According to Horizons
Funds the Investment Objective of the Horizons
S&P/TSX 60 (HXT) is to seek to replicate, to the extent possible, the performance
of the S&P/TSX 60 Index (Total Return), net of expenses.
According to Horizons Funds the
investment objective of Horizons Enhanced Income Equity ETF (HEX) is to provide
unitholders with: (a) exposure to the performance of an equal weighted
portfolio of large capitalization Canadian companies; and (b) monthly
distributions of dividend and call option income. (and) To mitigate downside
risk and generate income, HEX will generally write covered call options on 100%
of its portfolio securities. Covered call options provide a partial hedge
against declines in the price of the securities on which they are written to
the extent of the premiums received.
The annualized price returns of the HEX,
since inception March 18, 2011, to date has been a negative 18.38 %. This does
not include the annualized income of about 10%.
The competition – namely the iShares
S&P/TSX 60 Index Fund which also seeks to provide long-term capital growth
by replicating, to the extent possible, the performance of the S&P/TSX 60
Index has generated a negative price return of 7.92% over the same period. This
does not include the annualized income of about 2.5%
My take on covered call writing is that
you are forced to sell winners to the call buyer and you are forced to hold
losers in order to keep writing those calls. Those management fees however
never go away.
2 comments:
How about buying xiu & writing covered call on it 6months out. From march 2011 to sept 2012 could have written 3 times getting better return then both managers.
Hi Muntazir
I see you have selected a trading peak and not a trading low to support your question. If you wrote calls on the XIU back than you would have as of last week a capital loss on the XIU of negative 13.5% - the DOW was up 9% over the same period - Bill C
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