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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: Are there any rules regarding insider purchases? Once they disclose a purchase, are they required to hold the stock for any specific period? If you know of a site where I could research this more fully, I would appreciate it.
Read Answer Asked by Brad on November 13, 2018
Q: Hi Peter, Ryan,

We have a few dogs with the downturn but we also cashed in all of our high runners in early October. Your insight is invaluable in our portfolio management strategy and we understand the decision to buy or sell is in our control. On that note, we have been buyers the past two weeks when a stock drops 25%-40% (i.e. KXS today at $67.99). Can you comment on the following opportunities (BYD.UN, WSP, NFI, CCL.B, PBH, SHOP, ENHG) to purchase now with a 3-5 year hold inside RRSP's.
1. Please rank (based on your expertise) the above stocks from best to worst as of today to add to an RRSP.
2. Which of the above, if any, are considered "prime" to purchase today.

Thank you
Jerry and Debbie
Read Answer Asked by Jerry on November 13, 2018
Q: I have 24k US to deploy in my TFSA account. My question is 2 fold.
Looking at a 3-5 year time horizon.
1)Should I keep the money is US $ or convert to CAD$
2)In view of the aforementioned time line what securities constitute a unquestionable buy at the moment.
Appreciate your services rendered.
S
Read Answer Asked by Alex on November 13, 2018
Q: In regard to Stantec's and the sale of their construction business do you think this sale should "fix" some of the drags on earnings the last few years? Overall how does this this position the company going forward? Do you think they need a infrastructure program to lift the stock price? And finally I they still quite tied to the oil and gas industries and is that weigh over the stock?

Thanks so much for your advice over the past three years - you have made me a much better investor.

Stuart
Read Answer Asked by Stuart on November 13, 2018
Q: Help me understand WEF please. Seems like they have mo debt, although Morningstar shows approx. $230M of “other liabilities” on their balance sheet. What could those be?
Morningstar states they earned about $80M TTM. True?
Why does the stock trade as if it could go out of business any time? Is the industry that fragile?
I note the stock was under 20 cents in 2008-9 crash. Can this happen again given their low debt?

Thanks
John
Read Answer Asked by john on November 13, 2018
Q: I’ve been reading much negative commentary on this site lately, mostly shots against 5i’s recommendations, and I feel compelled to add my own observations.

Having invested since the late 90s, and earning my sole living from it since 2008, I find the shots against 5i alarming, and their defence against them heartwarmingly reassuring.

I’m essentially a large-cap, dividend-growing financial & utilities/pipeline/reit/preferred oriented-type investor, including looking to the US for what the TSX does not have (in essence, I’m investing for income first and growth second, though growth is still important), who has subscribed to 5i since its inception.

The alarming part is that while I’ve bought into ‘some’ of 5i’s growthier stock picks, my conservative-oriented big cap stocks (both US & CAD) have fared just as badly in recent weeks. So much for my own - intensely researched - so-called safety stocks. The reassuring part is 5i’s comments back to everyone, which is basically summed up as: relax, move to the sidelines - by ‘doing nothing’: meaning: hold - watch the show, but don’t be a part of it.

I was fully invested in 08/09, and while I fortunately ‘did nothing’ at that juncture, I certainly could have used 5i’s wisdom and calmness at that critical time.

This too will pass. Some companies will not survive. Most will. Those that do, will typically prosper. Try not to make large bets. Spread it around. Don’t react. Invest for growing income. Accept some losses, and let them go.

I write this more to remind myself, but since I have greatly benefited from other 5i members who have voiced similar thoughts, I thought it important to include my own.

I trust and hope that Peter, Ryan and The Team will keep their skins proficiently thick, and carry us through a multitude of turbulent times long into the future.

Thank you for helping us keep our heads in these difficult times.

Warren
Read Answer Asked by Warren on November 13, 2018
Q: Not a question but more a suggestion. I have been a client since year one of 5i I have done very well with the service using it as a guiding tool followed up with my own research. A suggestion for other investors out there who maybe experiencing some panic in this sell off that we are having. I suggest that when they do look at your recommendations and after they have done some of their own research and decided to buy they should write the reasons down in a note book as to why they are purchasing this company stock and date it. Then they should list the reasons why they would sell it. This way when the market starts the sell off they can go back and read their notes and see if anything has changed with their pick and if they should sell or maybe buy more due to an irrational sale. Once I personally implemented this practice I found my feelings of panic in a sell off were gone because I know and can look back at why I bought a certain equity and make sure the story has not changed. Please feel free to put this out there and thanks for the great service looking forward to 2019 ideas.
Read Answer Asked by Kolbi on November 12, 2018
Q: Hi 5i,

Knowing that the US is not your focus, I would still value your opinion.

I have 30% of my portfolio in cash sitting in a USD margin account and I would like to invest in etfs for the S&P 500 and Nasdaq 100; could you please suggest etfs that do not pay any yield? I am also looking at IPAY and IWO for some diversification, would you be okay with this? Would there be any significant overlap in all these etfs? What percentage weighting would you have for more growth, medium to high risk tolerance and long term hold ?

Thanks as always. Please deduct as many credits as you see fit.
Read Answer Asked by K on November 12, 2018
Q: Having read a number of complainer's questions in the last few days it occurs to me that not everyone should be a do-it-yourself investor. I well recall the myriad compliments fawning over you and your staff when certain members were watching their 5i recommended holdings climb in value on almost a daily basis. You likely knew that those words of praise would at some point turn to venom which they have. My plea to those who see fit to complain at this time is that you carefully consider what you are doing by making your own equity investment decisions. It may not be the right way to go. There are numerous options for you such as mutual funds, robo-advisors and broad-based etf's. However it isn't constructive nor in my view appropriate to complain to 5i that your stocks have diminished in value at the moment. Peter and staff don't control market sentiment nor momentum. They provide valuable information and opinion without bias for you to assess and then for you to govern yourself as you see fit. Please don't complain about this service solely because your holdings are down. That is one of but three alternatives of equity investing (along with breaking even and having your investments appreciate). A better approach at this time is to ask questions so as to position yourself more wisely. Publish at your discretion.
Read Answer Asked by Ken on November 12, 2018
Q: Can you explain and justify what’s going on with Photon. I didn’t sell at the highs When I was up almost 100%, preferring to look more long term than trading. Now, for the first time, I am under water on it. I thought they were rolling out some new products that were supposed to do well and drive numbers up. Do you still see it as a long term (3-5 year) hold to get back to the $2+ range? Or do you see it as a missed opportunity, live and learn, sell and move on?
Thanks
Read Answer Asked by david on November 12, 2018
Q: Another source has made the following comments:

Higher commodity prices and solid demand for a number of its more important chemical products should lead to improved operating results in the back half of this year and extend through next year. With a free cash flow (FCF) yield of 11% based on last year’s results, and a FCF yield that moves to around 14% based on this year’s projections, Chemtrade is selling at a very attractive valuation.

In addition, the 9.6% dividend yield should be well supported by cash flows with a payout ratio estimated to come in at around 70% this year. As operations improve, we expect the stock to react positively as its payout ratio declines further. This offers us a compelling valuation for a company with improving fundamentals.

I know you aren't happy with its past performance but it looks like it's getting very attractive for income?
Read Answer Asked by Myles on November 12, 2018