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Investment Q&A

Not investment advice or solicitation to buy/sell securities. Do your own due diligence and/or consult an advisor.

Q: Hello Peter and team,
Do you see BCE and Telus as over value territory as it seems investors are moving to safety driving up share prices.. I was thinking of selling some and buy back later time (i know it may seem market timing, but they have run up alot). If I did sell, what are the alternatives? Thanks for the explanation on BAM; the market call commentary was harsh. Lastly, would you consider Enerplus a good buy and is PE a good way to look at oil companies or is it mostly on cash flow? Thanks very much
Read Answer Asked by umedali on April 06, 2022
Q: We are selling our house and will be renting a condo instead, so I’ll have 500k to put in the stock market. My current portfolio is mainly Canadian dividend stocks and bonds, providing me with plenty of retirement revenue. I am light on non-Canadian stocks and was looking at buying the above-mentioned stocks for a long term holding period (10+ years). Do you have issues with any of these stocks, and if so, what are those? I happen to be a customer/user of these companies, except for PFE. thanks,
Read Answer Asked by Martin on April 06, 2022
Q: According to KPMG, the Finance Minister has telegraphed that she will not be increasing the capital gains inclusion rate in the April 7 budget. That being said, never say never. I currently hold ITP with some accrued gains. Does it make sense to sell my holdings and crystalize my gains and then buyback my shares to take advantage of the still existing arbitrage opportunity? Is this what you would do if you were in this situation? For tax purposes, if they change the inclusion rate, would it be based on the trade date or the settlement date? I understand there is no 30 day waiting period to buy the shares back, but can I buy them back the same day that I sell them, or do I need to wait until the next trading day?

Thank you.
Read Answer Asked by WAYNE on April 06, 2022
Q: Just a clarification on the "superficial loss" rule for your readers...you can buy the stock back within 30 days but the capital loss you would have claimed gets added to your new adjusted cost base and can be claimed when the shares are eventually sold. I've had to do that a couple of times to prevent the stock from running away from me during the 30 days.
Read Answer Asked by Earl on April 05, 2022
Q: What are the best types of stocks to include in TFSA for long term hold (15-20yrs) with medium risk tolerance? Growth only or growth + income? Have heard that dividend stocks in TFSA can be good as income can compound over time tax free but if the growth outperformes the dividend yield would that not be better? Also could you include your top 10 Canadian picks right now for allocation in TFSA (sector doesn't matter)? Thanks
Read Answer Asked by Marco on April 05, 2022
Q: Hi
In a past question I was provided these US stocks to purchase: VZ, DUK, GILD, ABBV, O. I was looking for: low to moderate risk and high dividend yields I am again looking for another 5 to 7 stocks with similar criterion. As I am trying to build a US portfolio, please provide some diversification suggestions as well. Thanks, Len
Read Answer Asked by Leonard on April 05, 2022
Q: the metals are taking a shellacking today, do you know the reason?
Read Answer Asked by Mike on April 05, 2022
Q: Looking to lighten the load on above names. In terms of growth please rank their prospects over at least 3-year time horizon. Thanks.
Read Answer Asked by Randall on April 05, 2022
Q: Hi 5i,

In a recent newsletter by Richard Bernstein Associates they talk about a coming paradigm shift for investing in the next decade. They talk about the breakdown of globalization and the persistence of higher inflation and that asset class leadership will change.

They suggest the new paradigm will be to move away from long-duration assets (i.e. growth, technology, cryptocurrencies, residential real estate, and long term fixed-income) and that the longer term opportunities are in pro-inflation assets such as energy, materials, industrials, commodities, commodity related countries, gold and some real estate assets.

Question 1
I know no one can predict the future of the markets but I am interested in getting your thoughts on their paradigm shift idea?

Question 2
How would this paradigm shift be viewed through the lens of an ESG type of investor (i.e. someone that doesn't want to invest in fossil fuels, companies that wreak havoc on the environment, etc.?)

Thanks!
Read Answer Asked by Brian on April 05, 2022