Q: Hi Peter/Mike I've been away from the markets lately and have noticed that SHOP is way down as is my LSPD. My cost for my 5 shares of SHOP is 66.76 and it's 13% of my TFSA acc. My cost on my 200 shares of LSPD is 26.06 and it's 8% of my RRSP acc. Would it be wise to sell at this point and use the gains elsewhere or is it still hold these two. Thanks, Nick
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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: I have made good profit by investing in these ETF's. Now as the S&P 500 begins to roll down, I see losing some of the gains made so far. Should I sell these ETF's and park the money in cash and wait for the S&P 500 to move up and then invest it back. Alternately , should I leave it invested in these two ETF's. This is part of my fixed income investment. Thanks for the excellent advice you guys have consistently provided.
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Meta Platforms Inc. (META)
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Alphabet Inc. (GOOG)
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Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)
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NVIDIA Corporation (NVDA)
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AbbVie Inc. (ABBV)
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
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Enbridge Inc. (ENB)
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Constellation Software Inc. (CSU)
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Tourmaline Oil Corp. (TOU)
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WSP Global Inc. (WSP)
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Premium Brands Holdings Corporation (PBH)
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Aritzia Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (ATZ)
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Fortis Inc. (FTS)
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Digital Turbine Inc. (APPS)
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TELUS International (Cda) Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (TIXT)
Q: As with many of your members, im considering some portfolio adjustments and deployment of TFSA contributions to start the year.
What names in Canada and the US are you most excited about in 2022/2023 that you view as meriting consideration?
What names in Canada and the US are you most excited about in 2022/2023 that you view as meriting consideration?
Q: Did you guys miss all the oil and gas opportunities?
Q: hi. do you have any recommendations on NFT stocks, besides eBay??
Q: You stated in an answer to a question that XEG (up 79% in the past year, indicated yield 2.1%) has a yield of 2.1%.
When I checked XEG on my RB Direct website it states a yield of 1.51%.
Why is there a discrepancy and which is correct?
Thank you.
When I checked XEG on my RB Direct website it states a yield of 1.51%.
Why is there a discrepancy and which is correct?
Thank you.
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Sylogist Ltd. (SYZ)
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Apple Inc. (AAPL)
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Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)
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Microsoft Corporation (MSFT)
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PayPal Holdings Inc. (PYPL)
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Mastercard Incorporated (MA)
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Visa Inc. (V)
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Constellation Software Inc. (CSU)
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Kinaxis Inc. (KXS)
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Shopify Inc. Class A Subordinate Voting Shares (SHOP)
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Lightspeed Commerce Inc. Subordinate Voting Shares (LSPD)
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Nuvei Corporation Subordinate Voting Shares (NVEI)
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Topicus.com Inc. (TOI)
Q: Hi, Technology is the largest weight at about 45% ( even after the recent sell off) in our investment portfolio. Most of these holdings have been down 25-50% from the highs, over past 2-3 months, following the general market trend of indiscriminate selling in High multiple Tech stocks. LSPD and NVEI, of course, saw much steeper losses.
We do have the rest of the portfolio invested in Cdn large cap banks, industrials, utilities and telcos, generating decent dividend income.
We recently retired and as a part of portfolio planning/risk management, would like have a strategy to reduce the Technology weight to less than 35%, over next 2-3 years. The plan could be executed in phases, once the current tech rout is over and valuations have recovered.
From the perspective of risk, growth, stability and valuation, what would be the recommended/desired weighting for each company, balancing these factors. What would you suggest to be order of priority for the purpose of initiating sale of each stock. Also, it would be really helpful, if you could provide a reasonable price range for sale/trimming of these companies, based on price history and future expectation over 2-3 years.
CSU 14.5%
SHOP 9 %
TOI 5.2%
SYZ 3.5 %
LSPD 3 %
KXS 2.5%
NVEI 1%
US Large Cap Tech ( AAPL,AMZN,MSFT,MA,V,PYPL etc) 8% (we want to keep as is)
Thank You for your insight, which we value so much.
We do have the rest of the portfolio invested in Cdn large cap banks, industrials, utilities and telcos, generating decent dividend income.
We recently retired and as a part of portfolio planning/risk management, would like have a strategy to reduce the Technology weight to less than 35%, over next 2-3 years. The plan could be executed in phases, once the current tech rout is over and valuations have recovered.
From the perspective of risk, growth, stability and valuation, what would be the recommended/desired weighting for each company, balancing these factors. What would you suggest to be order of priority for the purpose of initiating sale of each stock. Also, it would be really helpful, if you could provide a reasonable price range for sale/trimming of these companies, based on price history and future expectation over 2-3 years.
CSU 14.5%
SHOP 9 %
TOI 5.2%
SYZ 3.5 %
LSPD 3 %
KXS 2.5%
NVEI 1%
US Large Cap Tech ( AAPL,AMZN,MSFT,MA,V,PYPL etc) 8% (we want to keep as is)
Thank You for your insight, which we value so much.
Q: Hi Team,
I am down over 50% on each of PINS and EGLX. I was considering giving up on them and moving the remaining funds in to TOI; something of perhaps "higher quality growth" that is also down considerable from its highs with a stronger conviction of future success. Would this be a move to be endorsed, or should I just ride out this pain for potential recovery in EGLX and PINS? Thanks for the advice.
Shane
I am down over 50% on each of PINS and EGLX. I was considering giving up on them and moving the remaining funds in to TOI; something of perhaps "higher quality growth" that is also down considerable from its highs with a stronger conviction of future success. Would this be a move to be endorsed, or should I just ride out this pain for potential recovery in EGLX and PINS? Thanks for the advice.
Shane
Q: Hi! The tech rout continues this morning. I previously was able to trade this rotation when it happened in 2021 and they seemed quite short lived. This feels a little more permanent because of the imminent end of tapering and lift off of rates. Impossible to predict, but do you see this rotation as lasting longer than the others in 2021 and if so is it too early to start nibbling at some beaten up names like SHOP and NVEI and GSY?
Also, I'm not sure why GSY is getting thrown out lately. Good valuation with good earnings and a recession doesn't seem likely.
Thanks,
Jason
Also, I'm not sure why GSY is getting thrown out lately. Good valuation with good earnings and a recession doesn't seem likely.
Thanks,
Jason
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AbbVie Inc. (ABBV)
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FedEx Corporation (FDX)
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JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
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Morgan Stanley (MS)
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Verizon Communications Inc. (VZ)
Q: Please provide your top 5 CDN and 5 US value stocks.
Q: EHTH was a darling at one time within a loved sector. Others, for example GOCO and SLQT along with EHTH have been crushed. Head scratching when you look at Total Addressable Market(assuming monetization opportunity), Aging Demographics, Insider Buying, buy action by Starboard Hedge Fund etc... Yet these sectors are runaway elevators to the basement. When does the action make sense. Is this a long term play with future catalysts?
Q: Could you give me an update on this company. analyst have a strong buy on it?
Thanks
Thanks
Q: How do you like these now for growth please?
Q: Happy New Year! Could I get your 2022 opinion on EV charging stations in general and Chargepoint in particular? Do you have any companies you prefer in this sector and do you see them as a buy now?
Thank you.
Thank you.
Q: 5i: Which do you prefer at these prices for the most secure upside potential, or other better options. And with either do you suggest hold off? Thanks Larry
Q: Happy 2022 thank you for another great year. I was wondering if you know any companies in the graphite/graphine space that might be good for a buy or at least put on a watch list for now.
Thanks
Thanks
Q: Hello 5I. I am looking for an equally weighted version of the TSX 60(XIU) ETF. Does it exist? Cheers
Q: Do you see any reason for the apparent weakness/breakdown of the shares.
You mentioned earlier that higher rates shouldn't be negative.
Thanks, Peter
You mentioned earlier that higher rates shouldn't be negative.
Thanks, Peter
Q: I own 100 shares of STIP in my RRSP. It's expected interest is listed as slightly over 4 percent. But in my TD Waterhouse account, under expected income it shows me getting $739 dollars per year in interest or 61.60 per month. That works out to 7% in interest. Is this right? I've owned the ETF for three months and sure enough I have received the 61.60 for each of those months. If so, it is a really good return for fixed income. I'm just not sure what accounts for the discrepancy.
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iShares Core Canadian Universe Bond Index ETF (XBB)
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iShares Core Canadian Short Term Corporate Bond Index ETF (XSH)
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PIMCO Monthly Income Fund (Canada) (PMIF)
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Cleveland-Cliffs Inc. (CLF)
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First Trust Tactical Bond Index ETF (FTB)
Q: Why is there such a variance in the performance of these bond funds. XBB seems to be the lowest and FTB the best with PMIF the second. What would you recommend holding in a portfolio. I am a 79 year old with a private pension.
Thank you.
Thank you.