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CSTB: the CIBC Short-Term Income Fund ETF Class, explained

By Sammy · Updated Jul 14, 2026 ·
Illustration for CSTB: the CIBC Short-Term Income Fund ETF Class, explained

Short answer: CSTB is the ETF class of the CIBC Short-Term Income Fund, an actively managed short-term investment-grade bond fund with about $1.6 billion in assets. The ETF class listed on Cboe Canada on May 28, 2026, charges a 0.17% management fee, pays income monthly, and is rated Low risk.

CSTB is a new door into an old fund. The underlying CIBC Short-Term Income Fund has existed for decades as a mutual fund; the ETF class simply lets you buy it through a brokerage at a much lower fee than the advisor-channel versions. This page covers what is inside. It is not financial advice.

What CSTB is

CSTB at a glance
AttributeDetail
TickerCSTB
IssuerCIBC Asset Management
StructureETF class of a ~$1.6B mutual fund
Holds~270 positions: short-term corporate, federal, and provincial bonds
Management fee0.17%
DistributionsIncome monthly, capital gains annually
Risk ratingLow
StatusListed on Cboe Canada May 28, 2026

One historical quirk: the fund’s formal mandate mentions insured mortgages, but it has not held direct mortgage positions since 2008. In practice it is a short-term investment-grade bond fund, a bit over half corporate bonds, with the rest mostly Government of Canada and provincial debt maturing in the next handful of years.

What to weigh

  • Short-term means low drama, low upside. Short maturities barely flinch when interest rates move. The trade is that returns will hover near prevailing short-term yields, nothing more.
  • The job it does well is “parking with a bit extra.” Money you might need in two to five years, sitting between a savings account and a full bond fund. It is not a growth allocation.
  • 0.17% is competitive for active management, and dramatically cheaper than the mutual fund versions of the same fund sold through advisors. Index alternatives exist a few basis points cheaper, but at this fee level the difference is small.
  • New class, old fund. The ETF class itself has no MER published yet, but unlike most new tickers, the underlying portfolio has decades of history.

Frequently asked questions

When did CSTB launch?

The ETF class listed on Cboe Canada on May 28, 2026. Some launch roundups group it with June, but Cboe’s records show late May. The underlying fund is decades older.

Is CSTB safe?

It is rated Low risk and holds short-term investment-grade bonds, which makes it one of the calmer things you can own. It is still a market investment: prices move a little, and it is not covered by deposit insurance like a savings account or GIC.

How is CSTB different from CCBA?

CCBA is the full Canadian bond market version: longer maturities, more rate sensitivity, a bit more return potential. CSTB stays short and steady.

Bottom line

CSTB is a quietly useful launch: a big, established short-term bond fund made available at a fee that finally suits self-directed investors. Nothing here needs a caution label beyond the usual. If it becomes your near-term parking spot, Greenline will show you how it fits with the rest of your plan.

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. It's the sort of thing we built Greenline for, if that'd ever be useful to you.