RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Very large lots being bought I often did the same using the rrsp as a fiscal financial instrument (as Crossland not Grossland).
Since an investor has 2 main enemies : taxes & inflation.
I'v used taxes by rssp in either way, but I loved the fact that the government is 50/50% in with sharing the risk and the gain as well (less).
So if I was very positive on a stock, I would have liked to have the gain just by myself so I would have moved a stock from the rssp to a TSFA (no income tax), 100% gain would be mine.
As I would move a risky stock to the rrsp to share the risk and if it fails, but if it has good recovery odds I would move the stock back out from rrsp.
That is a way to fight taxes as an investor on yield and Crossland might understand it too?