Q: Can you please give your opinion on COOP trading at less than 4x earnings in a recessionary environment as far as growth, safety, and capital appreciation. Thanks for your analysis.
Q: I am thinking of adding the following positions to my portfolio at about 2.5% each, would like your opinion on prospects for the following companies: bidi (Baidu); SONO; Mu (Micron); AMBA (Ambarella);; espo (VanEck e gaming etf); find (global fintech etf). These are all a play on the 5G rollout/stay at home revolution/play at home, your comments would be most welcome
Q: Hi 5i team,
I am not a value guy as you know from my questions, but I do mix in a sprinkling here and there. There seems to be some speculation by U.S. analysts that GM could or should spin off its electric vehicle division into a public company and that would attract a much higher market multiple. In the past, you were not very positive on GM and its prospects. Given the spectacular run of TSLA, has your opinion changed at all on GM, given its electric vehicle assets, and what would you consider to be the likelihood of a spinoff?
Thanks again for the insight.
Dave
Q: Apple is trading at 32x FY21 EPS estimates while its revenue growth for the next decade is estimated to be 5% per year. Is it too expensive now and therefore should be sold? I’ve held it in my RRSP account for a long time with substantial gains.
Thanks. Liping
Q: I hold ET in a registered account, and as it is a MLP I've had non-resident taxes withheld from dividends. They have indicated that they will likely convert to a c-corporation, and I'm wondering how that would affect the withholding tax on distributions, and if that would automatically mean a lower distribution.
Q: I have been looking at this company, and can't understand the steep discount on its share prices. I understand the Dakota Access Pipeline issues, and the fact that "energy companies" are generally in disfavour, but the cash flow looks solid and rateable, and debt levels are high, but sustainable and interest rates are lower, not higher, so debt levels look not so bad. What am I missing here??? Am I glossing over some risks???
Q: My I have your opinion of their recent earnings report and you opinion of their future prospects? Would you consider this a growth stock based on the sector they operate in?
Q: I owned Dow stock before it split into 3 separate companies and now I own shares in all 3. I've kept the shareholders and haven't touched them since the split. Do you prefer one of these companies over any others? I plan to add to this position (which is now 3 stocks instead of one). I am unsure if I should add to all 3, or pick the 'best' one. Can you offer some insight?
Q: I have been following a gradual dollar-cost averaging type approach to adding cash into the markets over the past several months.
With the US presidential election coming in the fall and a possibility of substantial political volatility there, would you advise deviating from this general approach? ie, is there a substantial chance of this event causing a market drop, that would merit changing a market approach?
Are there specific events that you are watching for that may act as triggers for coming market movements? The one that is holding my attention is Trump's overtures that he may not cede power if he loses, or if the election decision is unclear.
Q: I am intrigued by this company's business model of owning ground leases and working cooperatively with the owners of the business on top of that land. They say they collected 100% of payments during COVID and are essentially COVID and recession-proof.
In Geoff's previous question, he noted that it was "...likened it to a hundred year bond, yet if they can achieve their goal of increasing the distribution at twice the rate of inflation that is obviously better than a bond, safety comparisons aside."
Safety comparisons not aside, I'm interested in your views. It seems like raising capital and debt would be the main concerns. They seem to raise capital by offering more shares. How sustainable is that model?
All in all, can you assess the company in terms of safety and their claim to be more in the fixed income category than in the equity category. I actually like that they conserve dividend payments as it seems to justify this claim.
Q: Keysight is down big time today after it's earnings announcement. It has been fairly flat in 2020. I am still up on this stock but am thinking of moving on. Can I please have your thoughts on Keysight and any comments you may have. If I sell I would put 50% of the proceeds into REAL and the other 50% into Well. Thank You.