Q: Hi 5i- With people stocking up, I am wondering if this might be a timely buy? A short term trade perhaps ? Pays a nice dividend too. Thanks for your advice. Ron
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: What is their debt? Can they survive if there is prolonged recession?
Thanks,
Milan
Thanks,
Milan
Q: Good day team, did you guys post/suggest US names to keep an eye on during this market correction? If you did, I can't seem to find it.
Additionally, for broad US exposure what etf is the most efficient in a tfsa?
Cheers
Additionally, for broad US exposure what etf is the most efficient in a tfsa?
Cheers
Q: morning guys:
I bought a couple names with the dip but had to use my line of credit to do so . Am I able to claim the interest on next years taxes as I borrowerd to invest . If so is there a calculation that is used to determine how much interest i can claim .
Thank u
I bought a couple names with the dip but had to use my line of credit to do so . Am I able to claim the interest on next years taxes as I borrowerd to invest . If so is there a calculation that is used to determine how much interest i can claim .
Thank u
Q: What's your view of Covid 19?
In the event the contagion is contained, should we expect a meaningful market rally or would the damage done to the economy be felt for a longer period at this stage. Simply looking for your outloouk and gut feeling. Thank you!
In the event the contagion is contained, should we expect a meaningful market rally or would the damage done to the economy be felt for a longer period at this stage. Simply looking for your outloouk and gut feeling. Thank you!
-
TFI International Inc. (TFII $122.33)
-
Cargojet Inc. Common and Variable Voting Shares (CJT $103.23)
-
Points.com Inc. (PTS $32.16)
Q: Hi Team!
Of the 3 listed stocks, do you have a preference to slowly accumulate in this up and down market?
PTS had some decent Q4 and FY results and decent 2020 guidance. Would they be that affected by COVID19? They are essentially just providing loyalty e-commerce and technology solutions.
Would CJT and TFII suffer that much in the e-commerce space given their delivery aspects? With the oil selloff (and thus reduced fuel costs) they should save quite a bit in fuel costs especially if oil remains on the low side for weeks/months.
All 3 are roughly down between 16-21% in the last month.
Looking out 12-18 months, I would think each would revert back to their recent 52 week highs.
Thank-you for keeping us all informed!
Steve
Of the 3 listed stocks, do you have a preference to slowly accumulate in this up and down market?
PTS had some decent Q4 and FY results and decent 2020 guidance. Would they be that affected by COVID19? They are essentially just providing loyalty e-commerce and technology solutions.
Would CJT and TFII suffer that much in the e-commerce space given their delivery aspects? With the oil selloff (and thus reduced fuel costs) they should save quite a bit in fuel costs especially if oil remains on the low side for weeks/months.
All 3 are roughly down between 16-21% in the last month.
Looking out 12-18 months, I would think each would revert back to their recent 52 week highs.
Thank-you for keeping us all informed!
Steve
Q: How does one preserve capital at times like these if one is fully invested, mostly in equities? This is defintiely not the time for changing sector allocation...How does one deal with having a full position SHOP for example? Thanks.
Regards,
Shyam
Regards,
Shyam
Q: what opinion can u give on this company, it has grown in size rather rapidly and the nature of the business, would u buy into it
Q: What impact will the shutdown of the Cosmos and Union Reef operations in Australia have on KL?
Carl
Carl
Q: When do you think is a good time to buy Air Canada? It's gone from $52.09 on January 13th to close at $27.40 today; almost a 50% decline.
Q: What are your current thoughts on SJ? Is it a buy in these volatile times?
-
Bank of America Corporation (BAC $47.50)
-
JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM $292.85)
-
Royal Bank of Canada (RY $185.73)
-
Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD $100.94)
-
Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS $77.71)
Q: What do you advise about investing in banks given current market environment. What are the tipping points - pro and con? Which 2 or 3 banks [Canada or US} would you put on a watchlist?
Q: Given current market prices and with 3-5 year time horizon, what are your top 3-5 names, US or Canada, for growth.
Q: You may recall my question a couple weeks ago when I had sold all equities and was building a defensive portfolio of inverse etfs (HXD, HQD, HIX, and volatility HUV) and asking for further suggestions for the troubled times ahead. I noted that this coronavirus is not a one off event (like 9/11 or the 2008 crash) but a steadily worsening situation on a global scale that was sure to lead to major declines (especially given how overbought N. Ameican markets have been) and also stoke volatility. My thinking was that having made the "trend my friend" during the 11 year bull market, it was high time to give the bear a chance. The virus was the spark, but it could have come from elsewhere, as we saw with the oil shock yesterday.
Needless to say, the returns on the bear bunch have been stellar (I keep moving up the stop losses to lock in any gains when the markets decide to turn positive). Each 'bad' day is putting more money in the coffers for the days of capitulation when it looks like the tide is finally turning. (Disclaimer: I don't recommend this approach to everyone, as leveraged etfs can bite both ways, and one must always use stop-losses). Many experts are chanting the old mantra "the best thing to do is do nothing" and advising us to keep our long-range objectives in sight. One problem with this is that after such routs, markets often look for new leadership and favor new sectors of the economy. This happened after the tech crash, when it was back to bricks and mortar.
My question concerns methodology: I don't really understand why anyone would hold any equities through the kind of rout we are witnessing (except maybe virus-driven names like Clorox or some of the Pharma companies working on vaccines). Isn't it far better to sit on cash (cash is king and queen) or do a bit of contrarian investing in order to keep eking out modest gains through the market mayhem? Then, one can rest easy until the dust finally begins to settle (instead of losing sleep wondering what the next day or next moment will bring), and gradually leg into your favorite long-term positions on the worse days? Am I missing something?
Needless to say, the returns on the bear bunch have been stellar (I keep moving up the stop losses to lock in any gains when the markets decide to turn positive). Each 'bad' day is putting more money in the coffers for the days of capitulation when it looks like the tide is finally turning. (Disclaimer: I don't recommend this approach to everyone, as leveraged etfs can bite both ways, and one must always use stop-losses). Many experts are chanting the old mantra "the best thing to do is do nothing" and advising us to keep our long-range objectives in sight. One problem with this is that after such routs, markets often look for new leadership and favor new sectors of the economy. This happened after the tech crash, when it was back to bricks and mortar.
My question concerns methodology: I don't really understand why anyone would hold any equities through the kind of rout we are witnessing (except maybe virus-driven names like Clorox or some of the Pharma companies working on vaccines). Isn't it far better to sit on cash (cash is king and queen) or do a bit of contrarian investing in order to keep eking out modest gains through the market mayhem? Then, one can rest easy until the dust finally begins to settle (instead of losing sleep wondering what the next day or next moment will bring), and gradually leg into your favorite long-term positions on the worse days? Am I missing something?
Q: Is it too late to buy this one?
Virus concerns will keep people home.
Virus concerns will keep people home.
Q: In your estimation, can these 2 companies survive until we see a recovery in the oil price/sector?
Q: Good evening,
I have $100,000 sitting in my account and have been very patient to enter the market over the past couple of years. Right now seems like a good time to max out my TFSA and invest a large portion of this money but the question remains where/how? Individual stocks? ETFs?.
I’m 30 years old, have no debt and rent. This money I guess can be considered my savings so there’s no timeline as to when ill need it. With an outlook of 2-10yrs being invested with a moderate risk tolerance (would like to see some decent returns) any suggestions?
I have $100,000 sitting in my account and have been very patient to enter the market over the past couple of years. Right now seems like a good time to max out my TFSA and invest a large portion of this money but the question remains where/how? Individual stocks? ETFs?.
I’m 30 years old, have no debt and rent. This money I guess can be considered my savings so there’s no timeline as to when ill need it. With an outlook of 2-10yrs being invested with a moderate risk tolerance (would like to see some decent returns) any suggestions?
Q: I found this ETF when looking at some of the top ETF providers by AUM in Canada and noticed CI First asset was #5... this looks like a blend of ZUQ and VGG, what do you think compared to some of the other US dividend ETFs trading in Canada? Would you recommend it, and what would be your opinion on CAD Hedge vs Unhedged given where our dollar is trading currently and future outlook
Thank you for the great service
Thank you for the great service
Q: Hi can you explain how this stock swap is going to work the market sure don’t like it a 20% drop since the announcement
-
iShares Russell 2000 Growth ETF (IWO $299.54)
-
Vanguard S&P 500 Index ETF (VFV $157.61)
-
Vanguard Growth ETF Portfolio (VGRO $40.30)
Q: Hi 5i team,
Looking at the broad US market index (apart from NASDAQ), which will be your top two index ETFs that will most likely provide the strongest gain and the quickest bounce when the market turns around? And why? Prefer Canadian listed ETFs if available.
Thanks.
Looking at the broad US market index (apart from NASDAQ), which will be your top two index ETFs that will most likely provide the strongest gain and the quickest bounce when the market turns around? And why? Prefer Canadian listed ETFs if available.
Thanks.