Norbert's Gambit Canada

Convert CAD to USD for nearly free — the savvy investor's currency hack

Every time you convert Canadian dollars to US dollars through your brokerage, you typically lose 1.5–2% to the currency spread. On a $20,000 conversion, that's $300–$400 gone before you've bought a single share. Norbert's Gambit is a perfectly legal technique used by savvy Canadian investors to convert currencies for a fraction of that cost — often less than 0.2%.

What Is Norbert's Gambit?

Norbert's Gambit exploits a simple fact: some securities trade on both the TSX (in CAD) and the NYSE/CBOE (in USD) and represent the same underlying asset. By buying the CAD version and selling the USD version, you effectively convert currency at the market exchange rate, paying only the bid-ask spread rather than a brokerage FX conversion premium.

The most commonly used security for this purpose is DLR/DLR.U — Horizons USD/CAD ETF, which holds US dollars and trades on the TSX in both Canadian and US dollar versions.

How Norbert's Gambit Works: Step-by-Step

Step 1: Buy DLR on TSX (CAD side)

Purchase shares of DLR (CAD) in your Canadian dollar account. DLR holds US dollars and simply reflects the CAD/USD exchange rate. Check the current price and buy as many units as needed to achieve your desired conversion amount.

Step 2: Wait for Settlement (T+2)

DLR shares must settle before you can journal them. This typically takes 2 business days. Do not sell DLR during this waiting period.

Step 3: Journal to USD Account

Contact your brokerage (phone or online request) to "journal" your DLR shares from your Canadian dollar account to your US dollar account as DLR.U. This is the key step — the same physical ETF units are moved across currency accounts. Most brokerages can do this same-day.

Step 4: Sell DLR.U (USD side)

Sell DLR.U in your US dollar account. You now have USD proceeds. The total currency conversion cost is only the bid-ask spread on DLR (typically 0.01–0.02 per share) plus trade commissions.

Step 5: Buy Your US Investment

Use your USD proceeds to buy VOO, VTI, IVV, or any US-listed security you want at your brokerage.

Cost Comparison

MethodTypical CostOn $20,000 Conversion
Standard FX (brokerage auto-convert)1.5–2.0%$300–$400
Norbert's Gambit0.1–0.3%$20–$60
Interactive Brokers FX0.15–0.20%$30–$40
Break-even point: Norbert's Gambit requires a bit of time and effort, plus trade commissions. At Questrade (~$5 per trade), the technique makes sense for conversions above $5,000. Below that, the savings may not be worth the effort.

Which Brokerages Support Norbert's Gambit?

BrokerageNG Available?Journaling MethodNotes
QuestradeYesPhone or onlineMost popular platform for NG
TD Direct InvestingYesPhone onlyWorks well, phone required
RBC Direct InvestingYesPhone onlyMay charge journaling fee
National Bank DirectYesPhone or onlineFree journaling
Wealthsimple TradeNoN/ANo USD account, auto-converts at 1.5%
Interactive BrokersNot neededN/ANative FX already 0.15–0.20%

Norbert's Gambit in an RRSP

Norbert's Gambit works in registered accounts (TFSA and RRSP) as well as taxable accounts. Using it in an RRSP is particularly valuable because once you've converted to USD, you can buy US-listed ETFs like VOO (0.03% MER) and avoid the 15% US dividend withholding tax — a double win on efficiency.

Potential Risks and Considerations

TFSA contribution room: Selling securities in a TFSA does not generate a capital gain, but it is considered a withdrawal. Buying DLR in TFSA, journaling, and selling DLR.U is fine — just ensure you're within your contribution room for both sides.

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