Q: cfn - holding 430 shares...up 32% today. Sell at market or tender?
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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: Hi Peter
My RRSP will have some cash available .I was thinking about buying Abbvie , Fluor, and visa . My aim is to hold for 5 years . Am I going in the right direction with these stocks? They are replacing some preferred shares that have matured . I appreciate your opinion .
Candi
My RRSP will have some cash available .I was thinking about buying Abbvie , Fluor, and visa . My aim is to hold for 5 years . Am I going in the right direction with these stocks? They are replacing some preferred shares that have matured . I appreciate your opinion .
Candi
Q: Can I get your thoughts on Neptune tech (NTB) is it a buy at these levels
Thanks
Thanks
Q: I'm looking to initiate a position with market leverage. Would you choose between GMP and AHF? Thanks!
Q: Just a general comment on company identification: if the person asking the question could state the full name of the company instead of just the symbol, (since we obviously know which company we're asking about!) it would streamline the process, making it more clear and more efficient. Then, Peter or Ryan wouldn't have to worry about remembering to quote the full company name each and every time. It puts the onus on "us" to be more clear and precise. : )
Q: Kudos Peter and Team !
Besides SLF, could you give some ideas for companies that will benefit in a rising rate environment. Does this include the Banks ?
Thank you.
Besides SLF, could you give some ideas for companies that will benefit in a rising rate environment. Does this include the Banks ?
Thank you.
Q: Hi Ryan,What would be the best etf for china right now , Thanx Cliff
Q: Hi 5i Team, Could you give me your opinion of WEF & WFT as a Buy, Sell Or Hold
Jim
Jim
Q: Hello,
I was wondering if Enterprise (E.TO) and Easyhome (EH.TO) are good buys at current level? If yes what will be a good time frame for them?
Peter, I know that you don't like target prices and understand why, but can't we have a convention (at least for this site) that a 12 month target price, doesn't mean that the stock must be sold at that time. The conditions may improve by that time and there will be a new target (of course the reverse can also be true).
With that in mind are you willing to put a target price for them? Also, if this idea catches on, do you think we can have a Excel file with the most asked stocks and their target price? This way if conditions change, one would not have to sale just because the target price has been met.
Just and idea.
Thank you and I hope your ride goes smoothly.
I was wondering if Enterprise (E.TO) and Easyhome (EH.TO) are good buys at current level? If yes what will be a good time frame for them?
Peter, I know that you don't like target prices and understand why, but can't we have a convention (at least for this site) that a 12 month target price, doesn't mean that the stock must be sold at that time. The conditions may improve by that time and there will be a new target (of course the reverse can also be true).
With that in mind are you willing to put a target price for them? Also, if this idea catches on, do you think we can have a Excel file with the most asked stocks and their target price? This way if conditions change, one would not have to sale just because the target price has been met.
Just and idea.
Thank you and I hope your ride goes smoothly.
Q: Hi Peter and Team,
What is your opinion of Transalta (Ta) at this time. Thanks
Lawrence
What is your opinion of Transalta (Ta) at this time. Thanks
Lawrence
Q: Morning 5i Research Team,
Melcor (MRD) stock price is down. Is this providing a good entry point or is there something fundamentally wrong? Thanks
Lawrence
Melcor (MRD) stock price is down. Is this providing a good entry point or is there something fundamentally wrong? Thanks
Lawrence
Q: In the past week HR.UN has pulled back considerably, even moving lower than its 200 moving average. Was it due to the latest earnings release? Would you consider this a good entry point?
Brian
Brian
Q: Hi 5i Team;
Would you please offer an updated opinion on Gran Tierra Energy (GTE).
Thanks as always.
Would you please offer an updated opinion on Gran Tierra Energy (GTE).
Thanks as always.
Q: Looking at dc.a , is it a good buy at this price
Q: MTL?
volume at 2.3M and stock up 1.6%, any idea?
volume at 2.3M and stock up 1.6%, any idea?
Q: which gold companies do you preferr.with gold trading at 1233 is it getting to look atractive?thanks always jim
Q: Hi Team...I bought CBO in around May..it only goes down and when I look at the charts, it just basically drops (even over the last 5 years). Can you suggest an alternative? XHY??? I would like a steady Eddie for this part of my Portfolios but one that has a good dividend and some (even slow) growth!!?? Thanks ahead..
Q: hello 5i team, could you please give some info on i shares xpf, i hold some cbo and some xhy as part of my fixed income allocation will xpf compliment it
Q: I have a question about investment returns and expectations. If I understand correctly, as a momentum investor you expect "above-average' returns, which I will define as 10 -12% annually (is that correct?), based on the current upward movement and interest in a stock. Eventually, the momentum slows down and the stock either drops or goes into a holding pattern as in the case of AVO, BAD, BDI,
AMA etc. Sometimes, when answering questions about these stocks, you say that the market has lost interest or momentum has slowed but that you still expect growth.
Now to my question. When you comment that the stock in question is now more of a "long term hold", like BAD, what should an investor's expectations be for the return on that stock? Should we still anticipate 10% - 12% or should we now expect that stock to return maybe 6% - 8% averaged over that period? If so, this would make it more like the return of a blue chip, only with more risk.
I realize that you will not want to be seen as predicting actual returns but I am trying to understand what I should expect from stocks so that I have a realistic approach to investing.
Thanks so much and stay warm on the ride!
Paul F.
AMA etc. Sometimes, when answering questions about these stocks, you say that the market has lost interest or momentum has slowed but that you still expect growth.
Now to my question. When you comment that the stock in question is now more of a "long term hold", like BAD, what should an investor's expectations be for the return on that stock? Should we still anticipate 10% - 12% or should we now expect that stock to return maybe 6% - 8% averaged over that period? If so, this would make it more like the return of a blue chip, only with more risk.
I realize that you will not want to be seen as predicting actual returns but I am trying to understand what I should expect from stocks so that I have a realistic approach to investing.
Thanks so much and stay warm on the ride!
Paul F.
Q: Hello Peter,
What a difference a month makes! In August you wrote an article on reasons to be bullish and a short month later you identified reasons to be bearish. It is now up to us to navigate in those cross currents. At the end of August, I had decided to raise some cash in my RRIF portfolio (I’m 71); it now stands at 15%. If a correction occurs and some of my holdings pull back, I will take advantage of opportunities.
But what worries me are the doom and gloom scenarios that some pundits elaborate and that forecast cataclysmic crashes. So I decided to research for the principal reasons that caused the tech bubble in 2000/01 and the more recent 2008/09 crash. I found out that the answer lies in the bond market, specifically in the yield curve. In the period prior to the tech bubble, the yield curve had flattened and reversed and in the period prior to the recent crash, the yield curve had flattened.
Why is that fact significant? Financial institutions borrow money on the basis of short term bond (lower) rates and, in turn, lend out on the basis of long term bond (higher) rates; they make their money on the differential. But if the yield curve flattens or reverses, these institutions will cease to borrow and lend; as a result, the liquidity in the economy will dry up leading to stagnation and crash.
Knowing very well that there must be other reasons for the downturns, I take comfort in falling back on the KISS principle.
So, I routinely (daily) make it a point to take a look at the yield curve and then move on.
I appreciate your comments,
Tony
What a difference a month makes! In August you wrote an article on reasons to be bullish and a short month later you identified reasons to be bearish. It is now up to us to navigate in those cross currents. At the end of August, I had decided to raise some cash in my RRIF portfolio (I’m 71); it now stands at 15%. If a correction occurs and some of my holdings pull back, I will take advantage of opportunities.
But what worries me are the doom and gloom scenarios that some pundits elaborate and that forecast cataclysmic crashes. So I decided to research for the principal reasons that caused the tech bubble in 2000/01 and the more recent 2008/09 crash. I found out that the answer lies in the bond market, specifically in the yield curve. In the period prior to the tech bubble, the yield curve had flattened and reversed and in the period prior to the recent crash, the yield curve had flattened.
Why is that fact significant? Financial institutions borrow money on the basis of short term bond (lower) rates and, in turn, lend out on the basis of long term bond (higher) rates; they make their money on the differential. But if the yield curve flattens or reverses, these institutions will cease to borrow and lend; as a result, the liquidity in the economy will dry up leading to stagnation and crash.
Knowing very well that there must be other reasons for the downturns, I take comfort in falling back on the KISS principle.
So, I routinely (daily) make it a point to take a look at the yield curve and then move on.
I appreciate your comments,
Tony