skip to content
  1. Home
  2. >
  3. Investment Q&A
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: I currently am a holder of the following three companies. I consider CSU as an A+ quality, legacy wide-moat company and an A+ capital allocater. Conversely I consider Brookfield of similar nature in reinvestment skills, but as more of a B+ ranking. I consider Broadridge as a legacy wide-moat company, but once again I would rank it as a B+ here.

My question is if you know of any other companies that have these wide legacy moats and strong reinvestment skill similar to that of CSU. Especially down in the U.S. Perhaps you could list out 4-5 possibilities?

Thanks,

Liam
Read Answer Asked by Liam on July 09, 2019
Q: Hello 5i,

We are looking for advice on stocks that should be held in a US account rather than a CDN account. Our RBC RRSP has both CDN and US funds available. After reading several questions and answers it is clear that we are very confused about this topic. We are hoping questions below can help us grasp a general rule of thumb on which currency should we purchase and hold stocks for our RRSP's.
e.g.
1. should stocks that pay dividends in US funds be held in the US account or CDN account if they can be purchased in either currency? i.e. AQN, BAM
2. if we buy a stock such as Google (no dividend) to hold for a long time should this be purchased with US funds or CDN funds. Is this a stock that should be in a TFSA instead of an RRSP?
3. if we buy and sell lows and highs on stocks without dividends such as AMZN, and BABA, (2-3 transactions per year) should this be purchased on the US or CDN side of our RRSP.
4. if we are to purchase an ETF that pays a dividend in US funds should this be purchased and held in US funds?

Thank you for your help.
Debbie and Jerry




Read Answer Asked by Jerry on May 27, 2019
Q: A two part question relating to reading financial statements.
1. I'm looking for annual Free Cash Flow. For some companies (US) this is stated explicitly as a line item on the Cash Flow statement. For others it's less obvious. BAM, for example provides Net Cash - Beginning Balance, Net Cash - End Balance but also Cash from Financing Activities. Is one of these meant to be Free cash flow? If so, which one?

2. My second question is more about financial statements differing depending on the source (RBC/SA/amigo - [https://amigobulls.com/stocks/BAM/income-statement/annual?t=ibc]), again BAM will be my example using equity differences from 2018.

I've found some differences in results of equity estimates between RBC and amigo and am not sure why, as I presume BAM files once and everyone uses the same data.

As an example using 2018 data:
RBC amigo
EQUITY 29,815 97,150

Why would the be so different, and which is correct?

Thanks,

Cam
Read Answer Asked by Cameron on March 11, 2019