The Core Tradeoff
Every dollar you move from growth to income changes two things simultaneously. Your portfolio's long-term capital appreciation potential decreases — growth stocks tend to compound faster over decades. But your current income increases immediately — and that income compounds through DRIP reinvestment.
Neither approach is inherently better. The right answer depends on where you are in your investing journey, how soon you need income, and your tolerance for volatility.
Growth Holdings
- • Higher long-term capital appreciation potential
- • Little or no current income
- • More volatile — bigger swings in portfolio value
- • Tax-efficient when held (no annual dividend tax)
- • Capital gains tax triggered on sale
Income Holdings
- • Immediate, predictable cash flow
- • DRIP compounds share count automatically
- • Generally less volatile — dividends cushion downturns
- • Annual dividend income is taxable (unless sheltered)
- • Lower long-term capital appreciation potential
When Conversion Makes Sense
There are specific situations where moving from growth to income is a strong move:
- You're within 5-10 years of needing income. If you're approaching retirement or a period where you'll rely on your portfolio for living expenses, converting early gives your DRIP time to build your share count before you need to start withdrawing.
- You have large unrealized gains in a TFSA. Selling inside a TFSA triggers no capital gains tax. This is the most efficient place to convert — you keep the full proceeds to redeploy into income holdings.
- Your growth holdings have stalled. If a growth stock has plateaued and you no longer believe in its upside thesis, converting to income puts that capital back to work generating cash flow immediately.
- You want psychological stability. Dividends arriving every quarter provide a tangible sense of progress that growth stocks don't. For some investors, this emotional benefit outweighs the theoretical advantage of holding growth longer.
When You Should Wait
Conversion isn't always the right move. Here are reasons to hold off:
- You're early in your accumulation phase. If you're in your 20s or 30s with decades ahead, growth compounding has a massive advantage. Converting too early sacrifices long-term wealth for income you don't yet need.
- You'd trigger large capital gains in a taxable account. Selling winners outside of registered accounts means paying capital gains tax, which reduces the amount you can redeploy. Consider whether the income gained justifies the tax hit.
- Your growth thesis is still intact. If you still believe in the company's long-term growth story and don't need income now, there's no reason to sell just because the position has gotten large.
The Gradual Approach
You don't have to convert everything at once. Many investors use a gradual approach — converting a percentage of growth holdings each year, or redirecting new contributions toward income while leaving growth positions untouched.
Example: Gradual Conversion Over 3 Years
- • Year 1: Convert 20% of growth holdings — immediate income jump of ~$200/month
- • Year 2: Convert another 20% — income now ~$420/month (with DRIP growth from Year 1)
- • Year 3: Convert another 20% — income now ~$660/month
- • Remaining 40% stays in growth for continued appreciation
This approach reduces timing risk, spreads out any capital gains tax impact, and lets you adjust your strategy based on how the first year goes.
The Tax Layer: Account Matters
Where you convert matters as much as when. The tax implications differ dramatically by account type:
- TFSA: Convert freely. No capital gains tax on sale, no tax on dividend income. This is your best account for conversion.
- RRSP: No immediate tax on sale. But withdrawals are taxed as regular income. Good for holding US-dividend payers (withholding tax exemption).
- Non-registered: Capital gains tax applies on sale. Canadian dividend income gets the dividend tax credit. Calculate the net benefit before converting.
- RDSP: No tax on internal transactions. Good for long-term income building with government grants amplifying contributions.
What to Convert Into
Not all income holdings are equal. When deploying conversion proceeds, consider a mix of:
- Canadian bank stocks — Reliable dividends, long histories of increases, eligible for the dividend tax credit in non-registered accounts.
- Canadian pipeline/utility stocks — High yields, regulated cash flows, DRIP-friendly share prices.
- Canadian dividend ETFs — Instant diversification across dozens of dividend payers. Lower risk than individual stocks.
- REITs — High yields, but distributions are taxed less favorably. Best held in registered accounts.
The goal is to build a diversified income portfolio where no single holding accounts for more than 10-15% of your total income. This protects you from any single dividend cut devastating your cash flow.
Run your conversion numbers
Model what happens if you convert growth holdings to income. See the income jump, long-term tradeoffs, and timeline to your first $1,000/quarter in dividend income.
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This is informational only, not licensed financial advice. Prospyr does not recommend specific securities or investment strategies. Always consult a qualified financial advisor before making investment decisions.