Investor-grade writing for Canadian income builders
Clear articles on DRIP mechanics, dividend tax, account placement, and income-planning math.
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What makes a defensive dividend stock: how Fortis-type holdings stabilize a portfolio
Defensive dividend stocks can steady income when markets wobble, but the stabilizing job comes from cash-flow structure, not yield alone.
Read article→How Canadian telecom stocks fit into a dividend income portfolio — and the tax angle
Canadian telecom stocks pay eligible dividends from an oligopoly structure. High debt and capital costs make the income more complex than the yield suggests — here is the tax angle.
Read article→ETF vs individual dividend stock in Canada: what each approach means for your income
Dividend ETFs simplify diversification but blend income types and add MER drag. Individual stocks give DRIP precision and account placement control. Here is what each means for your income.
Read article→Monthly dividend payers in Canada: what they do and when to use them in a portfolio
Monthly dividend payers fill income calendar gaps, but many distribute blended income types rather than eligible dividends. Here is the specific job they do and when the trade-off makes sense.
Read article→Utility stocks in a Canadian income portfolio: the income job they are built to do
Utility stocks earn regulated returns set by provincial regulators, not market forces. Their income job in a portfolio is specific — and understanding it is more useful than comparing yields.
Read article→Split-share funds in Canada: why the yield is high and what you are giving up
Split-share preferred shares can yield 8–10% on Canadian equities, but the structure concentrates income risk and eliminates upside in ways most investors do not price before buying.
Read article→What covered-call ETFs actually do to your dividend income in Canada
Covered-call ETFs generate higher distributions by selling option premium, which changes the tax treatment, DRIP math, and long-term compounding in ways the headline yield does not show.
Read article→How Canadian REITs distribute income — and why it is not the same as a dividend
Canadian REIT distributions look like dividends on your brokerage statement, but the tax treatment, ACB impact, and DRIP mechanics are fundamentally different. Here is what changes.
Read article→How pipeline stocks behave inside a Canadian DRIP portfolio
Pipeline stocks generate contracted, regulated cash flow — a predictable DRIP base. How they behave in your portfolio depends on structure, not yield alone.
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