There are a couple of long-term bonds issued by Canadian banks that pay very high yields, and I’d like your opinion. For example, CIBC Capital Trust Tier 1 Notes – Series B currently yield close to 10 per cent. The notes mature on June 30, 2108, with the earliest call date of June 30, 2039. Locking in such a fantastic yield from a stable and strong Canadian bank seems like a no-brainer. Is there a catch?

Yup – a big one.

Let’s rewind to when these bonds were issued more than a decade ago.

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During the financial crisis of 2008-09, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce and other banks needed to shore up their balance sheets. To attract capital from skittish investors, they issued notes with supersized yields. The coupon on the CIBC notes, for example, is a juicy 10.25 per cent.

The new securities were important to the banks, because they qualified as Tier 1 capital. This made them as good as equity when calculating the important Tier 1 Capital Ratio, which the banking regulator uses in determining whether the banks have the financial strength to ride out periods of extreme stress.

However, the status of the notes has since changed. Under the stricter regulatory framework known as Basel III that came in response to the financial crisis, the notes have been gradually phased out as Tier 1 capital and will no longer qualify as of the first quarter of the 2022 fiscal year, which for the banks begins on Nov. 1, 2021.

Rather than continue to pay a 10.25-per-cent coupon on $300-million of bonds that are no longer serving their initial purpose, CIBC would rather redeem them. Notwithstanding the original 2039 call date, CIBC reserved the right to redeem the notes at face value earlier if there was a “regulatory event” that affected the notes’ eligibility as Tier 1 capital.

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And that’s exactly what CIBC intends to do. In February, 2020, the bank announced that, subject to regulatory approval, it “currently expects to exercise a regulatory event redemption right in its fiscal 2022 year … meaning that this redemption right could occur as early as November 1, 2021.”

CIBC isn’t alone. Toronto-Dominion Bank has said it also expects to exercise a regulatory event redemption right on its TD Capital Trust IV Notes – Series 2 as early as Nov. 1.

“They’re all going to go. They’re all dead,” James Hymas, president of Hymas Investment Management, said of the capital trust notes. The market has understood this for years, which is why the price of the bonds has gradually fallen.

Moral of the story: If something seems too good to be true, it probably is.

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More investing book recommendations

After my column last week in which I recommended Lowell Miller’s The Single Best Investment: Creating Wealth with Dividend Growth, several readers wrote to share their favourite investing reads. I’ve listed four here, along with a brief description of the contents based on reviews and samples I read online.

E-mail your questions to jheinzl@globeandmail.com. I’m not able to respond personally to e-mails but I choose certain questions to answer in my column.

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