WARNING: The Canada Revenue Agency Can Tax Your CPP and OAS. Here’s How to Get Tax-Free Retirement Income

TransAlta Renewables Inc. (TSX:RNW) is a top dividend stock for TFSA-investing pensioners!

| More on:
Path to retirement

Image source: Getty Images

You’re reading a free article with opinions that may differ from The Motley Fool’s premium investing services. Become a Motley Fool member today to get instant access to our top analyst recommendations, in-depth research, investing resources, and more. Learn moresdf

The CRA takes a cut of Old Age Security and Canada Pension Plan payments, leaving retirees who are overly reliant on their social security safety net with limited financial wiggle room. While you can’t shield your pension payments from the Canada Revenue Agency, you can shield passive income generated within your Tax-Free Savings Account (TFSA).

As such, it’s a good idea for retirees to turn their TFSAs into a tax-free income stream, rather than hoarding cash in those pesky “high-interest” TFSA savings accounts (who are we kidding? they’re actually rock-bottom interest rates). While the “4% rule” will give you a solid balance of income and long-term growth, there are companies with much higher-yielding securities that can provide you with superior growth.

Go green, get green!

Consider TransAlta Renewables (TSX:RNW), a 5.4%-yielding renewable energy play that has an impressive growth profile and a generous capital return structure. The company has 34 renewable power facilities (wind, hydro, and solar) across North America and Australia, with plenty of promising growth projects in the pipeline.

As a renewable energy kingpin, TransAlta is riding on ESG (environment, social, governance) tailwinds that will blow through the decade and beyond. Such tailwinds will allow TransAlta Renewables to score an outsized ROE as the company looks to meet the sky-high demand for global sustainable energy projects.

The white-hot stock has soared nearly 80% since its late-2018 bottom, a time when I recommended investors back up the truck on the stock. While I’d never advise chasing a hot stock based solely on its momentum, I do think the risk/reward trade-off on the name remains favourable given today’s valuations and the fact that the stock sold off violently between 2017 and 2018. The stock just broke out a few weeks ago and now appears technically and fundamentally sound.

At the time of writing, TransAlta Renewables stock trades at 13.1 times EV/EBITDA, 2.1 times book, and 9.9 times sales, which is pretty cheap considering the double-digit revenue growth (averaged 25% over the last three years) the firm is capable of, given the “green tailwinds” and its attractive capital structure.

Sure, the stock isn’t a steal as it once was, but I still think it’s a wonderful pick for income-oriented investors who don’t want to compromise on growth.

Management is aiming for an 80%–85% payout ratio, and as new projects gradually come online investors should expect to be rewarded accordingly through fairly frequent dividend hikes. For such a high calibre dividend growth stock, I’d say 13.1 times EV/EBITDA is a ridiculously low price to pay.

Foolish takeaway

Your OAS and CPP payments are subject to taxation, but dividend payments from your TFSA are CRA-proof. With a dividend stock that has a generous capital return structure like TransAlta Renewables at the core of your TFSA, your tax-free income stream could have the potential to grow so that you won’t mind giving the CRA its slice.

Stay hungry. Stay Foolish.

This article represents the opinion of the writer, who may disagree with the “official” recommendation position of a Motley Fool premium service or advisor. We’re Motley! Questioning an investing thesis — even one of our own — helps us all think critically about investing and make decisions that help us become smarter, happier, and richer, so we sometimes publish articles that may not be in line with recommendations, rankings or other content.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

More on Dividend Stocks

growing plant shoots on stacked coins
Dividend Stocks

5 Dividend Stocks to Buy With Yields Upwards of 5%

These five companies all earn tonnes of cash flow, making them some of the best long-term dividend stocks you can…

Read more »

funds, money, nest egg
Dividend Stocks

TFSA Investors: 3 Stocks to Start Building an Influx of Passive Income

A TFSA is the ideal registered account for passive income, as it doesn't weigh down your tax bill, and any…

Read more »

A red umbrella stands higher than a crowd of black umbrellas.
Dividend Stocks

3 of the Safest Dividend Stocks in Canada

Royal Bank of Canada stock is one of the safest TSX dividend stocks to buy. So is CT REIT and…

Read more »

Growing plant shoots on coins
Dividend Stocks

1 of the Top Canadian Growth Stocks to Buy in February 2023

Many top Canadian growth stocks represent strong underlying businesses, healthy financials, and organic growth opportunities.

Read more »

stock research, analyze data
Dividend Stocks

Wherever the Market Goes, I’m Buying These 3 TSX Stocks

Here are three TSX stocks that could outperform irrespective of the market direction.

Read more »

woman data analyze
Dividend Stocks

1 Oversold Dividend Stock (Yielding 6.5%) to Buy This Month

Here's why SmartCentres REIT (TSX:SRU.UN) is one top dividend stock that long-term investors should consider in this current market.

Read more »

IMAGE OF A NOTEBOOK WITH TFSA WRITTEN ON IT
Dividend Stocks

Better TFSA Buy: Enbridge Stock or Bank of Nova Scotia

Enbridge and Bank of Nova Scotia offer high yields for TFSA investors seeking passive income. Is one stock now undervalued?

Read more »

Golden crown on a red velvet background
Dividend Stocks

2 Top Stocks Just Became Canadian Dividend Aristocrats

These two top Canadian Dividend Aristocrats stocks are reliable companies with impressive long-term growth potential.

Read more »