RNVL: the RBC Enhanced North American Value Fund, explained
Short answer: RNVL is the ETF series of the RBC Enhanced North American Value Fund, an actively managed portfolio of Canadian and U.S. stocks judged to be trading below their true value, with roughly 25% added leverage through borrowing. It began trading on Cboe Canada on June 9, 2026, charges a 1.00% management fee, and is rated Medium to High risk.
RNVL rounds out the trio of leveraged “Enhanced” funds RBC listed on June 9, next to the quant dividend pair RCDL and RUDL. This one is different in kind, not just geography: the stock picking is traditional active value judgment rather than a quant screen, and the fee is meaningfully higher. The parent North American value strategy manages billions. It is not financial advice.
What RNVL is
| Attribute | Detail |
|---|---|
| Ticker | RNVL |
| Issuer | RBC Global Asset Management (RBC iShares) |
| Structure | ETF series of an alternative mutual fund |
| Strategy | Active North American value picking plus ~25% borrowing |
| Management fee | 1.00% |
| Distributions | Annually, in December |
| Risk rating | Medium to High |
| Status | Trading on Cboe Canada since June 9, 2026 |
At launch the portfolio ran about 119 positions across Canadian financials, U.S. large caps, and even some third-party index ETFs, with the leverage sitting lighter than its siblings at that snapshot. Unlike the monthly-paying dividend pair, RNVL distributes once a year in December, a tell that this fund is about capital appreciation, not income.
The catches
- 1.00% plus borrowing costs is a tall order. Value investing’s edge, when it shows up, is often a percentage point or two a year. A 1.00% fee plus interest on the leverage can eat most of that before it reaches you.
- Leverage on value stocks is still leverage. Cheap stocks can get cheaper. Roughly 125% exposure means a value trap hurts more than it would in a plain value fund.
- Two bets in one wrapper. You are betting that value beats the market, and that amplifying it helps. Those bets can both pay, both fail, or offset each other.
- Annual distributions complicate taxable planning. One December payout means less predictability than a monthly income fund, and a levered fund’s realized gains can lump up.
Frequently asked questions
When did RNVL launch?
The ETF series began trading on Cboe Canada on June 9, 2026.
How is RNVL different from RCDL and RUDL?
Same leverage wrapper, different engine. RCDL and RUDL pick dividend stocks with quantitative rules and pay monthly. RNVL is judgment-driven value investing across Canada and the U.S., pays annually, and costs 1.00% instead of 0.65%.
Is RNVL a good way to get value exposure?
It is one way, with leverage and a high fee attached. Unlevered value ETFs deliver the same core idea at a fraction of the cost. RNVL makes sense only if you specifically want the amplified version and trust the manager’s picks.
Bottom line
RNVL layers leverage on active value investing at the price point where good ideas often stop paying the investor. The strategy behind it has pedigree, but the math of fee plus borrowing costs means the manager needs to be very right, consistently. If you take the bet, keep it sized like one, and let Greenline show you what it adds beside your core.
Researching a fund is one thing. Seeing how it fits with everything else you own is another. That's the kind of thing Greenline is there for, whenever you want it.
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RCDL: the RBC Enhanced Quant Canadian Dividend Leaders Fund, explained
RCDL is a leveraged quant Canadian dividend fund from RBC, trading on Cboe Canada since June 9, 2026. About 25% borrowing on top of a dividend portfolio. Here's how it works.