I’ve used SUPR as the working example as it’s one of the safest dividends in the market but no dividend is entirely safe, unless you buy gilts or treasuries and hold to maturity. With the benefit of good ole hindsight, I bought too high but in 2022 high yields were as rare as hens teeth.
After several trades the position was exited, including earned dividends for a small profit of £292.00.
There were £2,861 of dividends in the above figure which have been re-invested back into the SNOWBALL to earn more dividends to buy more shares.
Compounded by the number of years before you start drawdown.
Latest position
There is a general misunderstanding of the term ‘To Top Slice’.
When you top slice the profit is the profit of all the shares in your share holding and you will note although the ‘profit’ taken was £225, great for a holding of one day, until the underlying shares are sold, the actual profit is £6.16.
There are two pots of money in your Snowball, capital where the last profit sits, although the market could take back the profit and some if a Black Swan sails by and earned dividends, which if re-invested elsewhere into you Snowball, SUPR can’t take back your income. Although the more you trade the more chance of buying a clunker.
The closed trades above 1k profit, which will should more than equal any future clunkers in the SNOWBALL.
A new position has been opened in SDIP.
SUPR xd next week for 1.545p = a yield of 7%.
If the SNOWBALL was near to drawdown, even if the price increases and the yield falls it would remain a core holding of the SNOWBALL.
The SNOWBALL is still accumulating, so if the price increases, SUPR would be sold and the cash re-invested in a higher yielder, although the yield you buy at is the yield you should receive for as long as you own the share, hopefully gently increasing.
The best outcome for the SNOWBALL, would be for the price to go sideways or even better fall and then some more shares could be added to the SNOWBALL at a yield higher than 7%.
Now if UK gilts yield 6% the risk reward would mean that holding SUPR at 7% was not worth the risk, although if UK Gilts yield 6%, SUPR’s price could fall and therefore be higher than 7%.
Millions of Brits rely on the State Pension to fund their retirement – but experts say one long-term investing strategy could potentially help retirees generate a second income stream worth as much as their annual pension payments.
The full new State Pension is currently worth £241.30 a week, equivalent to just under £12,550 a year. While the amount received depends on an individual’s National Insurance record, many savers are looking for ways to boost their retirement income beyond the state provision.
One approach gaining attention is building a portfolio of dividend-paying shares capable of generating annual income that matches the State Pension. If successful, this could effectively double a retiree’s yearly income.
The size of the portfolio required depends largely on the dividend yield achieved. Based on the current average FTSE 100 dividend yield of around 3.1%, an investor would need a portfolio worth approximately £405,000 to generate £12,550 a year in dividend income.
However, if a portfolio achieved a 5% yield, the amount required would fall to around £251,000.
While those figures may appear daunting, financial experts stress that retirement planning is typically a long-term process rather than an overnight achievement.
For example, someone investing £1,000 a month into a Stocks and Shares ISA and achieving average annual growth of 5% through compounded returns could potentially build a portfolio large enough to reach the target within around 15 years.
The timeline could be shortened further through a Self-Invested Personal Pension. Thanks to pension tax relief, a monthly contribution of £1,000 is automatically boosted to £1,250 for basic-rate taxpayers, allowing retirement savings to grow more quickly over time.
Experts note that choosing the right investment vehicle is an important first step. While SIPPs offer attractive tax advantages, they also come with restrictions on when money can be accesse
Stocks and Shares ISAs provide greater flexibility, although they do not offer the same upfront tax relief.
Whichever route investors choose, maintaining regular contributions is often seen as the key factor in building long-term wealth. Increasing monthly investments can accelerate progress towards retirement goals, while lower contributions may extend the timeframe required.
Building a diversified portfolio is also considered essential. Rather than relying on a handful of high-yield shares, investors are generally encouraged to spread their money across a range of companies and sectors to reduce risk and create a more sustainable income stream.
Financial analysts caution that dividend income is never guaranteed and investment values can rise and fall. Future returns may differ significantly from historical averages, meaning investors should carefully consider their own circumstances before making decisions.
Nevertheless, for those willing to invest consistently over many years, matching the value of the State Pension through dividend income remains an achievable target that could significantly enhance retirement finances
Discounts have come in for equity trusts, but alternatives are still in the doldrums – we see value in the sector.
Thomas McMahon
Updated 15 Jul 2026
Disclaimer
This is not substantive investment research or a research recommendation, as it does not constitute substantive research or analysis. This material should be considered as general market commentary.
Perceptions take time to change: some of us still need to learn it hasn’t been called Czechoslovakia for 35 years. Similarly, in the investment trust sector, there is still a general perception that discounts are under pressure, but we are no longer sure this is really true – at least in the equity sectors. Equity investment trusts are back within their pre-2022 range on average, albeit at the wider end of it. And the average discount is moving much further back in and then out again on macro newsflow, as we’d expect. Meanwhile, there are a number of equity trusts trading on a premium and issuing new shares, across multiple sectors.
On the other hand, in the alternatives space the picture is different. We have seen some narrowing, with many trusts making big moves back into a narrower trading range, but in aggregate they are still some way short of their pre-2022 normality. The trend is clear though, with corporate activity of all sorts thinning the field and seeing assets come out of the sector, creating a more advantageous environment for the survivors. Here we look at those alternative trusts we think are most likely to see a sustained, significant discount narrowing back to pre-crisis levels.
The backdrop
As analysts, we spend a lot of time discussing NAV returns. It’s the best way to analyse the managers’ performance, and it should also be, subject to caveats, more predictable – at least, the factors that affect the NAV performance of different strategies should be more quantifiable and predictable. But share price returns are what you get, at the end of the day. Indeed, one of the main attractions of our sector is the ability to make exceptional returns by buying something that is out of favour and seeing the discount close when sentiment changes. The challenge is that seeing through poor sentiment, and investing in a contrarian manner, is extremely hard, and involves working against some deep and important human instincts to run with the herd.
Back in late 2023, discounts were exceptionally wide until there was some certainty that the interest rate hiking cycle had peaked. Morningstar’s index of all investment trusts saw an average discount of over 19% that October. This figure had fallen to 10.8% as of 07/07/2026, having hit single figures in a few days before the latest fighting in the Middle East. Excluding the alternative asset sectors, the picture wasn’t quite so bad three years ago, with the average discount peaking at 14%-15%, and these equity and bond trusts have now established a single figure average discount in 2026, which is at 8.6% at the time of writing but has been as narrow as 6.5% when the conflict has been calm.
average discounts
Equity income strategies have seen a particularly strong recovery in demand, with the UK equity income and global equity income sectors currently both trading on a premium on average. The Asia Pacific equity income sector is meanwhile on a discount of just 1.1%. In the AIC North American sector, BlackRock American Income (BRAI) is seeking shareholder permissions to issue even more shares, the board believing the 15% it can issue not likely to be enough this year. BRAI has performed well, but also importantly, in our view, offers something very different: a heavily quant-based and systematic approach to stock selection which has worked well in US vehicles, along with a tilt to value which is quite rare after 10 to 15 years of value strategies departing and leaving the field to growth. It’s worth noting that at c. £166m in market cap it is “too small” in received wisdom, which perhaps should make boards take note that there is still plenty of demand for smaller trusts if they have the right strategy. It’s easy to see why there might be this recovery in demand for equity income. As rates have come down, equity income yields look more appealing, while the dividend growth they offer looks more attractive when bond yields are expected to fall. But we also think it’s the case that concerns about equity markets selling off have moderated, which makes the growth in equities more attractive.
In the growth equity sectors the picture is a bit more mixed, with strong divergence between winners and losers. Many of the ‘losers’ have been or are in the process of winding up or merging themselves away, and as the number of options in a sector falls, the remainder benefit from an improving technical picture. But good performance has also been rewarded, with top-performing trusts and those with a distinctive remit achieving very narrow discounts.
We have seen Scottish Mortgage (SMT) move from a 22% discount to a 7.7% discount over the past three years, and even trade on a premium for some time ahead of the SpaceX IPO. Given the huge size of this trust, at £18bn in total assets, and the huge number of shareholders, this is very meaningful for sector averages as well as investor sentiment. On the other hand, the much smaller Lindsell Train (LTI) has seen its discount move from low single figures to c. 20% over the same period: less significant for sector averages, but indicative that performance is being rewarded in some cases while other trusts are falling meaningfully out of favour. In the Europe sector, we have seen JPMorgan European Growth & Income (JEGI) and Fidelity European (FEV) enjoy meaningful discount narrowing, while the growthier strategies of Baillie Gifford European Growth (BGEU) and BlackRock Greater Europe (BRGE) have seen their discounts widen. In our view, discounts in the equity sectors can be considered back to ‘normal’: risk aversion and macro concerns are seeing them move in and out within single digits, while the success or failure of a strategy explains relative discounts. We would say, though, that the latter effect is still very pronounced compared to pre-2022, i.e. investors are currently very unforgiving about poor performance.
What about alternatives?
If we look at the alternative sectors, at the top level discounts don’t really seem to have moved much yet. The chart below shows the discounts of the renewable, infrastructure and private equity sectors over the past three years. Private equity looks stuck in its post-2023 range, as does renewable energy infrastructure. Only the infrastructure sector seems to be on an inward trend.
sector discounts
Prima facie, the changing rates outlook should have been positive for alternatives too. However, there are a number of factors that explain why discounts might have been slower to come in. One is simply the lead time between investment and maturity for income investors. If investors switched from alts to bonds over 2022 and 2023, they would have enjoyed yields peaking in October 2023, but then seen the opportunities get steadily less and less attractive – that index now yields 7%. On average, high yield bonds have a maturity of around three years, so anything invested at that point will have to be reinvested soon, if it hasn’t already been traded. It is true that sterling high yield is still trading closer to its peak back then, but this is a small market in international terms and dominated by some ‘interesting’ credits like Thames Water. For a diversified investor looking to reinvest, we think the yieldcos in the investment trust sector are only going to look more attractive in the coming months and years. The AIC Debt – Loans & Bonds sector moved decisively onto a premium in mid-2024, with around 8% seemingly being what investors are looking for in a high yield or otherwise riskier bond portfolio. We think as rate cuts make this harder for the conventional bond portfolios to generate, and as other risk factors recede, the high yields on offer in many of the alternatives will come down to this sort of number and lower, and bring in the discounts.
One trust we think looks ripe for a steadily narrowing discount as rates come down is Sequoia Economic Infrastructure Income (SEQI). SEQI makes loans backed by real assets, spread across numerous crucial infrastructure sectors. This yield is generated without the use of structural debt, and it has managed to maintain the same dividend yield since mid-2023, despite the rate cuts seen since then. We think that as yields on cash and government bonds come down, and with spreads in the corporate debt market looking narrow, SEQI’s yield will look ever more attractive to income-seeking investors, particularly considering the defensive characteristics to the infrastructure sector and well diversified portfolio.
Flight to the familiar
Another factor which we think has weighed on SEQI’s discount in recent months is concern about what is happening in the US private debt market. The BDCs that have run into trouble over there could hardly be more different than SEQI. SEQI invests in loans backed by real assets in critical infrastructure sectors and does not gear them up. The US BDCs are typically highly leveraged and lending to asset-light software companies. Private debt is a fairly new concept in the mass market space, so it is natural that investors might be wary, but we think it is now a well-established asset class and it makes no more sense to reject it outright than it would be to eschew equities entirely after a given sector crashes. We think investors are starting to appreciate SEQI is not affected by this US story, and that explains why the discount has come back in after widening in April when the concerns were at their peak.
discount
Source: Morningstar
As a broader point, we think investors have simply become wary of being involved in unlisted assets, and frightened that they are missing some vital information. There has been a lot of scepticism about the valuation and attraction of different unlisted asset classes, often with a specific flavour but, we think, always with an underlying scepticism in common. A few years ago we saw Hipgnosis Songs end its life amidst acrimony over valuations, and we think this created a cloud under which alts as a whole suffered. Some readers may remember that a valuation by Citrin Cooperman was at the heart of the controversy; in 2023 they valued the catalogue Hipgnosis owned at $2.6bn. Blackstone eventually bought the Hipgnosis catalogue for an implied $2.2bn valuation in 2024. Well, in May this year, Blackstone flipped the catalogue (plus some extras) to Sony for $4bn, giving them a handsome return and suggesting the original valuations weren’t too far off at all. 2023 and 2024 were the height of the uncertainty about unlisted assets. We think this sale is just one straw in the wind showing that panic and short-termism set in back then, and it’s now time to take a cooler look.
Another sign is the reopening of the IPO market, most notably with the massive success of SpaceX. SpaceX has been held by a number of investment trusts, from Scottish Mortgage (SMT) through to RIT Capital Partners (RCP), held through a period of ramp-up, massive investment and cash burn, and a lot of scepticism along the way. We can debate the valuation, but it is clearly a massive validation of the model of investing in companies which remain unlisted for much longer than before, and IPO once they are large and mature businesses. Uber is a great example of a company to follow this path much earlier. Before its IPO it was riddled with controversy, and was valued at $120bn at one stage, raising eyebrows. The IPO value ended up being a much lower $76bn, and the shares fell over 2021 and 2022, seeming to show that this model of staying private and unprofitable for longer was going to end up a disaster for early investors. However, Uber has since developed into a highly profitable business, and its market cap has reached $150bn, well ahead of the pre-IPO marks.
In Europe we are also seeing encouraging signs from the unlisted equity space. The IPO of Italy’s Bending Spoons on the Nasdaq was great news for its backers at Baillie Gifford, including BGEU and Schiehallion (MTN). Meanwhile, big fund raises in the space and defence sector have boosted the NAV of Molten Ventures (GROW), most notably the huge up-round for ICEYE, which manufactures and operates advanced satellites. The Molten team note that funding for the larger companies in the venture space has shown a good recovery from its 2022 and 2023 lows, and we are watching to see if this starts to cascade down into the earlier stage and smaller businesses. A bumper IPO of Revolut is still on the cards, which would benefit GROW. Revolut has reported excellent financials and was rewarded by a significant write-up last November. GROW has top-sliced this holding in the up-rounds, but retains a significant position. GROW’s near-60% discount has narrowed massively over the past year, delivering exceptional share price gains, but in our view at 20.5% it remains a significant discount opportunity.
Diversification is back
The artificial intelligence trade has made fortunes for those who invested in Nvidia back in 2022, and the memory manufacturers last year, and has driven returns in a number of related sectors and industries. There is scope for Anthropic to IPO at a valuation of over $1.2trn, which would be great news for SMT and MTN shareholders, and the AI trade is far from over, but we think there is a growing concern to diversify portfolios.
One way of doing this is to look for assets and portfolios which are geared to the current growth trends but for some reason haven’t revalued. We think a good example is Cordiant Digital Infrastructure (CORD). Like GROW, it has significantly rerated, but remains at a c. 20% discount. CORD invests in the “plumbing of the internet”, meaning telecoms towers, fibre-optic networks and data centres. We think it might have been categorised as a yieldco by some investors, but from the start its model of “buy, build and grow” has aimed at a 9% total return, with a dividend providing around half of that. In fact, it has grown the NAV by 13.5% annualised since launch, on our calculations, so out-performed its target and delivered growth a SMID-cap equity trust would be proud of. A particularly exciting element in the portfolio is the Prague Gateway asset, which is a project to build a huge, 26MW data centre. Development is set to begin, and there is potential for this to add a meaningful amount to the NAV over the coming years.
There’s definitely a growing sense of unease in how top-heavy markets have become, and so investors are also likely to be looking for growth opportunities outside the AI trade too. Asian and emerging markets indices are now almost as dependent on the AI trend as US and developed world indices are. There is some respite in markets such as Latin America, where commodities continue to play a major role, but commodity markets are increasingly being driven by expectations on data centre and power grid build out, so even these markets are dependent on AI to some extent. In that light, we think the growth potential in infrastructure should only look more attractive.
Indeed, we think HICL Infrastructure’s (HICL)strategic shift announced at their recent capital markets day could be a catalyst for the market to look again at its proposition. HICL’s discount has narrowed meaningfully from last year’s c. 30%, but still looks attractively wide at 16%. With the portfolio having shifted from essentially a yieldco to a 50/50 split between yield and growth, the plan is now to allocate up to 20% to ‘enhancers’: investments with a higher, 12%+ p.a., expected return, with holding periods expected to be shorter and HICL investing to grow the asset before selling it on. The team see huge opportunity in the need for growth and development in infrastructure to hit social and governmental expectations.
Conclusion
We think yield, a reassessment of unlisted assets, and the need to diversify growth portfolios should all see discounts in the alternatives space trend in over the coming months and years. There has been a lot of consolidation across the sector, with boards merging or winding up their trusts, and this has created a good technical situation for the survivors: when appetite returns, there are fewer options to choose from. Interest rate cuts would be extremely helpful, but are not necessary to see meaningful narrowing in most of the cases discussed. That said, we have seen in the equity sectors that strategies that have performed poorly or failed to buy back shares have been punished hard, and we think it possible that those in the alternative sectors which can’t provide some evidence their NAVs are justified, i.e. through asset sales, could be losers. Equity trust discounts haven’t narrowed across the board, but the winners have outweighed the impact of the losers, and we expect to see a similar Darwinian environment in alternatives.
I’ve took a ‘profit’ of £225 by selling 257 shares in SUPR bought yesterday.
Mr. Market is always right but sometimes not that bright. I will keep the remaining shares for the dividends. Cash for re-investment £517.00, which with the dividends to be received this month will be re-invested.
The S&P 500 Shiller CAPE ratio is on the verge of reaching its highest level in history.
By Adam Spatacco – Jul 17, 2026
Key Points
The Shiller CAPE ratio measures valuation trends across the entire S&P 500 index.
The CAPE ratio sustained a reading of more than 40 during the dot-com bubble.
Today, the CAPE ratio hovers close to its peak levels seen between 1999 and 2000.
The S&P 500 has long served as a barometer of investor sentiment. Among the tools used to assess the index’s valuation, the cyclically adjusted price-to-earnings (CAPE) ratio stands out for its ability to sift through short-term noise and reveal whether stocks are priced reasonably relative to their long-term earnings history. Understanding this metric helps explain both market extremes and the steps smart investors can take when prices climb sharply.
What does the CAPE ratio measure?
The CAPE ratio divides the current level of the S&P 500 by the average of inflation-adjusted earnings over the past 10 years. This approach removes the fluctuations that can distort ordinary price-to-earnings (P/E) ratios, which can appear artificially low during periods of abnormally high profits or artificially high after a single down year.
Image source: Getty Images.
A conventional P/E might appear “expensive” simply because earnings per share (EPS) have collapsed in a recession, even if stock prices have not fully adjusted. The CAPE ratio, by contrast, reflects a smoother picture of sustainable profitability across different economic cycles.
When the CAPE ratio begins to climb, it usually signals that stock prices are increasing at a faster rate relative to underlying earnings. While this can stem from investor optimism about future growth, it can also reflect mounting speculation or easy credit conditions. Over the long term, higher CAPE readings have been followed by more modest stock returns because frothy markets leave less room for further multiple expansion and more room for eventual compression when reality sets in.
The current environment in the technology sector echoes the dot-com bubble
Historical annual averages show that the CAPE ratio reached or surpassed a level of 40 for consecutive years only once: in 1999 and 2000, when it reached 42.1 and 41.7. These readings occurred during the peak of dot-com euphoria.
At that time, investors were pouring capital into internet start-ups and established technology companies alike, hoping that the emerging digital economy would generate limitless growth. As a result, many companies commanded stretched valuations despite minimal revenue traction and nonexistent profits. The broader market’s valuation expanded dramatically as enthusiasm outpaced concrete fundamentals.
Apple(NASDAQ) AAPL
As the chart above illustrates, the subsequent unwinding after the dot-com bubble was painful. Beginning in 2000, the realization that many internet businesses lacked a viable path to sustained earnings triggered prolonged selling pressure. Naturally, technology stocks led the decline, with the Nasdaq falling more than 75% from its peak and the S&P 500 entering a bear market that lasted into 2002.
This episode demonstrates how quickly sentiment can reverse once valuation detaches from reality. While the market eventually recovered, the scars of the extremes witnessed during the dot-com era remain etched in investor memories even today.
How should you invest in 2026?
As the chart above shows, the current CAPE ratio is inching closer to its dot-com-era highs. This elevated level invites caution even if it has not yet matched the extremes seen more than two decades ago. A continued rise in the CAPE ratio could foreshadow a period of weaker total returns or a meaningful drawdown — though such outcomes are never certain.
Rather than attempting to time the market, smart investors can benefit from maintaining broad diversification across sectors and asset classes. Within stocks, keeping an emphasis on blue chip companies with diversified business models, strong balance sheets, and a proven ability to navigate economic cycles provides greater resilience than a concentrated bet on any single theme or growth narrative. Established businesses tend to generate more predictable cash flows and often return capital to shareholders through dividends, offering a degree of downside protection during volatility.
In addition, holding a meaningful cash allocation alongside stocks will further strengthen your portfolio. Cash serves as both a defensive buffer during volatility and as dry powder for purchasing quality businesses at more attractive prices should the opportunity arise.
Above all else, history shows that the S&P 500 has always absorbed economic shocks, corrected its excesses, and resumed an upward trajectory as the economy grows and companies innovate. Through diversification, a focus on durable business models, and prudent cash reserves, investors can participate in that resilience while reducing the impacts of valuation-driven turbulence.
You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Twelfth Magpie’s Premium Investing Services.
Official figures for June show that over 6m more trades were placed for stocks on the FTSE 250 than the FTSE 100. In cash terms, this equates to a difference of more than £80bn.
Based on these numbers, the UK’s second tier of listed companies is clearly the poor relation. Yet it’s home to many high-yielding dividend shares that could appeal to income investors. Let’s take a closer look.
Delving deeper
The current (16 July) yield on the FTSE 250 is 3.5%, beating the Footsie’s 3.1%.
But as is often the case, focusing on an average hides a wide variation. For example, based on the past 12 months, there’s an incredible 54 FTSE 250 members yielding 5% or more.
One of these is Greencoat UK Wind (LSE:UKW). It was the country’s first renewable energy infrastructure fund and its £2.8bn portfolio of wind farms (both onshore and offshore) now contributes around 2% of the UK’s electricity.
The fund’s targeting a dividend of 10.7p for 2026. If this is achieved, it means the stock’s currently offering an incredible forward yield of 10.4%. Why so high?
Investor concerns
Although the fund continues to pay an attractive dividend that it’s pledged (no guarantees, of course) to increase in line with inflation, it’s the fall in its share price that’s been the biggest contributor to its above-average yield.
However, based on the value of its assets, this doesn’t appear justified. In fact, the fund now trades at a massive 23.75% discount to its net asset value (NAV).
Although the fundamentals of the market are strong — data centres, electric vehicles, and heat pumps are all increasing demand for electricity — the nation’s finances aren’t in such good shape. As a result, the government’s announced that it will abolish the Carbon Price Support from April 2028. This means electricity prices could fall by up to £5/MWh reducing Greencoat’s NAV by 3p-5p a share.
The fall in its NAV per share has another consequence. It means the trust’s close to its gearing limit of 40%, which restricts the amount it can borrow to fund further expansion.
On the other hand…
Despite these challenges, investors appear committed with 97.08% of shareholders voting against winding up operations at the annual general meeting.
And with the trust’s share price not reflecting the true worth of its assets by such a wide margin, it could be argued that the shares are in bargain territory. A near-25% discount, coupled with a double-digit yield, is an attractive proposition.
Indeed, the trust has increased its annual dividend for 13 consecutive years.
Volatile energy prices remain a concern. But to help mitigate this, the fund entered into various hedging arrangements. In April, it announced that 68% of its cash flows were “fixed in nature” through until March 2027. Although wind speeds can vary, output’s reasonably predictable.
Also, with Ed Miliband widely tipped to become the UK’s next chancellor, I think the renewable energy sector could have a powerful friend in the Treasury.
Personally, I think investors are being overly cautious. This could be a rare opportunity to acquire a FTSE 250 stock with a double-digit yield at a knock-down price.
That’s why I think a small shareholding’s worth considering as part of a well-diversified portfolio.
You need enough TFSA contribution room for $14,000, since the 2026 limit is $7,000 and CRA figures can lag.
VFV tracks the S&P 500 with low fees and pays small quarterly distributions, so it’s more growth than income.
Reinvest VFV’s payouts and keep adding over time to turn modest cash flow into bigger future withdrawals.
A $14,000 Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA) can feel like a financial featherweight of a portfolio, but it has surprisingly heavyweight ambitions. It’s not enough to retire tomorrow, unless tomorrow’s retirement plan involves instant noodles and very optimistic weather.
Yet it is enough to start building a repeatable system: invest, collect payouts, reinvest, and let time do the heavy lifting while you do literally anything else.
Source: Getty Images
Getting started
The first step is making sure the room exists. The Canada Revenue Agency (CRA) says the 2026 TFSA dollar limit is $7,000, added on January 1, 2026. It also says investors should calculate room using their own financial records, since CRA account information updates only once per year and may not reflect recent transactions.
That means $14,000 may work for someone with unused room from prior years, or for someone using two years of room across 2025 and 2026. What investors should not do is guess, contribute, and hope the CRA is in a generous mood. The CRA does not have “oopsie” energy.
* Returns as of July 6th, 2026
Once the room is confirmed, the next question is how to structure the money. If the goal is consistent payouts, investors can split the job into two parts: income today and growth for later. With the Vanguard S&P 500 Index ETF (TSX:VFV), the income today is modest, but the growth engine is the real attraction.
VFV
VFV stock is not a high-yield dividend stock, but an exchange-traded fund (ETF) that seeks to track the S&P 500 Index before fees and expenses, giving Canadian investors exposure to large U.S. companies. Vanguard says the fund invests, directly or indirectly, primarily in the stocks of U.S. companies.
So why use it for TFSA income at all? Because consistent payouts do not always mean the biggest payout. Sometimes they mean building a portfolio that can pay small quarterly distributions now while growing enough to support larger withdrawals later.
Vanguard lists VFV stock’s distribution frequency as quarterly, with a 12-month trailing yield of 0.84% as of June 30, 2026. On $14,000, that works out to about $118 a year, or roughly $29 per quarter. Helpful? Yes. Life-changing? Not unless your life-changing expense is one very enthusiastic pizza order.
More to come
That is why I would structure the $14,000 around reinvestment, not immediate spending. I would buy VFV stock inside the TFSA, turn on a dividend-reinvestment plan if available, and let each quarterly payout buy more units. The payout stays consistent, but the real goal is compounding.
The cost helps. Vanguard’s product list shows VFV stock with a management fee of 0.08% and a management expense ratio of 0.09%. Low fees are not exciting dinner conversation, but they matter for long-term investors as less money leaks out of the portfolio each year.
The recent valuation point is simple. VFV stock was recently trading near a 52-week high at 27.5 times earnings. That does not make it cheap; it makes patience important. Investors putting in a lump sum could consider buying in stages if market timing makes them twitchy.
Foolish takeaway
VFV stock can make sense for TFSA investors who want a clean, low-cost core holding with quarterly payouts. It will not pump out big income right away, but it can help build the asset base that future income depends on.
A $14,000 TFSA does not need to be complicated. Start with room, use a broad ETF, reinvest the payouts, and give the portfolio years to become more useful. The first cheques may be small, but small cheques with time and discipline can turn into something far more interesting.