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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: Thank you for your great service. I'm a young retiree. I need 5% after tax revenue for living expenses. My portfolio consist of 10% cash/equivalent, 2% Prefered (CPD) 15% high dividend stocks, and 65% other well diversified long stock positions of which half also pay dividend in the 2-3% range. Considering that my REITs represent 8% would you consider a good opportunity to add to my REITs since interest rates are going to stay low for the foreseeable future and hence high dividend and distribution stocks should do well in this environment. If so which of the above mentioned would you add to or if you have a better suggestion please do so. As for tax implication I own all my REATs in either TSFA or my RRSP. On a side note I also own Real Estate for approximately 30% of my net in addition to the stock portfolio.

Thanks for your great advise.
Read Answer Asked by Yves on March 25, 2019
Q: Hi, currently hold, PBH, ATD.B and WMT for my Consumer Staples allocation.
For yield , some growth and some safety, which is the better investment to add to my current holdings, KMB, PG, UL, or CLX in my RRSP. Thank-you in advance.Sam
Read Answer Asked by sam on March 25, 2019
Q: Revamping my tfsa, Currently own SHOP, PBH, SIA, NFI, GC, GSY and TOY. Can I have 3 American and 3 Cdn stocks with or without a dividend, solid ROE, and good GARP? I have TSGI in other accounts will keep SHOP and GSY others can be paired have ridden them for 3+ years. Also looking at 3 + years for these. Thanks david
Read Answer Asked by David on March 25, 2019
Q: Can you please list the Canadian companies who pay dividends in US dollars.
Thanks.
Dick
Read Answer Asked by Richard on March 25, 2019
Q: Hello! What do you think of TA now, given this announcement, and in light of your comments regarding their latest results? Also, the stock price is up by about 4% today. Is it best to sell and move on?
https://www.bnnbloomberg.ca/transalta-strikes-investment-deal-with-brookfield-renewable-partners-1.1234074?fbclid=IwAR1JLfnBK_qAif-rT7p-PKE5cavP6PJJEN8w_u4n1Tcj5nVUe7SzSCC0lzw
Read Answer Asked by Helen on March 25, 2019
Q: Further to a question asked by ‘M John’ on March 15, about CIPF protection for larger portfolios, my understanding is that an investor is protected to a maximum of $1M, but that is for the ‘cash’ side of things, meaning, if you had $900,000 of stocks and $100,000 of cash, should the broker go under, you’d only be calling on CIPF for $100,000, because all the stock holdings are automatically ‘guaranteed,’ because they’re held separately. So in theory, a portfolio held at one institution can be very large, and one need not worry, unless they get above $1M in cash or cash-equivalents.

Is my understanding correct, or is it $1M total, including all stock holdings?

Thanks for clarifying this.
Read Answer Asked by Warren on March 25, 2019
Q: Your comments please, on the following article in Reuters today with respect to a forthcoming recession once the yield curve inverts? Personally equities in general appear to be fully valued today and i'm reluctant to add cash to this market.

NEW YORK (Reuters) - The spread between three-month Treasury bills and 10-year note yields inverted on Friday for the first time since 2007 after U.S. manufacturing data missed estimates.

The three-month 10-year yield spread, the Federal Reserve’s preferred measure of the yield curve, narrowed to minus 0.56 basis points. An inverted yield curve is widely understood to be a leading indicator of recession.

The Market Purchasing Managers’ Index report, which tracks activity in the U.S. manufacturing sector, on Friday disappointed investors, with the headline index down 0.5 percent to 52.5 versus the expected 53.6. Earlier, Germany reported that domestic manufacturing contracted further in March, driving the benchmark 10-year U.S. government bond below zero and adding to fears of a global slowdown in growth.

The soft data exacerbated a trend that began on Wednesday after the Fed issued a statement showing policymakers foresaw no further rate hikes for 2019 given the slowdown in the American economy.

“The reality is the market is now expecting lower rates on average over the next 10 years than we have currently. And it’s a combination both of a dovish Fed and also ongoing global growth concerns,” said Jon Hill, U.S. rates strategist at BMO Capital Markets.
Read Answer Asked by LARRY on March 25, 2019
Q: Good mornng,
Thank you for your prompt and very helpful answer to my question re: Mutual funds/ETFs that do not pay any DISTRIBUTIONS and only generate CAPITAL GAINS.
As a follow up to your general HORIZON Total Return ETFs recommendation, what are your thoughts in terms of appropriateness if I were to split the amount to be invested in each of my minor grandchildrens' Non Registered in-trust accounts as follows: 50% in HXS.CA and 50% in HXT.CA? Your comments/thoughts on these specific ETFs would be most appreciated. Feel free to recommend other ETFs as need be . Thank you.
Read Answer Asked by Francesco on March 25, 2019
Q: would you confirm for me if it is correct that DSC can be deducted from capital gains as outlays and expenses. and would be claimed using schedule 3 when completing my income tax return? thank you
Read Answer Asked by Bren on March 25, 2019