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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, I currently hold NWC in my TFSA, it has a good dividend but the stock has been weak lately. What is your view on this stock? Would that make sense to replace it with PBH which is in the same sector? I know that you have these two companies in your model portfolios, but you certainly have a preference for one of them in terms of growth potential. Thanks, Gervais
Read Answer Asked by Gervais on April 24, 2019
Q: AD is now paying a 9% dividend which makes it very tempting. I have been investing a long time and have generally found high yield dividend stocks often disappoint. On the other hand I also understand that there are moments where the market will misprice stock values and create opportunity.
So in the case of AD am I correct that holding the stock (which I do) is reasonable and that the stock should appreciate to a value supporting a 4 to 6% yield.
On the other side, at a 9% yield the general market does not share my view and I think predicts a material event or dividend cut.
I have a long time frame and high risk tolerance.
So my question is when does the high yield give you cause for concern?
Thanks John
Read Answer Asked by John on April 23, 2019
Q: Hello, I’m interested in buying a 3 % position in nfi. I’m holding back because it was a $60 a share stock not that long ago. I keep thinking if I bought at $50 i would be upset ,because as a dividend stock that pays 4+% it should have some stability with that dividend, assuming nothing is wrong with the company. I have read on your question platform that you do not think anything is that wrong with nfi.
Question is is it a good time to buy with a decent time frame, or stay away, as it seems to be acting like a small cap oil company with no dividend?
Read Answer Asked by Brad on April 22, 2019
Q: Hi 5i team, I am doing some due diligence on PEO. PEO will become a take out candidate (for a AON, Mercer, WTS, Morneau-Sheppell): at what conditions or what size? As the company ever discussed about a Toronto listing? What are your expectations about it? Would you agree that these two main lines (broker and TPA) of business are pretty much recession resistant? The CEO mentioned that he expects to make several acquisition of “non-controling interest” in the next few years: It should be a good move since it is less risky (less integration risks)?
What do know about their main (similar size competitors) in Canada, Hub and AJ Gallagher? Can you comment about the risks on the emergence of private health market exchanges such as AON Choices (partnering with six large insurers in Canada)? Can you comment results published Monday morning.
Thank you for your collaboration,
Eric
Read Answer Asked by Eric on April 22, 2019
Q: Following up on my question last month on whether CAE would benefit from additional training requirements for pilots following the two crashes of Boeing 737 Max 8, it looks like Canada has stepped up with the following news late yesterday from our Transport Minister Marc Garneau. Do you know who might compete with CAE for any outsourced training and how CAE is viewed in the aerospace training industry?
Transport Minister Marc Garneau says airlines hoping to fly the Boeing 737 Max 8 in Canadian airspace must first train their pilots using a flight simulator.
The call goes further than recommendations from U.S. regulators as training procedures for the grounded plane come under continued scrutiny following two deadly crashes.
“Simulators are the very best way, from a training point of view, to go over exactly what could happen in a real way and to react properly to it,” Garneau said.
“It's part of it - the software fixes...and the training itself, which in my mind requires simulation time,” he said at an event in Montreal Wednesday.
Garneau's comments highlight the potential hurdles to landing on a common set of standards and getting the Max 8 back into the air.
Read Answer Asked by Gordon on April 22, 2019
Q: Hi
After reading the most recent Q about AD, I am left as an investor realizing information was in the hands of National before widespread and publicly available.
Please comment on why it is appropriate for NA to have information that was unavailable to regular investors.............and who may have been buying today and therefore lost money. (with full awareness would not have been buying)
What is an investor to think about management who did not reveal publicly before revealing to at least one analyst? From my understanding this is illegal. There have been documentaries written on this form of behavior.
Thanks
Read Answer Asked by Dave on April 18, 2019
Q: Just a follow up to my question about the drop in Alaris today. So an analyst at NA drops his/her target price and the stock drops 10%? Was there any specific reasoning behind the downgrade and where would an investor get that information? If there is no fundamental change to the companies business, why would investors sell out of their positions? I have heard portfolio managers comment that they don't pay any attention to "price targets" and base their decisions on their own analysis and the fundamentals of each company they invest in. As you have said before, there are always 2 sides to each trade but it seems a lot of people react to an opinion and sell before they done any checking. Your comments please.
Read Answer Asked by Rudy on April 17, 2019