• Canadian banks

    From Alan Bowler@21:1/5 to All on Tue Nov 9 21:04:27 2021
    A while ago I wrote that the big Canadian banks have
    a long track record of being good investments, but
    the financial regulator had blocked their usual dividend
    hikes during Covid. The restriction was lifted this
    week and immediately the two big insurance companies
    bumped their dividends Manulife (18%) and Sun Life (20%).

    The banks are expected to follow suit this month when they
    announce their 4th quarter results.

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  • From uncle_vito@21:1/5 to Alan Bowler on Wed Nov 10 19:12:01 2021
    On Tuesday, November 9, 2021 at 6:04:32 PM UTC-8, Alan Bowler wrote:
    A while ago I wrote that the big Canadian banks have
    a long track record of being good investments, but
    the financial regulator had blocked their usual dividend
    hikes during Covid. The restriction was lifted this
    week and immediately the two big insurance companies
    bumped their dividends Manulife (18%) and Sun Life (20%).

    The banks are expected to follow suit this month when they
    announce their 4th quarter results.

    Thanks for the info. I get ticked that canuck companies with hold taxes for US investors.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From Alan Bowler@21:1/5 to All on Thu Nov 11 20:51:54 2021
    On 2021-11-10 10:12 p.m., uncle_vito wrote:

    Thanks for the info.
    I get ticked that canuck companies with hold taxes for US investors.

    As I have pointed out before, it makes no difference in your
    total tax bill. It is just the two countries doing about
    a 50/50 split on the taxes you pay. The same thing happens
    to me on dividends I get from Proctor & Gamble and other
    US companies I own.

    Almost every country in the world will withhold some
    amount of taxes on dividends paid to non-residents.
    If there is a tax treaty like Canada and the US have
    usually the two countries about split the tax take.
    If there is no treaty you may end up paying double
    taxation on a portion. E.g. there is no treaty between
    Canada and Brazil so if I owned shares in Vale, Brazil
    would withhold about 30% of any dividends but I could
    only claim about 15% as already paid foreign tax, and would
    be double taxed on the other 15%.

    Currently the UK seems to be an exception and doesn't
    withhold taxes on dividends (at least for Canadians)
    so for Barclays Bank and BT Group (British telecom),
    the Canadian governments get all the tax from me.
    This may not last, between Brexit and incompetent
    handling of COVID-19 the UK will be getting desperate
    for tax revenue and sticking to foreigners is easy
    politics.

    Note. If you hold a Canadian stock in a retirement account
    like an IRA the is no Canadian withholding tax, and eventually the
    US will collect all the taxes as you draw down the account.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)
  • From uncle_vito@21:1/5 to Alan Bowler on Thu Nov 11 23:08:02 2021
    On Thursday, November 11, 2021 at 5:52:00 PM UTC-8, Alan Bowler wrote:
    On 2021-11-10 10:12 p.m., uncle_vito wrote:

    Thanks for the info.
    I get ticked that canuck companies with hold taxes for US investors.
    As I have pointed out before, it makes no difference in your
    total tax bill. It is just the two countries doing about
    a 50/50 split on the taxes you pay. The same thing happens
    to me on dividends I get from Proctor & Gamble and other
    US companies I own.

    Almost every country in the world will withhold some
    amount of taxes on dividends paid to non-residents.
    If there is a tax treaty like Canada and the US have
    usually the two countries about split the tax take.
    If there is no treaty you may end up paying double
    taxation on a portion. E.g. there is no treaty between
    Canada and Brazil so if I owned shares in Vale, Brazil
    would withhold about 30% of any dividends but I could
    only claim about 15% as already paid foreign tax, and would
    be double taxed on the other 15%.

    Currently the UK seems to be an exception and doesn't
    withhold taxes on dividends (at least for Canadians)
    so for Barclays Bank and BT Group (British telecom),
    the Canadian governments get all the tax from me.
    This may not last, between Brexit and incompetent
    handling of COVID-19 the UK will be getting desperate
    for tax revenue and sticking to foreigners is easy
    politics.

    Note. If you hold a Canadian stock in a retirement account
    like an IRA the is no Canadian withholding tax, and eventually the
    US will collect all the taxes as you draw down the account.

    Thanks for the explanation. I had heard it before but was not convinced. I am sure to tell my tax prep person of the dividends withheld so I am taxxed properly. This is for my EMERA shares.

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  • From Alan Bowler@21:1/5 to Alan Bowler on Tue Nov 30 20:06:49 2021
    On 2021-11-09 9:04 p.m., Alan Bowler wrote:
    A while ago I wrote that the big Canadian banks have
    a long track record of being good investments, but
    the financial regulator had blocked their usual dividend
    hikes during Covid.  The restriction was lifted this
    week and immediately the two big insurance companies
    bumped their dividends Manulife (18%) and Sun Life (20%).

    The banks are expected to follow suit this month when they
    announce their 4th quarter results.

    Bank of Nova Scotia bumped its dividend by 11% today.

    --- SoupGate-Win32 v1.05
    * Origin: fsxNet Usenet Gateway (21:1/5)