?

Thanks for helping me understand this one....Steve
Read Answer Asked by Stephen on October 03, 2022
Q: I see a lot of questions about tax loss selling with the intent to re-buy after 30 days, and I've never utilized this before. I have approx 250k in an unregistered account across 15 companies, and I'm obviously down on many of them (a lot of tech). Is it okay to not try and take advantage of tax loss selling in this way, given that I'm planning to hold many of these name for at least the next 3+ yrs, and potentially much longer (like 5-10+)? I will be continuing to add to my unregistered account (since I've maxed rrsp and tfsa), and hope to become an increasingly savvy investor, but I'm a bit scared of screwing up tax loss selling to this end, especially at this time with the current volatility. So, would you recommend that this is something I must add to my "arsenal", or just ignore it for now? Are there many successful investors that stay away from the sell then re-buy in 30 days approach all together? Thanks!
Read Answer Asked by Andrew on October 03, 2022
Q: Hello, thinking of selling these stocks for tax loss reasons (10-15%). Although one would think a very possible recession with the related decrease in earnings is already baked in share prices, I am afraid it is not entirely so. I intent to buy these stocks back in a month, hopefully with a lower SP. Is the tradeoff between tax loss and the risk of share prices jumping much higher worth it? Thanks
Read Answer Asked by Martin on September 29, 2022
Q: I want to crystalize tax losses in my non-reg account. Can you please suggest good proxies for IYT, VTV, VEA, and IWO? Thanks.
Read Answer Asked by Michael on September 28, 2022
Q: Hi

Is my thinking correct?

Based on the above, next year the Government will be being paying more in OAS and in some cases GIS (the Old Age Pension supplement for low income seniors).

In fact some people who are having their OAS clawed back as of July 2022 based on their 2021 income, can apply to have there OAS recalculated for the period July 2022 to June 2023 should they expect lower income in 2022.

Thank you for your time

Thank you

Mike
Read Answer Asked by Mike on September 28, 2022
Q: Retirement and tax planning to maximize net dollars during retirement are of interest to me. Can you suggest a few resources that do a nice job with strategies on these subjects. Thank you
Read Answer Asked by Chris on September 22, 2022
Q: In Canada, on death of an individual, are all registered plans (LIF, RRIF) of that person considered sold and added to their estate for tax purposes. What about RESP and TFSA plans? thanks
Read Answer Asked by george on September 21, 2022
Q: Can you advise me on how CRA determines how much should be removed from a RIF on an annual basis?
Read Answer Asked by Margot on September 20, 2022