Q: What do you think of Enovix Battery and Enphase Energy? Profitability wise and as a good investment?
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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 again your thoughts on Remitly Global
Thanks again.
Thanks again.
Q: I believe shares of BNRE are still exchangeable into shares of BN after their re-org, I know you are positive on the prospects of BN.
BNRE is starting as a smaller player in their industry but looks to aggressively grow.
By buying BNRE , at minimum , would you not get the same potential returns as BN but have potential for higher upside if their insurance business grow successfully.
Thank you
BNRE is starting as a smaller player in their industry but looks to aggressively grow.
By buying BNRE , at minimum , would you not get the same potential returns as BN but have potential for higher upside if their insurance business grow successfully.
Thank you
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Fairfax India Holdings Corporation Subordinate Voting Shares (FIH.U)
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BMO Low Volatility US Equity ETF (ZLU)
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Vanguard Dividend Appreciation FTF (VIG)
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SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (SPY)
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iShares MSCI India Small-Cap ETF (SMIN)
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iShares MSCI India ETF (INDA)
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iShares MSCI China ETF (MCHI)
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iShares S&P India Nifty 50 Index Fund (INDY)
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KraneShares CSI China Internet ETF (KWEB)
Q: Emerging markets are getting some attention lately for reasonable valuations.
India is being mentioned as a strong growth country. Many experts suggest US large corps as a better way to invest rather than the corps of the emerging markets .
What are your thoughts and ideas for investment to take advantage of emerging markets as far as actual emerging market etf or etf of large cap US based major exporters/worldwide etf. ?
India is being mentioned as a strong growth country. Many experts suggest US large corps as a better way to invest rather than the corps of the emerging markets .
What are your thoughts and ideas for investment to take advantage of emerging markets as far as actual emerging market etf or etf of large cap US based major exporters/worldwide etf. ?
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iShares 1-5 Year Laddered Corporate Bond Index ETF (CBO)
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iShares Core Canadian Universe Bond Index ETF (XBB)
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iShares Core Canadian Long Term Bond Index ETF (XLB)
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iShares U.S. High Yield Bond Index ETF (CAD-Hedged) (XHY)
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iShares 20+ Year Treasury Bond ETF (TLT)
Q: Good morning,
With bond rates moving higher can you suggest your top 3 bond etf's to gain exposure at a low cost. Would holding these in a registered or cash account be best? As always thank you for your time
With bond rates moving higher can you suggest your top 3 bond etf's to gain exposure at a low cost. Would holding these in a registered or cash account be best? As always thank you for your time
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Cisco Systems Inc. (CSCO)
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Hasbro Inc. (HAS)
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Salesforce Inc. (CRM)
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The Walt Disney Company (DIS)
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CAE Inc. (CAE)
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Cargojet Inc. Common and Variable Voting Shares (CJT)
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Atlassian Corporation (TEAM)
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Generac Holdlings Inc. (GNRC)
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Crocs Inc. (CROX)
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Converge Technology Solutions Corp. (CTS)
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Ciena Corporation (CIEN)
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Charter Communications Inc. (CHTR)
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FNF Group of Fidelity National Financial Inc. (FNF)
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YETI Holdings Inc. (YETI)
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BioNTech SE (BNTX)
Q: Hello 5i Team,
I'm looking to sell the following 12 stocks in my cash account to crystallize some losses in anticipation of better buying opportunities in the fall: BNTX, CAE, CHTR, CIEN, CJT, CTS, DIS, FNF, GNRC, HAS, TEAM, and YETI.
For each of these stocks, could you please indicate: HOLD; SELL; or SELL + RE-BUY (with suggested proxy).
Feel free to deduct as many credits as you see fit.
Thanks in advance for your always helpful advice!
I'm looking to sell the following 12 stocks in my cash account to crystallize some losses in anticipation of better buying opportunities in the fall: BNTX, CAE, CHTR, CIEN, CJT, CTS, DIS, FNF, GNRC, HAS, TEAM, and YETI.
For each of these stocks, could you please indicate: HOLD; SELL; or SELL + RE-BUY (with suggested proxy).
Feel free to deduct as many credits as you see fit.
Thanks in advance for your always helpful advice!
Q: i know you prefer in a tax shelterd account but how would the distrbution be taxed in a cash account
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BCE Inc. (BCE)
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TELUS Corporation (T)
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TELUS International (Cda) Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (TIXT)
Q: Hi, Telco stocks have been weak for past few months , with new 52 weeks lows. perhaps due to pressure from increased competition ( Rogers/Shaw) and rising interest rates. Many analysts have also revised their price targets lower, in anticipation of weak results and soft outlook, at least in the near term.
My question is more specific to Telus, which was hit hard today, due to lower guidance announced by TIXT. Although, TIXT accounts for only 10% of Telus revenues/earnings, but it appears to be a continuous drag for the parent co. I know, 5i hold TIXT in its portfolio and has been supporting to own the stock, despite its downward trajectory for a long time. Telus now faces not just industry challenge from its peers, but also additional impact with negative and uncertain outlook for TIXT.
In light of this, if we wish to own only one Telco, would it be safer and
My question is more specific to Telus, which was hit hard today, due to lower guidance announced by TIXT. Although, TIXT accounts for only 10% of Telus revenues/earnings, but it appears to be a continuous drag for the parent co. I know, 5i hold TIXT in its portfolio and has been supporting to own the stock, despite its downward trajectory for a long time. Telus now faces not just industry challenge from its peers, but also additional impact with negative and uncertain outlook for TIXT.
In light of this, if we wish to own only one Telco, would it be safer and
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Brookfield Corporation Class A Limited Voting Shares (BN)
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Brookfield Asset Management Ltd. Class A Limited Voting Shares (BAM)
Q: YOU HAVE BEEN VERY SUPPORTIVE OF BN. SHOULD I SELL BAM AND CONSOLIDATE BN.
Q: Hi 5 i Team - I hold some PBH but am considering switching to QSR since it appears to have more opportunities for stock growth, at least in the next couple of years. Do you have a preference between the two at this point based on fundamentals, management and overall outlook. Thanks.
Q: would ZFM and/or IEI bond etf be a good addition to balanced portfolio as substitute or addition to broad based bond etf ?
Q: I am down significantly on these ETF's, down 17% with distribution included on ZPR with it representing 3.6% of my portfolio and down 7% on ZLI or 0.8% with distribution with ZLI representing 3.1% of the portfolio. These were added prior to the rising interest rate environment with the desire for income. Given the unit price have declined so significantly on ZPR (24%), would it be a good move to average down on this ETF in this interest rate sensitive environment? At least the ZPR is mainly held outside registered accounts so the significant capital loss could be used to offset other gains if I was to sell? What would you do with these funds at this point? Hold, Sell, Average down or...?
Q: What am I missing about PBH: high crazy debt, low ROE, high P/R . High interest rates must be hurting them with all this debt. I never bought because it always seems expensive. My neighbour and his LP have held 7% shares for many years - bought low single digits. I should have listened to him all those many years ago - LOL.. Too expensive to buy now as I can get better returns in banks: capital and compounding dividends. Just curious on your comments. I thought ofd buying at $79.00 and, of course did not do so.
Q: Uh oh. Tonight's news release didn't sound great. I'm down 50% on this stock but don't mind holding if you still think it has long-term potential. Any updated thoughts on this stock? Thanks.
Q: Best table pounding buy today for a registered account any sector?
Q: Hello,
What are your 2 favorite covered call etfs and why? Do you generally recommend them for the average investor?
What are your 2 favorite covered call etfs and why? Do you generally recommend them for the average investor?
Q: Good Afternoon,
I have held EMA for income for a number of years. The stock price has been falling for a while now. Is there some problem with the company itself or is this whole sector out of favor? I really appreciate your advice which I always find very helpful.
Jane
I have held EMA for income for a number of years. The stock price has been falling for a while now. Is there some problem with the company itself or is this whole sector out of favor? I really appreciate your advice which I always find very helpful.
Jane
Q: May you please provide an update on KFRC?
I am holding it at a 15% loss in an RRSP.
Would you continue to hold or cut your losses?
If your suggestion is to move out, please offer a few of your more recent high convictions picks.
Thank you.
I am holding it at a 15% loss in an RRSP.
Would you continue to hold or cut your losses?
If your suggestion is to move out, please offer a few of your more recent high convictions picks.
Thank you.
Q: Hello 5i,
In a previous answer you indicated that DE could be purchased in a range somewhat below $6.30 per share as I recall. I initiated a position slightly under that and now need to add my next tranche. Since that time, however, they have raised their dividend and the share price is now around $7.30. The short term chart is fairly strong. The question is: what would now be an attractive entry point for my second tranche? Should I try and wait for a pull-back of some sort or just bite the bullet and proceed?
Thanks!!
Cheers,
Mike
In a previous answer you indicated that DE could be purchased in a range somewhat below $6.30 per share as I recall. I initiated a position slightly under that and now need to add my next tranche. Since that time, however, they have raised their dividend and the share price is now around $7.30. The short term chart is fairly strong. The question is: what would now be an attractive entry point for my second tranche? Should I try and wait for a pull-back of some sort or just bite the bullet and proceed?
Thanks!!
Cheers,
Mike
Q: 10:31 AM 7/11/2023
We would appreciate Peter's opinion because we are concerned about the litany of advice we hear against large portfolio concentrations in individual stocks or sectors because we are repeatedly told this is bad.
But in your answer to Angelo's question on the 7 giant US technology companies on June 23rd 23 you said "some investors like concentration. In fact, done right, concentration is one of the better ways to increase wealth. But for a general investor, we would suggest a cap of about 30% here.
5i seem to be content with 15% in the Brookfields
June 22nd to James you said "We typically get nervous as our [individual] weightings approach 10% and caution against a 'one stock' portfolio".
In our own portfolios of Canadian stocks, as long term forever holders would not the same logic apply to hold a 30% or more weighting in the 5 big Canadian Banks through all the ups and downs of the markets, for steady dividend income with some growth?
One family member has comfortably held RY since 1968 and 10 shares bought 55 years ago have grown to 326 shares today through 4 stock splits and dividend reinvestment when available, and never regretted or worried about it.
The same logic must surely apply to holding other large sector positions: 15% in 3 Pipelines, 35% in 7 Utilities, and 2 Telecoms.
I know most Brokers and Advisors like to advocate "diversification" and "trimming" and switching to "hot" sectors but it seems to me that much of these strategies are designed, even with the best of intentions, to just encourage trading and switching to generate fees.
So Peter's best advice please - in the end how bad is it to just hold a concentrated Canadian Blue Chip portfolio in Financials, Pipelines, Utilities, and Telecoms with a small 15% scattering in some other sectors? This way we have few worries, no foreign currency risk, miss the thrilling scary ups and the frightening crashes [like Nortel and Concordia], but sleep at night.
Thank you............ Paul W. K.
We would appreciate Peter's opinion because we are concerned about the litany of advice we hear against large portfolio concentrations in individual stocks or sectors because we are repeatedly told this is bad.
But in your answer to Angelo's question on the 7 giant US technology companies on June 23rd 23 you said "some investors like concentration. In fact, done right, concentration is one of the better ways to increase wealth. But for a general investor, we would suggest a cap of about 30% here.
5i seem to be content with 15% in the Brookfields
June 22nd to James you said "We typically get nervous as our [individual] weightings approach 10% and caution against a 'one stock' portfolio".
In our own portfolios of Canadian stocks, as long term forever holders would not the same logic apply to hold a 30% or more weighting in the 5 big Canadian Banks through all the ups and downs of the markets, for steady dividend income with some growth?
One family member has comfortably held RY since 1968 and 10 shares bought 55 years ago have grown to 326 shares today through 4 stock splits and dividend reinvestment when available, and never regretted or worried about it.
The same logic must surely apply to holding other large sector positions: 15% in 3 Pipelines, 35% in 7 Utilities, and 2 Telecoms.
I know most Brokers and Advisors like to advocate "diversification" and "trimming" and switching to "hot" sectors but it seems to me that much of these strategies are designed, even with the best of intentions, to just encourage trading and switching to generate fees.
So Peter's best advice please - in the end how bad is it to just hold a concentrated Canadian Blue Chip portfolio in Financials, Pipelines, Utilities, and Telecoms with a small 15% scattering in some other sectors? This way we have few worries, no foreign currency risk, miss the thrilling scary ups and the frightening crashes [like Nortel and Concordia], but sleep at night.
Thank you............ Paul W. K.