Q: Will I avail of the 20 for 1 Split via the CIBC/NEO CDRS? Thanks! Austin
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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.
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Park Lawn Corporation (PLC)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Canadian National Railway Company (CNR)
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Enbridge Inc. (ENB)
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Sun Life Financial Inc. (SLF)
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TELUS Corporation (T)
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Constellation Software Inc. (CSU)
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Fortis Inc. (FTS)
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WSP Global Inc. (WSP)
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Canadian Apartment Properties Real Estate Investment Trust (CAR.UN)
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Chartwell Retirement Residences (CSH.UN)
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Descartes Systems Group Inc. (The) (DSG)
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TFI International Inc. (TFII)
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ATS Corporation (ATS)
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BRP Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (DOO)
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Kinaxis Inc. (KXS)
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Tricon Residential Inc. (TCN)
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Magna International Inc. (MG)
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Thomson Reuters Corporation (TRI)
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Alimentation Couche-Tard Inc. (ATD)
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Premium Brands Holdings Corporation (PBH)
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Shopify Inc. Class A Subordinate Voting Shares (SHOP)
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goeasy Ltd. (GSY)
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Leon's Furniture Limited (LNF)
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Nutrien Ltd. (NTR)
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Boyd Group Services Inc. (BYD)
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Brookfield Infrastructure Corporation Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares (BIPC)
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Brookfield Renewable Corporation Class A Exchangeable Subordinate Voting Shares (BEPC)
Q: About 1 year ago we created an equal-weighted 'balanced' portfolio of 30 Canadian companies in a non-registered account. Most were chosen from companies either covered by a 5i research report or included in a 5i model portfolio. The remainder were chosen, based on the 5i Q&A section, from what appear to be 5i sector favourites. All purchases are made with the intent to be long-term holds (10+ years). As well, we intend to increase our investments over the next 2-3 years, and then adjust over time as needed. Currently the amount invested represents ~40% of the eventual total.
Although a goal is to keep the portfolio roughly equal weighted, of the 30 companies, the following 14 were acquired in 3 purchases (full position) and currently have weights in the 2.31% (SHOP) to 5.00% (ATA) range for an average of 3.71%: CSU, MG, GSY, WSP, LNF, ATD, ATA, SLF, BAM.A, BIPC, FTS, DOO, SHOP and TFII. The remainder were acquired in 2 purchases (2/3 position) and currently have weights in the 1.98% (BEPC) to 3.17% (TCN) range for an average of 2.56%. So, overall, the weightings currently range from ~2% to ~5%.
Over the next 6 months we will invest another ~25% of the eventual total. As we make additional purchases, we need to strike a balance between keeping the weights roughly equal while taking advantage of market opportunities. Please provide some broad guidance/wisdom.
Of the 30 companies in the portfolio, which 10 would you have the highest conviction in today? Please rank them.
Are there any of the 30 that you might consider as candidates to be replaced because there are better options, and if so, what replacements would you suggest and why (disregard tax considerations)?
What additional 3 Canadian companies might you consider adding to the portfolio and why?
As always, thanks for the great service!
Although a goal is to keep the portfolio roughly equal weighted, of the 30 companies, the following 14 were acquired in 3 purchases (full position) and currently have weights in the 2.31% (SHOP) to 5.00% (ATA) range for an average of 3.71%: CSU, MG, GSY, WSP, LNF, ATD, ATA, SLF, BAM.A, BIPC, FTS, DOO, SHOP and TFII. The remainder were acquired in 2 purchases (2/3 position) and currently have weights in the 1.98% (BEPC) to 3.17% (TCN) range for an average of 2.56%. So, overall, the weightings currently range from ~2% to ~5%.
Over the next 6 months we will invest another ~25% of the eventual total. As we make additional purchases, we need to strike a balance between keeping the weights roughly equal while taking advantage of market opportunities. Please provide some broad guidance/wisdom.
Of the 30 companies in the portfolio, which 10 would you have the highest conviction in today? Please rank them.
Are there any of the 30 that you might consider as candidates to be replaced because there are better options, and if so, what replacements would you suggest and why (disregard tax considerations)?
What additional 3 Canadian companies might you consider adding to the portfolio and why?
As always, thanks for the great service!
Q: Hi Guys
I'm interested in buying some ETF. Is there a place where I can compare the different ETF's. I'm looking at buying in different areas Canadian US International etc. Are there any you suggest I should look at. Primarily interested in dividend paying ones but some growth as well
thank you
Steve
I'm interested in buying some ETF. Is there a place where I can compare the different ETF's. I'm looking at buying in different areas Canadian US International etc. Are there any you suggest I should look at. Primarily interested in dividend paying ones but some growth as well
thank you
Steve
Q: Hi,
When reading questions or watching the news, I hear a lot of financial ratios being referenced to. I hear P/S, P/E, etc.. of a stock being high or low, but what is that in comparison to? Is it relative to the historical sector average or vs current peers? There are just so many metrics that it is kind of overwhelming for the average investor. I understand that if you're a professional financial analyst focusing on a certain sector doing this everyday, you know the important valuation metrics to look at within all the companies within a sector. But what about for us general investors that like to look at some of these important data points that hold stocks in various sectors?
At times, I want to compare important metrics of companies in similar sectors when looking at the best investment, say for example in tech semi conductors NVDA vs UCTT vs QCOM. Or if I wanted to compare ATZ vs GOOS VS DOL in a different sector. What are the best data points to compare? For example, div yield, P/E (NTM), P/S (NTM), EV/EBITA (NTM), FCF/Share (FY), PEG, EBITA CAGR (5Y), REV CAGR (5Y), Net Debt (FY), etc...These are just some examples that I see. I'm more a growth investor so I assume Rev CAGR would be an important data point to watch, for example. I would imagine that you compare different data points when comparing companies in the tech sector vs if you are comparing stocks within the energy sector. Such terms like operating cashflow, net cash, EPS/REV growth, debt, I hear lots from your answers so should these data points always be on my screen? Or is it more important to look at the data points in relation to how they are trending vs historical years and quarters of that specific company.
I have a watchlist of my portfolio with stocks in all different sectors that I look at daily and would like to keep track of important data points at a high level. For example, I have EBITDA(FY) as one column and can easily sort it so I can see which of companies are unprofitable, or CFO so I easily sort that to see which companies have negative cash flow from operations. What would be on your screen if you had to pick say 10-15 data columns and what is your financial analysis process like?
Thanks!
When reading questions or watching the news, I hear a lot of financial ratios being referenced to. I hear P/S, P/E, etc.. of a stock being high or low, but what is that in comparison to? Is it relative to the historical sector average or vs current peers? There are just so many metrics that it is kind of overwhelming for the average investor. I understand that if you're a professional financial analyst focusing on a certain sector doing this everyday, you know the important valuation metrics to look at within all the companies within a sector. But what about for us general investors that like to look at some of these important data points that hold stocks in various sectors?
At times, I want to compare important metrics of companies in similar sectors when looking at the best investment, say for example in tech semi conductors NVDA vs UCTT vs QCOM. Or if I wanted to compare ATZ vs GOOS VS DOL in a different sector. What are the best data points to compare? For example, div yield, P/E (NTM), P/S (NTM), EV/EBITA (NTM), FCF/Share (FY), PEG, EBITA CAGR (5Y), REV CAGR (5Y), Net Debt (FY), etc...These are just some examples that I see. I'm more a growth investor so I assume Rev CAGR would be an important data point to watch, for example. I would imagine that you compare different data points when comparing companies in the tech sector vs if you are comparing stocks within the energy sector. Such terms like operating cashflow, net cash, EPS/REV growth, debt, I hear lots from your answers so should these data points always be on my screen? Or is it more important to look at the data points in relation to how they are trending vs historical years and quarters of that specific company.
I have a watchlist of my portfolio with stocks in all different sectors that I look at daily and would like to keep track of important data points at a high level. For example, I have EBITDA(FY) as one column and can easily sort it so I can see which of companies are unprofitable, or CFO so I easily sort that to see which companies have negative cash flow from operations. What would be on your screen if you had to pick say 10-15 data columns and what is your financial analysis process like?
Thanks!
Q: In a rising interest rate environment, what fixed income products perform relatively better? Would US TIPS or floating rate loans be an acceptable option?
Thanks
Thanks
Q: I know Nucor and Teck are different, but for growth, which would you choose now...or would you own both?
Q: You answered my question this morning, asking which stock to put into a RSP, as if I asked for stock to put in TFSA. Very different tax consequences.
What would I put in RSP from this list? I would think a stable but slower growth choice could work well.
What would I put in RSP from this list? I would think a stable but slower growth choice could work well.
Q: I've been looking at copper companies. Southern copper appears enticing because of the dividend and the price of copper. What do you think the long term prospects of this company are? Thanks.
Q: Dear 5i team.
Please give us your updated assessment of Flow in light of recent results reported.
Many thanks,
Please give us your updated assessment of Flow in light of recent results reported.
Many thanks,
Q: Good morning,
I am looking for some suggestions on a dividend stock with growth potential to be held in CAD side of TFSA long term hold. Current holdings in account are. CAD: TOI ,TD, HEO, in USD: BAM, NTR, V, NVDA, ROBLX, CMPS
Thanks for the great service you and your team provide
I am looking for some suggestions on a dividend stock with growth potential to be held in CAD side of TFSA long term hold. Current holdings in account are. CAD: TOI ,TD, HEO, in USD: BAM, NTR, V, NVDA, ROBLX, CMPS
Thanks for the great service you and your team provide
Q: Currently own Telus but it appears to be stuck in a trading range. Would a switch to BCE for a telco position, offer more growth in addition to a slightly better dividend? Many thanks.
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DocuSign Inc. (DOCU)
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CrowdStrike Holdings Inc. (CRWD)
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Digital Turbine Inc. (APPS)
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Unity Software Inc. (U)
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Upstart Holdings Inc. (UPST)
Q: Hi folks. I am at a 47% loss in a registered account. It now is only a small percentage. Might it be a good idea to sell and circle back in about a year. What could be a better replacement?
Also January often tells us what kind of an investing year we will have as does the 2nd year of a presidency. What are your thoughts? It appears to be setting up for a tough year.
Thank you for your guidance as always
Also January often tells us what kind of an investing year we will have as does the 2nd year of a presidency. What are your thoughts? It appears to be setting up for a tough year.
Thank you for your guidance as always
Q: Hi 5i Team,
In my RRSP, does it make sense to switch from PG to ABBV? Appreciated it if you can give the reasons.
Best,
Matt
In my RRSP, does it make sense to switch from PG to ABBV? Appreciated it if you can give the reasons.
Best,
Matt
Q: Any ideas why the stock pat:ca jumped recently? What is your take on this stock? What is the forecast for this stock? Any headwind with rising interest?
Thanks
Thanks
Q: Recently sold Teck in the material sector. Any suggestion (uranium, lithium, iron, rare earth, etc. US or Cdn) will do. Currently holding ABX. Thanks.
Q: My acb is $10. I've been watching the stock fall over the last year. Would you sell to lock in gains, or continue to hold. What is your outlook for the stock. Thanks
Q: What are your three highest conviction growth stocks from your Growth Portfolio at this time. This for a long term medium to higher risk for my TSFA. I already have all the stocks in the Balanced Portfolio.
Q: Hi 5i,
Both reported this morning. Can you comment? Which would you prefer today?
TIA!
Both reported this morning. Can you comment? Which would you prefer today?
TIA!
Q: I am interested in your views upon these two base metal royalty companies. They strike me as a good play for the mining sector. APY just reported a seemingly excellent quarter. Would owning both give too much duplication?
Q: can you please explain why this stock has gone from 24 to 120 in two years?
is it acquisitions that drive this price? and can you comment on the after close earnings? many thanks...
is it acquisitions that drive this price? and can you comment on the after close earnings? many thanks...