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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: Hi there,

The market has rallied hard over the last 3 trading days. Still it is far off from the all the highs when looking back. In your professional experience and years of investment experience, can you comment on where you think the market goes from here? Do you think this is a head fake / bull trap and we are heading lower in the coming months and there will be better entry points over the next 6 months? I've heard more people say U shaped recovery, and a couple saying V shaped. What is your positioning on this? It would great to hear your perspective on the current market and where it might go over the next 12 months.

Thanks!
Read Answer Asked by Michael on March 26, 2020
Q: As North American jurisdictions begin, finally, to transition to halfway-decent testing regimes, will investors begin to discount the economic cost of social distancing? Yes, the pandemic will continue to grow, and yes, there seems to be excessive optimism in the market's response to government interventions, but are we now past the point where events or results could cause investors to panic as they did last week? I've been trying not to buy into what smells like a bear market rally but now I wonder if the cost of recession has already been baked-in.
Read Answer Asked by John on March 26, 2020
Q: Hi everyone,

I hope everyone at 5i and their families and friends are healthy and getting through the quarantine period.

I have a question about building positions. I assume its generally accepted that a full position is a 5% weight. Do you recommend sticking to full positions (5%) and half positions (2.5%) or can you build positions at 1%, 2%, 3%, 4% and 5%. Assuming a 1% position might be a junior gold miner, a 3% position would be something like Suncor, which is a good company, but volatile because its based on the price of oil and a 5% position being a stable, blue chip like BCE? Is it ok to look at it this way or does it make things too subjective and its best to stick to full positions (5%) and half positions of (2.5%-3%) and perhaps avoid some of the more speculative investments that would be a 1 or 2% weighting. If you're not comfortable holding 3%, maybe its not worth the investment?

Thanks,
Jason
Read Answer Asked by Jason on March 25, 2020
Q: I have few questions regarding preferred shares. Many solid companies ''before covid19'' have preferred shares over 8% div. If that rate is OK for me for long term even without price appreciation, how safe will you quote them in general? What is the risk associated with that investment? Will you favor ''retractable'', ''rate-reset'', ''perpetual'', ''fixed-floating'' or ''floating rate''? How to find the term of a specific share?
Thanks a lot
Read Answer Asked by Daniel on March 25, 2020
Q: I was reading your answer to Dennis about fixed income bonds from banks. I know very little about CBO and Bank bonds but asssume they are near risk free. Do you think there is an arbitrage opportunity in borrowing on a secured line of credit to buy a bank bond? Any particular bond that you can suggest and can they be bought on online self directed brokerage accounts with Canadian banks?
Regards
Read Answer Asked by Rajiv on March 24, 2020
Q: I have asked a question today and here is another question that is related and comes with the same caveat that i do not know much about bonds/debt/fixed income; beyond the basics.
From what i saw on TV, the selloff in equities would force pensions to sell debt.That should depress the corporate debt prices? The central banks would buy mortgage backed securities. Who would purchase corporate debt, specially high yield? Would that also make the fixed income bonds issued by canadian banks more attractive(cheaper)? Would it also indicate that equity selloff is near bottom or reached bottom?
Would you prefer to buy bonds/debt or equity when there is a little stability? And could you please suggest some?
Thanks.
Read Answer Asked by Rajiv on March 24, 2020
Q: So having been through the Great Recession and now the cornea virus, I finally get it. Review your portfolio ,sell those companies whose fundamentals are damaged and possibly beyond repair ( swallow the loss),deploy your cash after things have settled down and there is more clarity into stocks who have the potential to rebound much better than the stocks you have sold. Is that about it?
Read Answer Asked by Derek on March 19, 2020
Q: hi,
can I get your best ideas for a long term investor ( who enjoys dividends with some growth ) for the following: (Canadian equities if possible please ) home improvement, Pharma, health services, REITS, drugstores, railways, and any other areas that you think should do well moving forward with covid19 looming over us for the next while...
cheers and stay healthy everyone. make sure to get outside and get lots of exercise! chris
Read Answer Asked by chris on March 19, 2020
Q: Dear 5i
With the recent chaos in the markets i had gone to mostly cash but kept the bond ETF`s ( CLF , CBO , XBB , ZAG ) , only to watch them go down quite a bit as well . It's a bit concerning to think that i was well protected to the down side ( at least i thought i was ) , only to see bonds go down . You would think with interest rates going down ( generally good for bonds ) bond yields going down that bond prices typically go up . But such haven`t been the case . In light of all this should i be temporarily reducing my bond exposure or is the worse over do you think for dropping bond prices ?
Would appreciate your insight .
Thanks
Bill C.
Read Answer Asked by Bill on March 18, 2020