Q: I hold a share of Amazon stock and was wondering if it is time to sell or continue to hold.
It seems to have lost its momentum and the support it once had, seems to be getting lower.
Q: Good Morning,
Apologizes as I know you've been asked this question or various of a million times but here it goes. At this point in time please list your 5 favorite stocks for a 10 year hold in each of your RRSP account and your TFSA account.
Q: Please refer to their latest news release.
My question is at what point would a stock like this start to interest 5i?
Take your time answering as I know you guys are busy with this current market sell-off.
Q: I like both of these companies and I own both but would like to put some more money into one of them. Which would you recommend for a 3-4 yr. hold and why.
Peter
Q: Hi 5iresearch team
At finance.yahoo.com website, I was able to download the historical data of indexes (S&P500, Dow, and Nasdaq as well as the Candian TSX or any other ticker) in an excel file format (CSV). Now, it seems I can do that with Canadian tickers only. Is there a way to download the American companies historical data from the Yahoo site? If not is there another source that provides similar format data?
Thanks
With interest rates set to climb, do you believe that “residential” REITs/Real Estate stocks like CAR.UN, IIP.UN and TCN should be over-weighted in one’s portfolio? My thesis is that less people will be able to buy a house in an already overheated real estate market, forcing them to consider renting an apartment or home. (I assume that real estate is also overheated in the US when including TCN) Do you concur, and if so, can you suggest any additional names? Thanks.
Q: Hi 5i - a two parter:
Firstly, are you aware of any website or other resource out there that offers easily accessible side by each display of the common evaluation metrics of companies in the same sector, subsector or industry?
(I ask because most sectors differ from other sectors in terms of what is a desirable P/E or P/CF or ROE or ROA etc. etc. so when I see what I might think are either healthy or unhealthy metrics for a particular company I don't have a readily available way to compare those metrics to companies operating in the same sphere to allow me to quickly determine if they truly are unhealthy or unhealthy, comparatively speaking.)
And secondly, is there any resource you are aware of that sets out what the average various evaluation metrics are for the different sectors / subsectors / industries or, alternatively, what could reliably be considered healthy metrics for each.
I'm not adverse to doing the work to come up with this information myself (although I expect I would have difficulty arriving at reliable information to fulfill part two of the above) but it would save me a lot of time and paper if that information had already been gathered. I suspect others might find the sort of sector specific database I'm looking for helpful too.
Thanks!
Peter
I am seeing an increasing number of questions from people looking to exit their technology holdings and wonder (as I read your banner at the top of the page about doing nothing) if now is perhaps too late to be exiting. I understand that people may look for safer havens but I would like your opinion on whether or not people with a 5-10 year horizon and an appetite for risk should be scaling into many of the higher quality names rather than selling at what appears to be nearing a bottom. I can't help but think of so many who bailed out of oil stocks when things appeared dire and then didn't get back in for the massive rise.
Q: On 5 Jan you responded to James that you had the view that AFRM was still fundamentally strong and was setting up for a potential rebound. Do you still feel this way? I see there are some legal issues surrounding this company now as well. I have a half position in this company, am normally a long term investor, but is it time to sell this and put that money into another company which has better bounce potential? Thanks again, Dan
Q: Hi, Interested in your take on why BRP Inc trades at such a low valuation. They have great brands, seem to have the ability to innovate, and it looks like they can continue to grow (10% for the next several years seems reasonable). What am I missing? I am a long term investor (investing for 10+ years out) and I don't mind volatility so would you recommend I look for more aggressive growth?
Thanks
Q: At what price does this become a table pounding buy for a long term investor? Would you start to nibble once it stops dropping with the rest of the market?
Thanks
Q: Can you explain why for all periods up to 1 year VGG has a larger drawdown than CDZ? In other words CDZ seems to be less affected by the current expensive growth sell off. Going forward for a 3 year hold, what etf would you favour? Thank you.
Q: Hi. Do you have any insight into ADN's positive performance today? Not only is it bucking the overall market trend, but similar companies, such as CFF, WEF and SJ are all down.
Q: Hi Peter and Staff
I had asked about TECH as a way for a smaller portfolio like an RESP to participate in AMZN, GOOG etc. I think I understand it only holds 6 companies being AMZN,GOOG,MSFT,NFLX.FB and APPL and obviously % change as prices of those stocks move around. IF I were to suggest that for an RESP , which TECH one would you suggest, symbol wise as far as hedged , not hedged and what is the MER
I think I notice that you suggest GGG instead of TECH. Is that correct? Do you suggest the TECH.US one ? Am I correct that it has 100 holdings including the six that are in TECH. What % of the fund is those 6 that are in TECH? IS there a rough sector allocation available?
Please deduct multiple credits if needed to give the whole answer