skip to content
  1. Home
  2. >
  3. Investment Q&A
You can view 3 more answers this month. Sign up for a free trial for unlimited access.

Investment Q&A

Not investment advice or solicitation to buy/sell securities. Do your own due diligence and/or consult an advisor.

Q: Please recommend one of the financial companies to be added in my portfolio.
Read Answer Asked by Dev on January 09, 2019
Q: Hi Guys. BNP Paribas
I think its one of Frances largest publicly traded banks. It has a pretty good track record of being profitable, has a pretty broad product line, Insurance, wealth management etc, pays a good dividend, looks reasonably valued.
Would you feel this is a safe investment at this price for a long term hold, and is there a risk of it getting hammered even more like the U.S. banks did in 2008.
thanks Gord
Read Answer Asked by Gordon on January 07, 2019
Q: Hello,
i have little exposure to financials in my TFSA. What would be your top 3 ideas in order of preference at this time I could consider? I plan to own for the next 10 to 15 years if possible.
I was looking at GS and FSZ given the yield and they are trading near their lows. I guess the sub-sector they operate in makes me a bit cautious.
I own full positions of BNS and SLF in my RRSP.
Thanks,
Dan
Read Answer Asked by Daniel on January 07, 2019
Q: Q: As part of the financial sector of an income portfolio of a retiree would prefer POW or LB for "reliable" income with some (inflation) growth? Thanks.

Asked by David on September 10, 2018
5I RESEARCH ANSWER:
We would far prefer POW here.

Regarding the above question, I would to understand the business fundamentals for why you answered as strongly about LB vs POW.

The purpose of the question is improving my investor education / smarts.

To the naive / superficial investor; they look like stable financial sector businesses with strong track records at paying their dividends.

thanks for trying to educate me;)

Ernie
Read Answer Asked by Ernest on January 02, 2019
Q: Peter,

I am confused. The major banks have a year end of October 31st. I can go to Morningstar and the financial statements are already posted. Are these tentative numbers? It would take a lot longer than two months to have final numbers Taxes are not even due until 180 days after year end. As a general rule, how many months after corporate year end do companies release their final financial statements?

Happy New Year and many thanks for all the work this year !

Paul
Read Answer Asked by paul on December 31, 2018
Q: I am looking for a sanity check. I am a retired income investor so I like covered calls like BMO's ZW series. However I believe the market is at or near a bottom so owning covered calls ETFs is significantly less appealing than owning the underlying stocks, especially since I can claim some capital losses. So, for example, yesterday I sold ZWB and bought RY. Am I making sense? I do realize I am a bit less diversified and I realize I would need to buy a few companies to replace say ZWC.
Thanks
don
Read Answer Asked by Don on December 19, 2018