Q: Is there a REIT or two that provides high growth potential and high dividend yield. Given the current market circumstances, I might be able to get something at a deflated price.
You can view 3 more answers this month. Sign up for a free trial for unlimited access.
Investment Q&A
Not investment advice or solicitation to buy/sell securities. Do your own due diligence and/or consult an advisor.
Q: I presently own Surge Energy and Tamarack Energy. Both are up multiples from their 52 week lows. Surge is starting a 3.5% dividend on July 15th.
Both are down a bit during this selloff. Would you add to either or have they gone up so much in the past twelve months that it is a bit greedy to expect either/both to continue rising. Josef Schachter said Surge could go to $13 (it did), then possibly $20 and eventually $40 in 2-3 years.
Tamarack is more solid but has had an awesome year, as well. Are they peaking now?
Thanks.
Both are down a bit during this selloff. Would you add to either or have they gone up so much in the past twelve months that it is a bit greedy to expect either/both to continue rising. Josef Schachter said Surge could go to $13 (it did), then possibly $20 and eventually $40 in 2-3 years.
Tamarack is more solid but has had an awesome year, as well. Are they peaking now?
Thanks.
-
Whitecap Resources Inc. (WCP)
-
Baytex Energy Corp. (BTE)
-
Tamarack Valley Energy Ltd. (TVE)
-
Topicus.com Inc. (TOI)
Q: Hi Team,
TOI has had a rough couple days. Today as of writing down another 5%. At $62 a share today would you consider this a great buy? Is there any news that is making the stock drop extra bad today compared to some other tech stocks that are rallying some today? Also...even though oil is more in favour in todays market, would you consider selling some of either WCP, BTE, or TVE to buy into TOI weakness? And would you consider TOI a better long term hold than an oil stock?Thanks
Shane.
TOI has had a rough couple days. Today as of writing down another 5%. At $62 a share today would you consider this a great buy? Is there any news that is making the stock drop extra bad today compared to some other tech stocks that are rallying some today? Also...even though oil is more in favour in todays market, would you consider selling some of either WCP, BTE, or TVE to buy into TOI weakness? And would you consider TOI a better long term hold than an oil stock?Thanks
Shane.
Q: SPY is down over 20%QQQis down over 30% ytd.BAM is down over 25% ytdMSFT is down over 25% ytd.Do you think now is appropriate to enter into any of these names…and if so how would you rank each one to enter?Kim
Q: I would like to capture a tax loss on Otex. Would Engh be a good proxy while I wait to decide whether to rebuy Otex. As always, thanks for your help.
Q: TOI is at a 52 week low despite having a good quarter on its latest report.
It is dropping on higher volume than normal.
Yes it is a tough market for growth stocks but the high volume scares some.
Thanks
It is dropping on higher volume than normal.
Yes it is a tough market for growth stocks but the high volume scares some.
Thanks
Q: ? Over a 5 day period this stock has went from $75 to $64 as of June 14.
Thanks
Thanks
-
Kinaxis Inc. (KXS)
-
Shopify Inc. Class A Subordinate Voting Shares (SHOP)
-
Lightspeed Commerce Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (LSPD)
-
Topicus.com Inc. (TOI)
Q: Hi 5i - at current prices, how would you rank the following Canadian tech stocks: SHOP, KXS, TOI and LSPD?
Thanks, Neil
Thanks, Neil
Q: Everyone, well the feds raised rates and will raise again next meeting. Are the rates increases what the market was looking for? Clayton
Q: I have seen in several answers you say you are encouraging tax loss selling in this market. Why? I don't see the reason to do that.
Let's use a hypothetical example. Last year I bought $10,000 of stock XYZ. It's fallen 50% so my paper loss is $5000. I sell the stock for a capital loss of $5000. I buy the stock back in 30 days (at the same price I sold it at), or I buy a proxy stock using the $5000 from the sale. Lucky me, one year from now stock XYZ has doubled and I now have a paper capital gain of $5000 (or the proxy stock I bought has doubled, and I have a $5000 gain). I sell the stock XYZ (or the proxy) and have a capital gain of $5000. The loss I generated from tax loss selling offsets the gain I made one year later. Net effect is 0, other than trading commissions.
If I had simply kept the stock XYZ, one year later I would be back at breakeven, no gain or loss.
If you believe in the stock as evidenced that you buy it back 30 days after selling it, or you buy a proxy and keep that, I don't see the point of tax loss selling for the sake of it. If you buy something completely different, that's a different story. But reading through the Q&A must people intend to buy the stock back in 30 days.
For this example keep in mind that the financial situation doesn't suddenly change; my tax bracket remains the same during this example.
Please explain why you are encouraging tax loss selling at this time. I don't see the point of doing this if you intend to buy back the same stock, and you remain within the same tax bracket. If you are relying on the stock being lower 30 days later when you buy it back that is market timing.
Paul
Let's use a hypothetical example. Last year I bought $10,000 of stock XYZ. It's fallen 50% so my paper loss is $5000. I sell the stock for a capital loss of $5000. I buy the stock back in 30 days (at the same price I sold it at), or I buy a proxy stock using the $5000 from the sale. Lucky me, one year from now stock XYZ has doubled and I now have a paper capital gain of $5000 (or the proxy stock I bought has doubled, and I have a $5000 gain). I sell the stock XYZ (or the proxy) and have a capital gain of $5000. The loss I generated from tax loss selling offsets the gain I made one year later. Net effect is 0, other than trading commissions.
If I had simply kept the stock XYZ, one year later I would be back at breakeven, no gain or loss.
If you believe in the stock as evidenced that you buy it back 30 days after selling it, or you buy a proxy and keep that, I don't see the point of tax loss selling for the sake of it. If you buy something completely different, that's a different story. But reading through the Q&A must people intend to buy the stock back in 30 days.
For this example keep in mind that the financial situation doesn't suddenly change; my tax bracket remains the same during this example.
Please explain why you are encouraging tax loss selling at this time. I don't see the point of doing this if you intend to buy back the same stock, and you remain within the same tax bracket. If you are relying on the stock being lower 30 days later when you buy it back that is market timing.
Paul
-
Shopify Inc. Class A Subordinate Voting Shares (SHOP)
-
A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund (AW.UN)
-
Lightspeed Commerce Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (LSPD)
Q: You mentioned in a response that high valuation stocks, i.e. 10x sales are not likely to perform well in this market. Can you name Canadian stocks 5i follows that would fall in that category. Thanks.
-
Sylogist Ltd. (SYZ)
-
Kinaxis Inc. (KXS)
-
Open Text Corporation (OTEX)
-
Stewart Information Services Corporation (STC)
Q: I hold 1/2 positions in KXS, STC, & OTEX, and a 1/4 position in SYZ.
I have a small gain in KXS and small losses in the other 3.
Would you choose to consolidate or replace with similar any of these holdings at this time and if so what moves would you make.
Thanks, Hugh
I have a small gain in KXS and small losses in the other 3.
Would you choose to consolidate or replace with similar any of these holdings at this time and if so what moves would you make.
Thanks, Hugh
Q: Hi team,
The Globe recently published an article on high-interest savings account ETFs. It included this sentence: "A recent report by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) Capital Markets pegs the after-fee yield from these funds at between 1.8 and 1.9 per cent, which is far better than most other cash alternatives available to the typical investor."
Link: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/personal-finance/article-this-cash-parking-spot-for-investors-has-never-looked-better/
Does this look right to you? I'm seeing more like 0.6% as the yield on these products.
Thanks.
The Globe recently published an article on high-interest savings account ETFs. It included this sentence: "A recent report by Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CIBC) Capital Markets pegs the after-fee yield from these funds at between 1.8 and 1.9 per cent, which is far better than most other cash alternatives available to the typical investor."
Link: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/personal-finance/article-this-cash-parking-spot-for-investors-has-never-looked-better/
Does this look right to you? I'm seeing more like 0.6% as the yield on these products.
Thanks.
Q: Based of a previous comment from you, I bought ZRR as a hedge against rising interest rates. I am down 10% since buying it. Perhaps I misunderstood what you said. Why is it dropping? Thanks.
-
Sylogist Ltd. (SYZ)
-
Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
-
Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
-
Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
-
Bank of Montreal (BMO)
-
Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
-
TELUS Corporation (T)
-
Brookfield Renewable Partners L.P. (BEP.UN)
-
Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp. (AQN)
-
Tricon Residential Inc. (TCN)
-
A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund (AW.UN)
Q: Can you please provide your top 10 canadian dividend stocks which can also provide some capital growth. Time frame is 5 years. Is now a good time to start buying or should I wait?
Thank you
Thank you
Q: If you could temporarily transform yourself into a riverboat gambler for a day, what is the one stock, possibly having been hammered lately, that you would buy for a quick roll of the dice and accompanying gain or loss? Thanks.
Q: Would appreciate your opinion on the future prospects of this company.
Thanks
Paul
Thanks
Paul
-
Sangoma Technologies Corporation (STC)
-
Sylogist Ltd. (SYZ)
-
Converge Technology Solutions Corp. (CTS)
Q: With the general sell off in tech stocks, I'm currently down about 40% on each of these companies. However, I remain long term positive on them and would like your opinion as whether now is the time to add to my positions or whether you feel there may be further pain ahead for the sector and I'd be better off biding my time?
Thanks, Rick
Thanks, Rick
-
Apple Inc. (AAPL)
-
Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)
-
Alphabet Inc. (GOOG)
-
Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)
-
The Walt Disney Company (DIS)
-
Shopify Inc. Class A Subordinate Voting Shares (SHOP)
-
Meta CDR (CAD Hedged) (META)
Q: These large behemoths have been decimated in varying degrees. Would you please rank them and would you buy now for a long hold on what seems like a huge sale on quality leaders? Thanks.
-
Restaurant Brands International Inc. (QSR)
-
Recipe Unlimited Corporation Subordinate Voting Shares (RECP)
-
A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund (AW.UN)
-
MTY Food Group Inc. (MTY)
Q: Hi, I’m trying to decide between these 4 operators to invest right now. Would you do a short compare of their size, debt and outlook ?
In 5i Market Data , what is the difference between « Total debt to equity » and « Leverage ratio ». Does Debt/CF show up somewhere? Which other ratio(s) would be the best indicator(s) in this specific sector ? Thanks
In 5i Market Data , what is the difference between « Total debt to equity » and « Leverage ratio ». Does Debt/CF show up somewhere? Which other ratio(s) would be the best indicator(s) in this specific sector ? Thanks