Q: If we were to enter a recession, what are the best short canditates you see, either in USA or Canada? Maybe a few specific companies, but more likely ETF's. Do you ever see a point in hedging?
Q: hi, if I sold stocks for a loss that are in XIT, and then buy XIT as a proxy and hold for a month, then buy the stocks I sold (that are in XIT) back after waiting a month, do I get the capital loss? (ie even though I owned the equities in the XIT)?? thanks, chris
Q: Hi 5i Team - Would you consider any or all of Unity, Roku and Upstart as oversold. Also could you suggest a few U.S. stocks that may be oversold at this point - besides the possibility of the ones mentioned. Thanks.
Q: Dear 5i
The above noted ETFs are the ones i commonly use in my RRSP , TFSA and non registered accts .
CDZ and ZLB are used for CDN content and the rest for US content.
I believe there is probably some redundancy in these and was wondering which ETFs could be left out .
Which ETFs would you use for RRSPs , which for the TFSAs and which for the non-registered acct .?
Thanks
Bill C
Q: Dream Unlimited reported what seemed to be good earnings as well as the launch of Dream Residential REIT a couple weeks ago - to little market reaction.
Could I have your thoughts on these announcements and current assessment of the company .
Thank-you.
Q: I see that this name has been downgraded by a few analysts even after the fall. Do you suggest that I continue to hold? At this point, I figure it may take me 2 years or more to break even but I don’t want to hold if it’s going to keep falling to $17 or something. Thank you.
Q: Please rank the above 7 stocks in terms of the negative impact a recession-based bear market would have on their price, and also on their ability to maintain their dividend.
Q: From: Asked by Carlo on May 25, 2022
5i Research Answer:
Certainly; we assumed just US stocks when we answered David's question, but if it is just US income that is desired (and not US stock exposure) then Canadian stocks paying US dividends can improve one's after-tax return, depending on an investors' tax rate.
1-Can you explain how US dividends can improve one's after-tax return?
2-Can I just transfer MG (for example) from a Canadian to a US portfolio? Are there any advantage?
Q: I'm more a scavenger than a predator, as much interested in dividends as capital gains. Right now, however, I see opportunity in the growth sector as it collapses after years of ridiculous rises. My intention is to sell off bond funds to pick off the debris of this collapse.
First question: Now or wait?
Second question: What are your choices given this scenario, US or Canadian? Bear in mind, I'm not interested in the 5 or 10 yr wait. I'm looking at a bounce back after half the herd has jumped. I want reasonable growth prospects, a price to earnings ratio that isn't stupid and a margin that also isn't stupid. Say, for example, Apple.
You get it. I also don't expect perfection from you. No one ever got it from me.
Q: I have an unregistered account which we use to generate long term dividend income. There are currently 9 holdings in the red, and 9 still in the black.
I am debating whether or not to sell some of the losers to capture capital losses. Then, in 30 days reasses - either repurchase same or redirect cash elsewhere.
In order of biggest to smallest loser, based on $:
LIF, SYZ, LNF, QSR, TCL.A, ZRE, AQN, BEPC, EIF
In general, I'm quite happy with the performance of this account in this declining market environment. Although the capital has declined a bit, the income stream has been quite stable.
Question 1: Please comment on the merit of this idea. Lose one or two dividend payments now for sure versus banking a loss for future tax benefit sometime. (retired, no earned income)
Question 2: Would you consider any of the 9 names above unsuitable for this account?
Question 3: Which of these 9 names are most likely to have further to fall?
Q: Just when I thought the worst was over, it plunges down again. Why the drastic move?
I had the misfortune of buying heavily into this. Not sure whether to plug my nose and hang onto the 400 shares, sell half, or all. Advice please.
Q: You recently answered Sheldon's question and gave a positive view of this stock and its last quarter report. It keeps dropping significantly with the market. With its reasonable valuation and more generous dividend I'd like to buy a full position of Tricon for a 3 year hold. With rising rates and mortgage costs the rental market in the US should be strong (folks need a place to live). Is there a bear thesis you can put forth to suggest this current proposed investment has more downside than I now am seeing? Thank you
Q: Questions on RESPS. My kids are 5 and 3 so I have their RESP money in VGRO, right now. Plan is to move it to VBAL when they get closer to needing the money. But then I assume I have to de-risk it even further later on. What would you suggest for this eg. GICS and how many years out? I know this is years out, but just want to have a plan.
Q: The only commodity I see that has bust is lumber from 1250 to 650....If inflation lingers (high key component commodity prices) for 6 -12 months while the Fed raises interest rates to damper economic expansion , a V shape recovery seems less likely.The losers I've sold has been creamed by further 25-50% down side(eg. ANRG,PINS,TFII).....How does the DYIer protect/invest his capital within a portfolio given a U shaped recovery? Are there some better performers/sectors that lead the way out of this mess?
Q: What is the forward PE of the IYW technology etf at this time? Do you think this makes a good addition for some of my USD portion of my portfolio for 3 to 5 year hold? Time to start buying?