Q: I am aiming to have a portfolio with 2 solid companies in each of the 11 sectors. Do you feel SLF and X would be sufficient for allocation to the financial sector? Or would you suggest adding a bank (RY) to provide better diversification? Thanks in advance.
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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: If you were to invest in only 2 Specific Big Canadian Banks at this time, which are the most solvent to weather the storm. Which would you avoid?
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
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National Bank of Canada (NA)
Q: I have just read that the European Banks are going to stop paying dividends and that the US banks are under a lot of pressure to follow suit. Do you think that The Canadian Banks will also suspend dividends?
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Apple Inc. (AAPL)
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Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)
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Costco Wholesale Corporation (COST)
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Meta Platforms Inc. (META)
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Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)
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Bank of America Corporation (BAC)
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
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Exxon Mobil Corporation (XOM)
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Berkshire Hathaway Inc. (BRK.B)
Q: hi, dear team
i just got some money for longterm investment. how about this list ?
can you tell me at which price i can buy?appreciate!
best regard
Jacky
i just got some money for longterm investment. how about this list ?
can you tell me at which price i can buy?appreciate!
best regard
Jacky
Q: At what point do the banks become a screaming buy? If TD Waterhouse has correct numbers, several are now trading below book value. I have only seen this a couple of ties in my life and it has always worked out okay in the long run. Have I missed anything?
Q: I tried my bank chart system and they do not show 15 year charts.
can you tell me what was the low back the great recession 2008/2009 period, for these 2 stocks. It should give some perspective on where we were during a severe recession.
can you tell me what was the low back the great recession 2008/2009 period, for these 2 stocks. It should give some perspective on where we were during a severe recession.
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
Q: Retired dividend-income investor. I currently own BNS and RY. I was planning on topping up BNS, then read an answer about harvesting capital losses. I had already take enough losses to cover my gains to look after 2020 income tax implications.
I selected BNS for its international diversification and RY for its USA diversification.
I am now considering harvesting my new BNS capital loss and was considering either CM or BMO for immediate replacement, wait a bit then do my original top-up later. Which bank to you consider the better replacement?
Thanks...Steve
I selected BNS for its international diversification and RY for its USA diversification.
I am now considering harvesting my new BNS capital loss and was considering either CM or BMO for immediate replacement, wait a bit then do my original top-up later. Which bank to you consider the better replacement?
Thanks...Steve
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Manulife Financial Corporation (MFC)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
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Sun Life Financial Inc. (SLF)
Q: I am a buy and hold investor with 5 to 10 years of time horizon.
Have the following 7 stocks in Canadian financials in the order of their weights in our portfolio. Financials makeup roughly 7.5% of the total portfolio including cash positions and we like their dividend. TD, RY, BNS, BMO, SLF, CM, and MFC. I like to reduce exposure to financials and also like to reduce number of different shares. Two questions:
1. Is 7.5% a reasonable weight considering the current situation?
2. Which one of these I should sell to reduce financial weight and to reduce the number of shares in financials?
Have the following 7 stocks in Canadian financials in the order of their weights in our portfolio. Financials makeup roughly 7.5% of the total portfolio including cash positions and we like their dividend. TD, RY, BNS, BMO, SLF, CM, and MFC. I like to reduce exposure to financials and also like to reduce number of different shares. Two questions:
1. Is 7.5% a reasonable weight considering the current situation?
2. Which one of these I should sell to reduce financial weight and to reduce the number of shares in financials?
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Park Lawn Corporation (PLC)
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Enbridge Inc. (ENB)
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WSP Global Inc. (WSP)
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Enghouse Systems Limited (ENGH)
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Badger Infrastructure Solutions Ltd. (BDGI)
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Tricon Residential Inc. (TCN)
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Magna International Inc. (MG)
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Richards Packaging Income Fund (RPI.UN)
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Savaria Corporation (SIS)
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Leon's Furniture Limited (LNF)
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Evertz Technologies Limited (ET)
Q: Hello 5i,
As a pensioner who requires dividends for my income, I have been looking at the above names to potentially add over the next year or so. It is my belief (uneducated guess) that it might take that long before we see any solid bottom and subsequent recovery begin.
In that vein, out of the above, how would you rank these based on the following:
1. Safety of company through a one year to 16 month recession.
2. Safety of the dividend through this same period.
3. Confidence in management team
4. Sector vulnerability
5. Value at current levels
6. Any other considerations, warnings or caveats for any of these ??
i.e. some of these have a decent 5i rating (B or higher), but the rating dates back to 2019, some as early as the summer.
And, finally, are there any suggestions you might have that are not on this list that deserve serious consideration in place of any of the above?
I am in no rush for an answer so take as long as you need to consider this question and deduct as many credits as you see fit - I should have enough to cover it. I hope that this question might also prove beneficial to other 5i members who rely on dividends for income.
All the best to everyone in this very trying and uncertain time!!! Be safe above all!!
Thanks to all at 5i!!
Cheers,
Mike
As a pensioner who requires dividends for my income, I have been looking at the above names to potentially add over the next year or so. It is my belief (uneducated guess) that it might take that long before we see any solid bottom and subsequent recovery begin.
In that vein, out of the above, how would you rank these based on the following:
1. Safety of company through a one year to 16 month recession.
2. Safety of the dividend through this same period.
3. Confidence in management team
4. Sector vulnerability
5. Value at current levels
6. Any other considerations, warnings or caveats for any of these ??
i.e. some of these have a decent 5i rating (B or higher), but the rating dates back to 2019, some as early as the summer.
And, finally, are there any suggestions you might have that are not on this list that deserve serious consideration in place of any of the above?
I am in no rush for an answer so take as long as you need to consider this question and deduct as many credits as you see fit - I should have enough to cover it. I hope that this question might also prove beneficial to other 5i members who rely on dividends for income.
All the best to everyone in this very trying and uncertain time!!! Be safe above all!!
Thanks to all at 5i!!
Cheers,
Mike
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Tire Corporation Limited Class A Non-Voting Shares (CTC.A)
Q: Dear 5i team,
Would you have concerns to buy a really small number of any of these, say 50 shares, none are in my portfolio. The prices seem very attractive and I have not sourced key info that would say ‘no’ but I’d like to check in with you in in case I’ve overlooked something.
Which would you say is best, and no worries if you consider them all a ‘no’ right now.
In the energy arena, in light of several posts about bankruptcies, could you enlighten further please:
- are there any that stand out as being at greatest risk of that happening
- for big/medium names like ENB, CNQ, SU, KEY for example, would you consider them solid enough to be ‘immune’ to bankruptcy (assuming they are not in your group of ‘greatest risk’)
As a dividend investor, do you as a team ever produce a list of stocks most at risk/greatest likelihood of cutting dividends? Are most investors surprised by dividend cuts or is there a set of clear indicators that a cut is coming?
Thank you!
Would you have concerns to buy a really small number of any of these, say 50 shares, none are in my portfolio. The prices seem very attractive and I have not sourced key info that would say ‘no’ but I’d like to check in with you in in case I’ve overlooked something.
Which would you say is best, and no worries if you consider them all a ‘no’ right now.
In the energy arena, in light of several posts about bankruptcies, could you enlighten further please:
- are there any that stand out as being at greatest risk of that happening
- for big/medium names like ENB, CNQ, SU, KEY for example, would you consider them solid enough to be ‘immune’ to bankruptcy (assuming they are not in your group of ‘greatest risk’)
As a dividend investor, do you as a team ever produce a list of stocks most at risk/greatest likelihood of cutting dividends? Are most investors surprised by dividend cuts or is there a set of clear indicators that a cut is coming?
Thank you!
Q: Hello,
When I look at Canadian stocks traded on the US exchanges, why is there a yield and p/e discrepancy? Even after factoring the exchange, the Canadian stocks on US exchanges look much cheaper. Why is this? And should we be choosing the US exchange due to higher yield and lower pe?
When I look at Canadian stocks traded on the US exchanges, why is there a yield and p/e discrepancy? Even after factoring the exchange, the Canadian stocks on US exchanges look much cheaper. Why is this? And should we be choosing the US exchange due to higher yield and lower pe?
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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BCE Inc. (BCE)
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TC Energy Corporation (TRP)
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WSP Global Inc. (WSP)
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Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp. (AQN)
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Alaris Equity Partners Income Trust (AD.UN)
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North West Company Inc. (The) (NWC)
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A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund (AW.UN)
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Leon's Furniture Limited (LNF)
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BMO Canadian High Dividend Covered Call ETF (ZWC)
Q: Hi, I'm a retired, dividend-income investor. I took some profits and losses (to wipe out potential capital gains) over the last 5 weeks and am now planning on reinvesting the cash to top up some of my existing equities, up to my desired asset allocation. I want to leg in, in probably 3 waves over the next couple (?) of months, to top up ZWC, AD, AQN, AW, BNS, BCE, LNF, NWC, RY, TRP, WSP.
Can you please indicate which of the above equities you would allocate into which wave (in other words, does it look like the equity is "ready" for an investment OR should I continue to wait for a while)...or not at all (not worth any further investment).
Thanks for your help...Steve
Can you please indicate which of the above equities you would allocate into which wave (in other words, does it look like the equity is "ready" for an investment OR should I continue to wait for a while)...or not at all (not worth any further investment).
Thanks for your help...Steve
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
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National Bank of Canada (NA)
Q: Which Canadian bank looks most attractive right now?
Q: Why is TD Waterhouse rejecting my trades? I was trying to buy Royal Bank at the open, and now, even a market trade for 100 SHOP got rejected?
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Bank of America Corporation (BAC)
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
Q: What do you advise about investing in banks given current market environment. What are the tipping points - pro and con? Which 2 or 3 banks [Canada or US} would you put on a watchlist?
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
Q: Are you aware of any research that provides detailed analysis regarding oil patch exposure of the big 5 banks?
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
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National Bank of Canada (NA)
Q: What would be the top 3 Canadian banks have the best/quickest rebound potential ? thanks
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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BCE Inc. (BCE)
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TC Energy Corporation (TRP)
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Fortis Inc. (FTS)
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WSP Global Inc. (WSP)
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Algonquin Power & Utilities Corp. (AQN)
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Chartwell Retirement Residences (CSH.UN)
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Alaris Equity Partners Income Trust (AD.UN)
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North West Company Inc. (The) (NWC)
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Magna International Inc. (MG)
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Premium Brands Holdings Corporation (PBH)
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A&W Revenue Royalties Income Fund (AW.UN)
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Leon's Furniture Limited (LNF)
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BMO Equal Weight REITs Index ETF (ZRE)
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BMO Europe High Dividend Covered Call Hedged to CAD ETF (ZWE)
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BMO Low Volatility Canadian Equity ETF (ZLB)
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BMO Canadian High Dividend Covered Call ETF (ZWC)
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Nutrien Ltd. (NTR)
Q: Retired, conservative dividend-income investor with a "buy-and-hold & trim-add around a core position" strategy. At times like these, I take a fresh look at my holdings and ask two key questions. #1 = are there any of my equity holdings that have alarm bells going off? #2 = how safe are the dividends (knowing that no dividend is 100% secure)? The portfolio capital may rise or fall, but it is the continuation of the dividend that is more important.
For asset allocation purposes related to individual stocks (as opposed to sector allocations), I use the following:
5% targets = AQN, BCE, BNS, PBH, RY, TRP, WSP
4% targets = AD, AW, CSH, NWC
2% targets = LNF, MG, NTR
ETF targets = roughly 3-7%
Q#1 = are there any of these equities that you hear alarm bells?
Q#2 = are there any of these equities where you foresee dividend risk?
Q#3 = any thoughts on how I have my asset allocations set up (knowing it is a very personal decision?
Take a bunch of credits. Thanks for your help...Steve
For asset allocation purposes related to individual stocks (as opposed to sector allocations), I use the following:
5% targets = AQN, BCE, BNS, PBH, RY, TRP, WSP
4% targets = AD, AW, CSH, NWC
2% targets = LNF, MG, NTR
ETF targets = roughly 3-7%
Q#1 = are there any of these equities that you hear alarm bells?
Q#2 = are there any of these equities where you foresee dividend risk?
Q#3 = any thoughts on how I have my asset allocations set up (knowing it is a very personal decision?
Take a bunch of credits. Thanks for your help...Steve
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Bank of Montreal (BMO)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
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National Bank of Canada (NA)
Q: Thoughts on the CN banks? Low rate environment; Cdn economy hampered economically due to low oil and lacklustre mtg/productivity . How does this factor for growth in our banking oligopoly? I would think the 4-5% dividend yield is relatively safe but I cannot see where the stock price growth would come from other than wealth management divisions and perhaps trading which is somewhat risky. Thanks.
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Royal Bank of Canada (RY)
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Toronto-Dominion Bank (The) (TD)
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Bank of Nova Scotia (The) (BNS)
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Canadian Imperial Bank Of Commerce (CM)
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National Bank of Canada (NA)
Q: Assuming we get a rate cut of 0.5% by Poloz tomorrow, or, over the next few months, how bad will that impact CIBC's NIM and can we estimate the hit on their earnings? Is one bank more exposed to NIM than others? Regional banks are not reacting well right now. Thank you.