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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,
This is a follow up to another member question/answer from July 26, 2019. "But we would still prefer building one's own ETF with 10 to 15 stocks. Yes, there will be some that decline. But this will ensure proper diversification, eliminate fees, and (likely) get you higher income and overall returns. Owning 15 or so stocks across 11 sectors is not that difficult, but there is a trade off between effort (and perhaps inexperience) and costs. But this would also be the easiest way to balance out the account with no concentration risk, over time." is the portion I'd like more information on. I currently hold XIC:CA for the bulk of my Canadian exposure. If i were looking to "replicate" the XIC ETF with 15 stocks over 11 sectors, would you recommend equal weighting across all sectors and do you have any stand out stock picks to represent each sector in this scenario. Thanks!
Read Answer Asked by Daryl on September 26, 2019
Q: Could you please tell me how the fundamentals are calculated in divided class share structured companies? Could the answer could include A,B,Preferred shares? How would rules apply to Market cap/ P/Eratios, or anything else? Would it be total market cap of both a and b shares or per class when I view them on a company profile? Is every company required to report this the same way? How about general calculations of the company. What is the best method for me to look at when I wish to do research on a company. I use ATD.A,B as an example but any example you wish will be fine.
Thank you
Jeremy
Read Answer Asked by Jeremy on September 26, 2019
Q: Is this the right time to buy any of the above ETF's or will they continue to slide down?
Read Answer Asked by Terry on September 25, 2019
Q: I am retired and hold the above ETFs in my RIF, TFSA accounts. Please advise which ETFs you would hold in this environment and which are duplicated. I am looking for stability and safe dividends. Thanks for your input.
Read Answer Asked by diane joan on September 25, 2019
Q: I have about 150k in an RESP account for my 2 kids ( grade 9 and 12) so next year kid 1 will start withdrawing funds and kid 2 in 4 years. I've maxed out the match up grants so no new contributions. I hold mostly global growth mutual funds and am thinking I should shift to a more conservative dividend aristocrat type of holding. This would maintain equity and start generating some income vs more global growth focus I have used to get to this point. Do you have a suggestion for 1-3 low cost mutual funds or ETFs to generate some income and be good holdings for the drawdown period over the next 8 years.
Read Answer Asked by Tom on September 25, 2019
Q: I currently own CPD in a taxable account at a loss position. With interest rates looking like they are going downwards would it be positive for preferred resets? Would you be okay with a switch from CPD to XBB at this time? I have CPD as part of my fixed income portfolio even though it is kind of a hybrid between equity and bond. Thanks for your insight
Read Answer Asked by Rudy on September 25, 2019
Q: Good morning 5i,
I am looking for advice on US dollar fixed income possibilities in this particular economic climate. I have some of the two mentionned and wondering whether I should continue holding them? also, what would be a good buy at the moment?
thanks
Read Answer Asked by joseph on September 25, 2019
Q: Most of my information is supplied by your insightful replies in this form but now require a little more direction.
Need to convert about 105000 from rrsp to rrif .
Am looking for 4 or 5 ETFs that are dividend payers as all our needs are covered with
oas and cpp plus company pension.
We also have tfsa, US and Canadian trading accounts so this would be for discretionary spending.
Thank you
Barry
Read Answer Asked by Barry on September 25, 2019
Q: The 2.0 version of the rate reset preferreds (with the floor feature) offered by the likes of Enbridge, Brookfield, etc. would seem to provide a compelling combination of high-quality downside protection plus upside opportunity, especially in the existing low-rate scenario. Why are they mostly spurned, and at some point wouldn't the corporations bite the bullet and redeem them at par, to be replaced with other forms of corporate debt with lower liability? Thanks very much.
Read Answer Asked by Howard on September 25, 2019