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GIGD ETF: the Guardian i3 Global Dividend Growth Fund, explained

By Sammy · Updated Jul 14, 2026 ·
Illustration for GIGD ETF: the Guardian i3 Global Dividend Growth Fund, explained

Short answer: GIGD is the ETF series of the Guardian i3 Global Dividend Growth Fund, an actively managed global dividend ETF that began trading on the TSX on June 16, 2026. Guardian’s i3 team screens stocks with proprietary AI models, then human managers build the portfolio. The management fee is 0.50%, plus a 0.18% administration fee.

Guardian Capital has run this global dividend growth strategy since 2007, first in separately managed accounts and more recently as a mutual fund. GIGD is a new ETF series of that existing fund, so the strategy has a long history even though the ticker is brand new. This page covers what Guardian has disclosed and what is still unknown this soon after listing. It is not financial advice.

What GIGD is

GIGD at a glance
AttributeDetail
TickerGIGD
IssuerGuardian Capital LP
StrategyActive global dividend growth, AI-assisted screening
Management fee0.50% (plus 0.18% administration fee)
DistributionsQuarterly
Risk ratingLow to Medium
StatusTrading on the TSX since June 16, 2026

The “i3” in the name is Guardian’s investment team and process. Their models score companies on cash flow, dividend growth, the probability of a dividend cut, and how sustainable the income looks. That screen narrows the universe, and portfolio managers make the final calls. So this is AI-assisted, not AI-run.

The portfolio itself looks like what you would expect from a quality global dividend mandate. As of June 30, 2026, the top holdings included Apple, ASML, Broadcom, Microsoft, Alphabet, Costco, Royal Bank of Canada, and European financials like AXA and Allianz. Large, profitable companies across the US, Europe, and Canada, with a noticeable tech tilt for a dividend fund.

What to weigh

  • The fee is mid-range for active management. The 0.50% management fee plus the 0.18% administration fee puts the all-in cost above 0.68% before taxes. That is well below a typical bank mutual fund, but several times what a plain global index ETF costs.
  • AI screening is a process claim, not a guarantee. Guardian’s own disclosures note that predictive models may perform differently than expected. Judge the fund on its holdings and results, not the label.
  • No yield to quote yet. The first distribution covered a stub period only. Anyone quoting a yield for GIGD this early is guessing.
  • Dividend growth is a tilt, not a shield. A dividend growth portfolio still falls in a bear market. The Low to Medium risk rating reflects the quality tilt, not an absence of equity risk.

GIGD versus GICD

Guardian listed a Canadian sibling on the same day. GICD applies the same i3 process to Canadian dividend stocks, which makes it more concentrated, with Royal Bank alone near 10% of the fund at launch. GIGD spreads the same idea across global markets. If you already hold a lot of Canadian equity, the global version adds more that is actually new.

Frequently asked questions

When did GIGD launch?

The ETF series began trading on the TSX on June 16, 2026. The underlying Guardian strategy has run since 2007, so there is a longer record behind it than the listing date suggests.

How often does GIGD pay distributions?

Quarterly. The first payment, for a stub period, was $0.03001 per unit with a June 24, 2026 record date. There is no meaningful yield figure yet.

Is GIGD actively managed?

Yes. Guardian’s i3 models handle the screening, scoring companies on cash flow and dividend sustainability, and human portfolio managers construct the portfolio from there.

Bottom line

GIGD wraps a long-running global dividend growth strategy in an ETF, with AI-assisted screening and a reasonable but not cheap fee. It is a plausible core-adjacent holding for someone who wants quality dividend payers without picking them individually, once the ETF series builds some history worth judging. If it ends up in your mix, Greenline will show you how it sits alongside everything else you hold.

Researching a fund is one thing. Seeing how it fits with everything else you own is another. Seeing it all in one place is what we built Greenline to do, if you ever want a hand.