Q: The fourth article ("Dividends for the long run")in the last "5 from 5i" by Michael was kind of thought provoking. There was research by Credit Suisse that found that "Cash Cows" (high CFROI/low growth) and "Dogs" (low CFROI/low growth) had outperformed in cumulative shareholder return going back 4 decades. If I understood correctly the thesis seemed to be that performance is a function of expectations versus what really happens and that for stocks that were "Cows" or "Dogs" expectations tended to be consistently too pessimistic which actually ended up leading to better share performance as expectations were exceeded. Are there any Canadian companies that come to mind that you think fall within those two profiles just to help me relate to some real life examples? Thanks,
Q: Could you tell me what is the weighting of REF.UN of appartments/office/retail? It's very weak relative to CAR.UN so I assume it has little weighting to appartments. Thank you.
Q: Could you please comment on this morning's results. Given that their Q4 revenue was higher than the entire previous fiscal year's revenue, it would seem that their growth trajectory is very much intact.
Q: How much longer would you give EFL to turnaround. I'm down over 20% now. Do you expect the next earning release to be a catalyst. Do you have a rule of thumb as to what percentage loss to consider a sale.
Q: GoldMoney -ZAU- released their latest positive #$. Could you please analyze and comment on this interesting alt. fin concern. Potential, future, validity, general comment and #$ parsing.
Thank you
Q: It would appear that a 5% exposure to the Oil and Energy Sector is the current recommendation. Should energy midstream and infrastructure companies be included in determining ones exposure?
Q: Laurentian Bank stock moved up 3% today on good volume. Is there company specific news? I thought it might be money coming back into Canadian financials following the vote of confidence from Buffett, however, the stock moved way more than other banks. Thanks!
Q: Was interested in your view on TEXAS PACIFIC LAND TRUST. Looks like a boring play that keeps grinding higher year after year. They seem to have a unique situation with their land holdings.
I'm looking for some reliable income that isn't from common share dividends. I currently have no exposure to bonds. What's your opinion of this mutual fund for that asset class? The MER seems a bit rich and I'm struggling to see how they can deliver a yield of 7.89% on floating rate bonds.
Q: Hi, I want to increase my sector weightings in Manufacturing and Industrial stocks, plus obtain some Income. I currently hold Barrick ($7K); CAE ($37K); CNR ($58K), Intel ($20K); Pfizer($17K)and Wajax ($10K). Looking to invest $40K more in this area, your suggestions would be appreciated. Thanks!
Q: I have been following AGT as it hits new lows. I am considering gradual purchases (1.5%of portfolio to 4.5 %) if and when the price begins to rebound . I believe their market will grow over the years but wonder what your thoughts are of the company and if you believe a stock price increase will happen over the next 6 months?
Q: Nvidia is one of your favorite US stocks. Yet it is almost 51x forward earnings. I own some but am hesitant about taking a full position in case the stock suddenly crashes back to earth. Is it really worth so much higher a value than AVGO, which is only at 15x forward earnings?
Q: I bought some units of KWH.UN during their recent financing not realizing that they are subscription receipts (KWH.R), not units that I have in another account (KWH.UN). What is the difference?
Thanks.
Q: A book I am reading says that the nominal return for bonds going back to 1928 is 4.9% represented by 10-year U.S. government-issued treasuries. How is this return calculated? How is the return on 10-year bonds transformed into an annual compound return?
Q: Why is everyone pumping like crazy except OPEC? Is it market share or, especially the US shale drillers, is everyone trying to take business from OPEC at the expense of selling their oil at a lower price. It makes sense to me to cut back a bit and let the price rise so, with a higher oil price, revenues go UP and resources do NOT go up exponentially. What am I missing?
Is it time to start accumulating Canadian oil stocks - Surge is below two dollars, Spartan is $1.85!!, Gear is sixty cents and RMP is a half a dollar. Are these stocks good to a significant bump when oil rises and would you now see it to be a good time to slightly average down on heavy losses?
If not now, when? I know the BTA - Border tax adjustment - is still an issue and you have favourites other than the above-listed. I am looking at WCP, RRX and VET, as well.
Thanks.