Q: The various parts of the Power Financial conglomerate are coming back to life after languishing since 2008. Which companies would be the best choice for a buy and hold strategy lasting at least 2-3 years? Thank you.
Q: My wife currently holds two BMO Equity Growth ETFs, series A and T6. According to their info sheet, it states they have management fees of about 1.4 % and MER of 1.71%. Are both those fees payable, or is the mgmt fee included in the MER
Thanks
Q: I want to buy some growth stocks but strong so that I don't need to check every day
growth may be low but ok Including US stocks which I know is not your specialty but
has proven much much better than Canadian stocks
Q: Hi Guys, I believe you have deemed both these high paying dividend companies to be of a higher risk nature. Do you believe one to be less riskier than the other and why. Thanks and good day. Alan
Q: I like both of these stocks but would ask would you recommend them an industrial etf .. if so which U.S. etf would you prefer. What on your thoughts on a Canadian industrial etf versus a u.s.. thank you. HON, UTX
Q: Good day 5i and happy Easter to all.my current allocation to global equity is 25%of which 7% is mpcf and 18% xdg..I am retired with a divided and growth profile.do you like mpcf as a so called way to have an alternative weight to portfolio or as I am considering dropping it in favour of more yield and add to xdg? And also do you think xdg offers good value at 21$ or would you wait for a pull back? Your input geatly appreciated.tks Larry
Q: The tax treatment of these ETFs (and typical of others) is difficult to determine. Dividends are withheld from these ETFs but are applied to the book value of the stock. We still pay for the dividend as income (with tax credits) but when the stock is sold, the capital gains are reduced by the amount added to the book value. Capital gains are taxed at 50%. Does it matter if we hold these in a RRIF or personal account? I'm retired and total dividend income is below $50k.
Q: Hello, I’m interested in buying a 3 % position in nfi. I’m holding back because it was a $60 a share stock not that long ago. I keep thinking if I bought at $50 i would be upset ,because as a dividend stock that pays 4+% it should have some stability with that dividend, assuming nothing is wrong with the company. I have read on your question platform that you do not think anything is that wrong with nfi.
Question is is it a good time to buy with a decent time frame, or stay away, as it seems to be acting like a small cap oil company with no dividend?
Q: I have been buying Namaste starting at .71 and steadily staking a good position over the past month. In your opinion, is the stock cheap or priced about right? What do you see as the reason for the down ward slide lately for this company?
Q: Would you still recommend this company after the April 18th quarterly results?
It seems like this subsequent sell off is much too excessive and it might be a great moment to initiate a position. Do you agree?
Q: My Portfolio Tracker is suggesting I move my Fixed Income allocation from 15% to 25% and my Geography from 17% International to 35% International. Given current market conditions which is most important to focus on first. Fixed Income or Geography?
My Fixed income ETF's are as follows:
CPD, VAB, XHY, and CBO.
Q: Any idea what the recent rise in Manga is all about. Do you see it continuing? Would you sell or hold or maybe sell some (at a profit) at this point or buy more?
Q: I understand that you are not tax experts but this is regarding reporting a superficial loss on the tax return. I understand that a loss cannot be claimed if it’s a superficial loss. How does this get reported on Schedule 3? Do I set the ACB the same as the proceeds of disposition resulting in $0 gain/loss or is there a more appropriate method? I also started a thread on the Forums section. Thanks