I understand from a recent 5i article that BAM and AQN pay out their dividends in US$ and that for a number of very good reasons, it is advantageous to have the US$ dividends from these two companies journaled to the US side of my account.
At present I have a 500 shares of BAM.A.CA and 500 shares of AQN:CA in my Cdn Non Registered account that pay out their dividends in Cdn $. Given that I have a US$ Non Registered account and that I need US$ from time to time to either purchase US stocks or for travel in the US, it would make sense for me to request from my brokerage firm that dividends from these two companies be journaled to my US$ Non Registered account.
Question 1. With the dividends now being paid in US$ and showing up in my US Non Registered account, would the BAM and AQN shares themselves be shown in the US$ account or would they remain in my Cdn$ Non Registered account with the dividends from these two companies, paid out in US$ and showing up in my US$ account?
Question 2. I also have a number of BAM and AQN in my TFSA. Would it make sense to move these two stocks to my Cdn$ Non Registered account and have the brokerage firm journal the dividends as well to my US Non Registered account and with the proceeds of the sale in my TFSA, purchase other stocks/ETFs within the TFSA?
Thank you for your team's sage advice and I look forward to hearing your response.
Q: The general objective for my portfolio is quality, dividend growth. Thinking about the REIT portion of my portfolio and recognizing that REIT dividends do not present the best growth opportunity, I am reviewing H&R REIT and Riocan REIT, both of which appear to be in repositioning mode. I could just hang in with them. Or I could sell one and buy an industrial REIT. Qs:
- should I hang in on both? (I am in the money on both).
- if I were selling one, which would you sell?
- of the Canadian industrial REITs, is Dream Industrial your favourite?
- would you consider Dream Industrial (or your preferred industrial REIT) of equivalent quality to H&R and Riocan?
Q: hello 5i:
We hold a position in this company, and would like your thoughts on the offer by St. Barbara. Did you have time to take in the investor presentation call? Do you think there'll be a better offer? Was a closing date for the sale given?
thanks
Paul L
Q: Hi Peter & 5i:
Would you be able to explain what the secondary bought deal offering means when the announcement says:
"The Fund will not receive any proceeds from the Offering. Food Services will distribute the net proceeds of the Offering to its long standing shareholders."
Food Services are selling their shares and then going to issue a "special one-time distribution" from the proceeds?
Thanks so much.
Q: You responded to a question May 7
"S&P changed GOOG's classification last year, so this is not a bad question on it. GOOG is now classified as Communication Services."
Why is it under technology in the Portfolio Analysis tool? Will you change the sector in the tool? Or do you consider it as technology?
This is a question on sector risk with changing stock classifications. I saw a question recently where you confirmed that GOOG is now classified as Communications. I believe FB, NFLX and the gamer stocks (ATVI, EA, TTWO) have been moved there as well. I tend to run an overweighting in tech stocks, as you know from my questions. It is higher risk, but I follow things closely. To my mind, GOOG, FB, NFLX and the gamer stocks move with tech sentiment, not with the sentiment, if there is any, on Communications stocks such as Verizon or Comcast. So, how can you assess your risk exposure to a particular sector, tech for example, when these new classifications don’t really change their risk levels and can give one a false sense of comfort that you have not exceeded your desired limit on that sector?
Thanks for the insight.
By the way, congrats on the successful launch of PA. It seems to be getting a lot of positive reviews.
Q: I'm a little late to the party on Boyd as it has already had quite the run-up. On a go forward basis would you still recommend initiating a position at these levels?
Q: do you consider the share offering that just came out for the company one you would be comfortable taking. Seems to be about 2.00 under the current price.
Q: Peter- In light of the secondary offering where the fund receives no proceeds of it but it goes to the long standing shareholders. Is that the unit holders? Wishful thinking and/or an opportune time cash out re meanyond meat craze?Thanks. Rod
I have transitioned from 55 stocks to 25 hybrid (ETF (16) & keeper stocks (9)) 3 months ago, based on 5i Stock & ETF Growth/Balanced portfolios. Sleep better.
Question: Given 'Ya can't time the market', can one successfully/intelligently tweak holdings a bit based on current economic conditions?
Example: Given USA-China trade war risk, move 20% (VEE, VTI, VVL, XEF, AYX) to (ZAG, XBB, CLF, HFR, ENB). If market goes down -2%, swap half back. Another -2%, swap back remaining half; otherwise, do nothing. Do this at most say 3 or 4 times a year.
Am I just kidding myself that ETFs can be used differently than individual stocks?
I did buy more (VVL, VEE) with available cash when they went down -3% (last week) from when I bought them, with little emotion. Just felt 'smart'. Or am I deluding myself?
Thank you for your continued wise advise for 6+ years.
I am aiming to have about 20% of my equity portfolio in international stocks (ie. not US or Canada). I currently own ZDH (4.3%), ZDM (5.06%), ZEQ (1.87%), ZLD (4.19%) and ZEM (4.15%).
Do these ETFs appear reasonable to you? Do you see any need to change/consolidate, or to reduce MERs? The Portfolio Analyzer recommends VIU, XEF, VEE and XEM. Do you think it is worthwhile replacing my ETFs for the recommended versions?
Also, VEE and XEM do not appear to be as tax efficient as ZEM, or am I missing something?