How to Use $7,000 to Transform a TFSA Into a Cash-Pumping Machine

In this article:
Canadian dollars are printed
Source: Getty Images

Written by Demetris Afxentiou at The Motley Fool Canada

Canadian investors are blessed with an abundance of stellar income-paying investments to make any account into a cash-pumping machine. Even better is when investors opt to invest in a TFSA, allowing that investment and future earnings to continue stacking tax-free.

While there’s no shortage of great investments, here’s how I would use the entirety of my 2025 $7,000 TFSA limit.

Keep it simple, invest in a big bank

Canada’s big bank stocks are superb picks. They are incredibly stable and offer defensive appeal and growth potential from foreign markets. When it comes to dividends, the big banks have been paying out without fail for nearly two centuries.

While that’s a great option for any investor seeking a TFSA-turned cash-pumping machine, Bank of Montreal (TSX:BMO) represents a unique option for investors.

BMO is the oldest of the big banks and first started paying dividends back in 1830.

Let that incredible span of time sink in for a moment. That’s pre-Confederation, spanning multiple World Wars, the Great Depression, countless recessions, and most recently, the COVID pandemic.

Today, BMO offers investors a tasty quarterly dividend that pays out a 3.73% yield.

Turning to growth, BMO has been focused on expanding its presence in the U.S. market in recent years. Thanks to its latest acquisitions, BMO is one of the largest lenders in the U.S., with an impressive network that stretches across 32 states.

Between the defensive appeal, juicy dividends and growing presence abroad, BMO is a cash-pumping machine that is just too hard to ignore.

How about a high-yield defensive gem?

Another stellar option for investors looking to create a cash-pumping machine is Telus (TSX:T). Telus is one of Canada’s big telecoms. Like the banks, telecoms boast a significant defensive moat.

In the case of Telus, that moat is the reliable subscriber-based business model the telecom follows. Specifically, the company offers internet, TV, wireless and wireline services to subscribers across Canada.

Telus is also investing heavily in upgrading its core business. The telecom announced a whopping $70 billion investment to bolster its operations across Canada over the next five years. That investment, which includes network infrastructure upgrades as well as artificial intelligence data centres, has massive long-term potential.

Turning to dividends, Telus really shines. The company offers a quarterly dividend that pays out an insane 7.53% yield. Telus has also provided an annual or better uptick to that dividend going back nearly two decades.