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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: Hello Team 5i,
I own the companies listed above within a TFSA
REAL is smallest holding at 11% of this account = approx 12k
I will add 6k to TFSA in Jan 21

I am considering four options
Keep REAL and BUY more REAL with 6k
Keep REAL and BUY more XBC, STC, ATA and/or WELL with 6k
SELL REAL and BUY NVEI with 18k
SELL REAL and BUY more XBC, STC, ATA and/or WELL with 18k

-sector allocation not a consideration
-transaction costs not a concern
-concentration (# of securities) within TFSA not a consideration

Your thoughts please?

All the best to all the people at 5i who provide such a wonderful service.
Steve P
Read Answer Asked by Steve on December 23, 2020
Q: I own all these in my utilites allocation (AQN 3.5%, BEPC 2.4%, FTS 2.5%, NPI 1.6%). I'm looking to pull some capital out of these to redirect towards industrials and consumer cyclicals for the upcoming year. Could you perhaps rank them on valuation, and/or suggest which way you might go, i.e. shave a little off each, equal weight them, drop one or more, etc. Thank-you as always.
Read Answer Asked by Peter on December 23, 2020
Q: Hi Peter et al:
I had some EMC shares, and when dell tyook them over I received 7 Dell shares. I want to increase this to an even 100- 300 depending on your advice. I researched Dell a little and read a comparison with Apple. Ranks 3rd in the pc market behind HP and Lenovo. Has 45 bil debt, but might spin off Vmware ( 81% x 60 bil=50 bil for Dell. Investors would then get the rest of the company for nothing.Currfent debt/Equity 110%. Apple 6%. Apple cash 190 bil. At current valuations Dell looks more attractive. Apple p/s 7.5x Dell .6x. It has a peg ratio under 1. Apple 2.4. Please advise. Maybe I should just sell the 7 shares and forget it. I don't like small odd numbers. Thank you, as always.
BEN.
Read Answer Asked by BEN on December 23, 2020
Q: Your thoughts on selling XLF to buy JPM & BAC and selling PFE & GILD to buy ARKG.

Thank you!
Read Answer Asked by Nhung on December 23, 2020
Q: I am trying to clean up our RIF, TFSA, and cash accounts. I believe that 5i has suggested that capital gain stocks are best in the TFSA. A RIF should not have dividend stocks, they should be in the non registered account.
I want to move in kind BCE from a TFSA account to our non registered account in December. In January I want to move BCE, CN, and RY out of a RIF. This would be the 2021 withdrawal from the RIF. These would be moved in kind from the RIF into the non-registered account. CN would be moved same day to theTFSA in January as a part of the contribution for 2021.

I thought I had sent the same question on Sunday night but I have not had a response yet so I’m assuming that it was lost somewhere. Hopefully I have not confused you and I have given you the picture. My question primarily is your thoughts on the general idea of what I have proposed. The CN stock is being put in to the TFSA because it will be more of a growth stock and the dividend is smaller.

Also where would you suggest a US stock be held? We have one or two growth stocks like SQ, no dividend, that we would like to put into the TFSA. Is that appropriate?

Thanks again for all that 5i does. Much appreciated.
John
Read Answer Asked by John on December 23, 2020
Q: DCTH and MLND What are your thoughts on these company’s
Thanks for the help
Read Answer Asked by Sam on December 23, 2020
Q: Hi Peter and team:
My question is about Drips and more importantly discounts on drips. I have had IPL for a number of years, and at one time they offered a discount. I truly believed, and was told that I was getting the discount on reinvestment. My shares are held in my RBC Direct investing account. I now read that this is an Rbc synthetic drip, and the only way to ever get the discount is to hold the shares in your own name. In a RRIF this would be impossible. Please fill me in on my lack of knowledge. Thanks, BEN.
Read Answer Asked by BEN on December 23, 2020
Q: Hello 5i team,
In a recent answer to a question from Tom about conpanies as a possible target to be acquired, you included CXI. I would like to know what characteristics of CXI makes it a potential candidate besides low valuation and cash on the balance sheet? I know the president of CXI has gone through this process before: has he ever mentioned specifically this endgame before for CXI? I would think that selling at this price + premium would be like a failure in the actual venture. And by what type of acquirers? A bank?
Thank you for your collaboration, Eric
Read Answer Asked by Eric on December 23, 2020
Q: My wife insisted I send this to thank you for her kitchen reno. (Lol)

Seriously, though, than you for your hard work and wonderful advice.

Have a merry Christmas and a safe holiday.

Mike
Read Answer Asked by michael on December 23, 2020
Q: Retired dividend-income investor. For the equity portion of a typical income focused portfolio, can you give me your suggested asset allocation for the 11 sectors. Thanks in advance...Steve
Read Answer Asked by Stephen on December 23, 2020
Q: I read your answers about Topicus shares from the CSU spinout. I have 50 CSU shares, so at a rate of 1.859817814 I would get 92.99 Topicus shares. You can't get any closer to a whole number than that. From what you said the number of spinoff shares is rounded DOWN. So even with 0.99 of a share they won't give me a whole share of Topicus? So I would end up with 92 Topicus shares plus some cash?

By the way, how/why did they come up with such a fraction? Why couldn't they just make it simple: you get 2 Topicus shares for every 1 CSU share (and then work backwards to make the math work)?

Paul
Read Answer Asked by Paul on December 23, 2020
Q: I forget to ask another question about CSU shares. My CSU shares are on the US side of my non-registered account (so that I collect the dividend in US dollars). With the spinout of the Topicus shares are there any ramifications of having the CSU shares on the US side of my account? Will the "dividend" be calculated in US dollars or CA dollars (given that they pay their regular quarterly dividend in US$)? Should I journal the shares back to the Canadian side of the account? If yes, is it too late to journal them back to the Canadian side of the account given that the ex-dividend date is Dec 23rd, and my broker wouldn't complete the journalling transaction until Dec 24th or after Christmas?

Paul
Read Answer Asked by Paul on December 23, 2020
Q: Ah! The magic of compound interest. Be warned I did this by my adding machine. What I came up with:
If you contributed the max. amount every year to your TFSA starting Jan.1/09, & made 10% every year, your total contributions of $69,500. magically became $133,029. on Dec. 31/20.
Almost a double! It will be when you put up $6,000. for 2021
Read Answer Asked by Joseph on December 23, 2020
Q: Hi Team,
I would like to send a gift subscription to 5iReseach to someone, and there does not seem to be a link for that on your web site. Just wondering how should I go about sending a gift subscription.
Cheers,
Read Answer Asked by Harry on December 22, 2020
Q: Please provide your top 10 ranked Canadian and US stock that are dividend aristocrats (at least 5 years of increases annually to their dividend or distribution) in the order you would purchase them.
Read Answer Asked by David on December 22, 2020
Q: Hi 5I! Two questions here for the end of 2020.

1- LSPD is now a 100% above its pre-pandemic levels with a market cap of more than 9 bln. Share price has doubled in two months. All of this with negative net income, negative net margin, negative ROE, negative EPS, etc... Price to sales ratio is at a astounding 39+! And, a probably decent portion of its customers still on lock-down around the world. I understand growth expectation are high and analysts are pounding the table on this one. The quintessence of the "Recovery" play. But at what point, to put it mildly, can we honestly say the stock is getting a bit ahead of itself? Isn't the downside risk factor growing at a equal alarming pace here, if things don't pan out like everyone expect? Don't get me wrong, I'm very happy to have bought the stock back in april. But I've learned over the years to be very careful when things get too easy. My best success in the market have always been acheived on the long run, with lots of patience and when things are boring.

2- FSZ has been trading at a very high yield for a long time now. How worry should I be since the yield stubbornly refuses to return to more "normal" levels. Either the market deeply undervalues the company or it thinks their payout ratio is too high and a dividend cut highly probable. Or, I'm missing something, which is also highly probable. Your toughts on this would be very appreciated.

To everyone at 5i, have a great holiday, happy New Year 2021 and thank you for your great work in 2020.
Read Answer Asked by Stéphane on December 22, 2020