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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: An interview with the Globe & Mail about ten days ago, David LePoidevin of Canaccord Genuity said "Our most exciting trade right now is the reset, fixed-floating preferred shares, which we’re buying at an average price of about 60 cents on the dollar. The dividends were reset about three years ago when rates were 0.5 per cent. The five-year is above 3.5 per cent, so the dividend increases are stunning. Not enough people are doing the math, but you can buy something that looks like it’s unattractive today, but in two years, you’re going to have a yield that might be approaching 9 or 10 per cent." Elsewhere he clarified that he is buying only non-bank preferreds.
What is your view on this? If you agree, what rate reset preferreds would suggest? Mr. LePoidevin mentioned BCE, TRP and ENB but no specific series. The tickers above are just my guesses.
Read Answer Asked by David on November 16, 2022
Q: I have been seeing a gradual price loss with some of the example preferred stocks I hold shown above.
With the continuing disaster going on in Ukraine and its inflationary impact, should I expect this to further reduce valuations for these types of investments as interest rates rise?
Read Answer Asked by Ted on March 10, 2022
Q: Hi Peter & 5i,
These are preferred minimum rate reset shares. Both have a minimum reset at 4.90%. Never to be reset at below this rate.
My questions:
1. If there is a minimum rate reset, investors are not concerned about falling rates (because falling rates don't affect these) but they are concerned about the ability of TC and PPL to pay the future dividends.
2. In your opinion should investors be concerned about the ability to pay the preferred share dividends? (There are lots of common share dividends that would be cut before the preferred share dividends).
Thank you for your answer and calmness during these unforseen times.
Read Answer Asked by Dennis on March 20, 2020
Q: I have provided a sampling of the Preferred Shares I have in my holdings where most of them have rate renewals out into 2023/24. With prospect of a recession and lower interest rates I have locked in returns for the short-term, would you be able to provide some insight into why their market valuation has dropped 25-30% in most cases? Are investors doubting Royal Bank, Bell, Algonquin Power, etc of being able to meet their debt obligations?
Read Answer Asked by Ted on March 16, 2020