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: Hi,

Care to comment on RBC's downgrade of BIN? One of their main key points was BIN's significant footprint in energy producing locales and they feel that BIN could experience pricing and volume pressures as crude prices impact regional GDP. In your last response to a question on BIN you said,"We added it to the portfolios largely because of its leverage to lower oil prices, its US revenue (60%) and its largely recession-proof business." Do you think RBC's concerns about lower crude affecting pricing trump the benefits of cheaper transport costs? It would appear the market does, BIN down 5% today after not much volatility lately.

thanks.
Read Answer Asked by Steve on April 20, 2015
Q: Since your most recent adjustment to your model portfolio, I have been looking at Progressive Waste Solutions (BIN). Today, I was planning to purchase until I noticed a PE ratio of about 27. Since this is much higher than the 10 -15 that I usually target for buys, I thought I would investigate further. Their growth is about 5% which indicates a relatively poor PEG ratio of about 5 and I see that their cash flow for the year indicated borrowing to pay a large portion of their dividends and share buy back. Also the dividend is relatively low at about 1.7%. I am certain that you would not place this company in one of your portfolios if the negatives I have described above was the basis for your decisions. Can you explain what I am missing and why this is one of the new replacements to the portfolio? Thank you very much. I always value your analysis and opinions.
Read Answer Asked by ED on April 14, 2015
Q: Hello Peter & Co,
In one of my previous questions, I had asked which of BIN or MAL to replace CHE.UN in the Industrials sector (6.0% of portfolio); your answer was to add BIN because the exposure to the sector could be increased. Fine!
My portfolio also holds CNR, BIP.UN and STN; they fall on the larger "industrials" umbrella. With these holdings, my exposure is at 12.4% (vs 9% in the TSX).
Would this clarification change your answer?
Thanks,
Antoine
Read Answer Asked by Antoine on February 17, 2015
Q: I have sold Manulife(RRSP) and IGM and(TFSA) and am dithering between CXI, GUD and BIN for the two replacements.
On your report card metrics, CXI scores an A on most of them and BIN gets a C on one year growth, although it gets an A on stability. However you suggest 10% weight for BIN and half of that for CXI. I did not understand why you would want it that way for a TFSA account.
I am fairly diversified, though a little light on pharma(PHM, PLI). Which 2 of 3 mentioned above would you recommend for TFSA and RRSP accounts? I would greatly value your suggestion.
Appreciate your service as always.
Read Answer Asked by Rajiv on February 14, 2015
Q: Hi peter and team,

Nice to see your recommendations on BNN. Is there a compelling reason to switch into BIN if i already hold WM. Both seem to be doing well although BIN is cheaper on a PE basis but WM pays a bigger dividend. It is held in my registered account so there are no tax issues and i pay a minimal trading fee on my account so those aren't considerations.

Thanks
Read Answer Asked by kelly on February 09, 2015