Here’s Why I Can’t Bring Myself to Touch XIU With a 10‑Foot Pole
Alex Smith
1 week ago
This will probably annoy a few people in the Canadian exchange-traded fund (ETF) industry, but I really donât care for the iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index ETF (TSX:XIU).
Yes, it has history. It was the first ETF ever to trade, debuting in 1990. Itâs also massive, with nearly $22 billion in assets. None of that changes the core issue: In 2026, XIU is simply too expensive for what it does.
All it offers is passive exposure to the S&P/TSX 60. Thatâs fine, but you can now get that same exposure in cheaper or more tax-efficient ways. Loyalty to a brand name is costing investors real money here.
If you want TSX 60 exposure, here are two better options from BMO Global Asset Management and Global X Canada.
The cheaper, no-nonsense option: BMO
The first alternative is the BMO S&P/TSX 60 Index ETF (TSX:ZIU).
ZIU does exactly what XIU does. It buys all 60 stocks in the S&P/TSX 60 in the same weights and tracks the index minus fees. Thereâs no strategy twist, no derivatives, no leverage.
The difference is cost. ZIU charges a 0.15% management expense ratio, undercutting XIU for identical exposure. You currently receive an annualized distribution yield of about 2.3%, paid quarterly.
Despite being much smaller at roughly $120 million in assets, liquidity is fine for long-term investors. ZIU isnât going anywhere. The only real reason XIU still dominates is brand inertia.
The tax-efficient option: Global X Canada
The second alternative is the Global X S&P/TSX 60 Index Corporate Class ETF (TSX:HXT).
HXT looks cheaper at first glance with a 0.08% management fee, but thatâs not the full picture. You also need to factor in a 0.16% trading expense ratio and an up to 0.20% swap fee. All in, itâs not meaningfully cheaper than XIU on a headline fee basis.
Where HXT wins is tax efficiency. XIU pays dividends. The current 12-month trailing yield is about 2.3%. Most of that is eligible Canadian dividends, which are tax-efficient, but theyâre still taxable in non-registered accounts.
HXT pays no distributions at all. Instead of holding the stocks directly, HXT uses a total return swap to synthetically replicate the TSX 60. Practically, this means no quarterly taxable income. Your return shows up entirely as share price appreciation.
In a taxable account, thatâs a huge advantage if you plan to hold long term and donât need to realize any capital gains soon.
The post Hereâs Why I Canât Bring Myself to Touch XIU With a 10âFoot Pole appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- Here Are My 2 Favourite ETFs for 2026
- Passive Income: How Much Do You Need to Invest to Make $500 Per Month?
- Why Iâm Never Selling This ETF in My Retirement Account
- 3 Top Canadian ETFs to Buy for Instant Diversification
- Here’s How Much a 40-Year-Old Canadian Needs Now to Retire at 65
Fool contributor Tony Dong has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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