DACU ETF: the Desjardins Active Canadian Bond Universe ETF, explained
Short answer: DACU is the Desjardins Active Canadian Bond Universe ETF, an actively managed core Canadian bond fund that began trading on the TSX on June 29, 2026. It holds Canadian government, agency, and corporate debt, can put up to a quarter of the fund in foreign securities, charges a 0.30% management fee, and is rated Low risk.
“Bond universe” is fund-industry shorthand for the whole Canadian investment-grade bond market: federal, provincial, and corporate. Index funds own that market by formula. DACU pays a manager to pick within it. This page covers what that gets you and what it costs. It is not financial advice.
What DACU is
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Ticker | DACU |
| Issuer | Desjardins Investments |
| Strategy | Active core Canadian bonds, up to 25% foreign |
| Management fee | 0.30% |
| Distributions | Monthly |
| Risk rating | Low |
| Status | Trading on the TSX since June 29, 2026 |
The mandate is high regular income with capital security, which in practice means the manager adjusts duration, credit mix, and the foreign sleeve as conditions change, instead of holding the index weights.
What to weigh
- The active hurdle is real but modest here. At 0.30%, DACU costs roughly three times a cheap Canadian bond index ETF. In bonds, where return differences are small, fee differences matter more than in stocks. The manager has to earn that gap every year.
- Active bond management has a fairer shot than active stock picking. Bond indexes weight by who borrows the most, which is a genuinely odd rule. Careful credit selection can add value. It just is not guaranteed to.
- The foreign sleeve is discretionary. Up to 25% outside Canada gives the manager room, and gives you slightly less certainty about what you own at any moment.
- New fund, thin data. No published MER yet and no distribution history worth judging.
Frequently asked questions
When did DACU launch?
It began trading on the TSX on June 29, 2026, one of three actively managed ETFs Desjardins listed that day alongside DACL and DAGL.
How is DACU different from a bond index ETF?
An index fund holds the whole Canadian bond market by formula. DACU’s managers actively choose duration, credit quality, and up to 25% in foreign bonds, aiming to beat that market after the 0.30% fee.
How often does DACU pay distributions?
Monthly.
Bottom line
DACU is a reasonable active take on the core Canadian bond sleeve at a fee that does not sink the idea on day one. Whether it beats a plain index fund is something only a few years of history will show. If it ends up in your portfolio, Greenline will show you what your bond sleeve is actually doing for you.
Knowing what a fund holds is the easy part. The harder question is what you actually own across every account, and how it's really doing. If you ever want everything you own in one view, that's what Greenline is for.
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