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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: Looking to more reit exposure I am thinking above three mentioned, either all three or combination. Any thoughts, or opinions would be welcomed, also, please rank in order of preference
Read Answer Asked by John on November 06, 2019
Q: You said in an earlier answer the following..."market chatter that cyclical stocks may be due for a run, with low interest rates and a resumption of global growth (or fading fears of a recession, at least)". Could you maybe name 3-5 stock you would recommend that would fit the bill as a "cyclical stock". Thanks.
Read Answer Asked by Kevin on November 06, 2019
Q: Hello Team,
I am overweight in technology growth names and have been caught in this “sector rotation” from growth to value. My question is do I now hold steady and ride out the storm, or trim back my growth holdings and switch to value? I am a buy and hold investor typically and believe the names I am invested in are best in class in what they do, and believe the way the world is going that technology will continue to advance and should be where the biggest growth is now and into the foreseeable future. So, with the names listed do I buy more , hold, or sell?Thanks for your input on the matter.
Read Answer Asked by Shane on November 06, 2019
Q: Just finished reading Peters article in the latest edition of Canadian Money about High yield dividend payers. Question about payout ratios. Its confusing.
Example; In Morningstar for 2018 the payout ratio was quoted at 134%(unsustainable)
Using operating cash flow the calculation is 230M/388M = 60%(sustainable)
Using free cash flow the calculation is 230M/322M= 71%(probably sustainable)
Peter you have said the calculations should use either free or operating cash flow for the calculations of payout ratio.
I contacted Morningstar asking about their calculation and they said they use what the company sends them.
So which is right when trying to figure out whether the payout ratio is too high?
There are multiple other examples, Enbridge to name one.
Stated payout ratio 282%, operating. cash flow calc, 3844/10502=37%
Free cash flow 3844/3156 = 121%. Quite a variance. I'm confused.
WHICH CALCULATION IS THE BEST ONE TO USE TO HELP DETERMINE SUSTAINABILITY?
Read Answer Asked by JEFF on November 06, 2019
Q: Good Morning 5i Team,
If I could, what would be your top picks for Consumer Disc. & Materials sectors. I am currently light have a longer term time horizon.

Thank you
Read Answer Asked by Massimo on November 06, 2019
Q: According to Portfolio Analytics (and certainly by any other measure as well!) I am over allocated to Apple. I really think their products remain sound (look at new AirPods Pro) and they seem to keep a considerable amount of cash on hand. I first bought at the time of the Brexit vote in 2016 at just under $93 USD per share and have been handsomely rewarded to date. Am I foolish not to rebalance some of the gains? I am thinking that if they have a big miss such as a larger hardware issue they have a lot of means to fix it and move on. Are they well positioned for 5G? Any thoughts appreciated.

thanks,
Marilou
Read Answer Asked by Marilou on November 06, 2019
Q: Would the tax treatment ( no holding tax) be the same on the LIRA account as with RRSP account holding US-ETFs or dividend-paying stocks?
Thanks
Cec
Read Answer Asked by Cecil on November 06, 2019
Q: I know you don't deal with US, but it seems people like to own US stocks as there are more opportunities. All of these stocks except Team have been recommended by at least 2 analysts on Market Call. Could you tell me briefly why these over the last three months have been performing so poorly. Which one would be the first one you would sell? Thanks for your expert opinion. Dennis
Read Answer Asked by Dennis on November 06, 2019