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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 am sure you are tired of ECN questions by now, but I have to ask;)

Do you have a good way to evaluate what the leftover divisions of ECN will be worth on a per share basis?

I assume one can't simply equate the amount of revenue left over.

I am not skilled enough to figure that out, but I am sure someone is.

Is there a bit of a disconnect here or are the left over segments only worth ~$3.5 a share.

As always, thanks for the great service.

Read Answer Asked by Colin on August 12, 2021
Q: I'm thinking that I want to remain invested in ECN because I like how they think and their results. I'm thinking of buying more shares in the coming days which ended the day barely up from the day before and I expect it will not fall the full $7.50 when it goes ex-dividend which would give me the post-dividend shares at a cheaper price than buying later. I would do this in my RIF and TFSA so there is no resulting tax. What do you think of this idea?
Read Answer Asked by Earl on August 12, 2021
Q: DNTL traded over 3 3/4 million shares on Thursday. Would you like to surmise where those shares came from. My brother's dental practice was bought by DNTL a few years ago, part of the purchase prices was in shares, at a lot less than what they are at now, and they would on occasion buy them back from him at escalating prices. Could those shares sold be from this type of operation??
Read Answer Asked by Edgar on August 12, 2021
Q: Hi 5i,
I'll preface my question by saying I'm not well versed in analyzing the ins and and outs of quarterly reports and financial statements.
That said, I hope you can help me understand the great difference in the share price of LSPD and CURA, both of which i own and which I therefore want to understand better.
As i read them, the most recent quarterly reports of the two companies disclose that LSPD had revenue of 116 million to 312 million for CURA. LSPD loss per share was .38 and CURA's was .01. LSPD has 2.2 billion in total assets of which 807 million is cash and 1.266 billion is said to be made up of goodwill. CURA has 3 billion in total assets, of which 333 million is cash and 538 million is goodwill.
According to the metrics in 5i's digest for each, CURA leads in all the profitability ratios and in every management effectiveness category. Price to sales for CURA is 10.93 and price to sales for LSPD is 40.90, while CURA's price to book is marginally better than that of LSPD..
Assuming I have the foregoing stats correct or nearly so, why does LSPD trade for nearly 8 times more per share than CURA, and why is LSPD considered such a good growth prospect? While I recognize they are clearly apples and oranges, given that LSPD seems to have so far to go just to catch up to the numbers a less favored company like CURA has already reached, is it way overpriced?.
Thanks,
Peter
Read Answer Asked by Peter on August 12, 2021
Q: Investing in high yield securities involves assuming the accompanying risks of course ... One can own an individual stock like ENB, a covered call ETF like QYLD or even a mortgage backed security company like NLY . Looking on RA's website it appears the major holdings are 40% global infrastructure and 38% real estate with a mixture of investments to make up the balance . I recently read an article on Seeking Alpha which called it a " Widows and orphans " security which kind of shocked me for such a high yielding stock ..... Could you give me a comparison of RA's price movement in comparison to the S&P 500 since inception ? An assessment of the risks in comparison to the three securities I have mentioned ? As well as a breakdown of how 5I views their investment strategy ? ...... { in the normal font size if possible }
Read Answer Asked by Garth on August 12, 2021
Q: Hello 5i Team

Inter Pipeline according to the TMX website has 429,219,175 Listed Shares Outstanding and 429,200,000 Total Shares (All Classes) outstanding.

Inter Pipeline according to Q2 financials has 429,200,000 shares outstanding.

Brookfield in their press release dated July 15 states the Brookfield entities own 41,848,857 shares and have an economic interest (but not voting control) through Total Return Swaps in 42,492,698 shares.

1 – Why is there a discrepancy in the shares outstanding on the TMX website and IPL’s financial statements?

2 – What is the actual number of shares that are required to be tendered to BIPC’s offer to meet the 55 % requirement set by the Alberta Securities Commission?

3 – What happens if the percentage of IPL shares tendered to BIPC offer is greater than 55 %, but less than 90 % (where BIPC can force the takeover of the remaining IPL shares)?

Thanks for all you answers during the saga of this takeover.
Read Answer Asked by Stephen on August 12, 2021
Q: Could you enlighten me about just why ECN is selling off a big chunk of their business and then paying a special dividend to shareholders? From what I can see and what you've said so far it will go from a $2.5 billion dollar company to a half billion dollar company. It will pay us $7.50 a share in a special dividend, but then the value of the shares we hold will likely drop by the same amount, if not more, since larger investors will probably abandon the newly shrunk company. So where is the benefit for shareholders in this action?
Read Answer Asked by John on August 12, 2021