Q: Hello Peter, I bought this REIT a couple of years ago (admittedly blindly, just on some positive comments from J-F Tardif). I've been quite happy so far as, while the gains have been modest, it keeps paying out an almost 9% distribution without a lot of drama. Have I just been lucky so far? Can you offer a brief assessment of this REIT please, including its payout ratio and if you see anything that suggests I should take my gains and apply them elsewhere. Thanks in advance!
Q: Would you ascribe the significant recent weakness in SCL primarily to company fundamentals or to tax-loss selling? In other words, would this be a good entry point for a speculative position?
I wanted your opinion on the following stocks that tanked for me
TCK.B down 59%
TOU down 39%
CXI down 28% (in TFSA)
They were all 2% holdings in my portfolio....but not any more. Is it time to sell, hold or double down? For TCK & TOU I could sell for capital loss and buy them back in January if you think there is value with those stocks? My time line is at least 5 years, if not 10 - 15 years.
Q: Hello Peter, Your opinion on this stock. It is one that is continuously dropping. Do you see any future for this (worth holding). Or is it dead money and better taking loss and moving elsewhere.
Thanks as always for your help.
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Asked by Iskandar on November 12, 2015
Q: Last night I asked a question as per bellow. I am re-sending it as it may not have reached you. Thanks. Joseph
I have some US$ to invest and am looking at the technology/internet sector in the US: PNQI (Powershares NASDAQ internet), FDN (First Trust Dow Jones Internet Index), IGM (iShares North American Tech ETF). (All of these have a heavy weighting in Amazon, Google and Facebook). I am also considering to invest in the US financials sector through an etf such as XLF or through a few individual bank stocks such as WFC, BAC & JPM. My goal is to invest in the US sectors that are best positioned to grow in the next 12 - 18 mos. First, do you see these 2 sectors of technology/internet and financials as the best sectors to invest for the next 12 - 18 months and if so, please suggest your best choice for each sector and explain why. Second, is there another sector other than tech/internet and financials worth considering at this time and if so can you suggest what I should invest in for a hold of 12 -18 months?
Q: I hold BEP, BIP, TRP at roughly the same 1.5% weighting of my total portfolio in each stock. Utilities (ex telecom), oil and gas and infrastructure (mainly pipelines) make up approx 13% of total portfolio. with TRP now yielding 5% or close to it and the others over 5%, which would you prefer for an additional 1.5% weighting and a long term hold within an RRSP? I'm looking for avg annual 5%-6% total return and relatively low risk. Thanks
Q: Do you think that DH stands to benefit from the Fintech threat to the big banks? Or is DH vulnerable due to its close connections with the banks?
Thank you, Peter
Q: Dear 5i,
Would you trim/remove any of these holdings from my “pipelines” sector?
ENB 2.0% weighting (down 9%)
PPL 1.5% weighting (down 21%)
TRP 1.5% weighting (down 11%)
VSN 1.5% weighting (down 28%)
The yield on some of these names is quite something. Will we all look back in 3 years and wish we mortgaged the house to buy them? Or is it “different this time”..? 
Thanks for a great “go to” for professional advice.
Just wondering which company would be a better choice for a retired person. From your answers on previous questions both have relatively safe dividends and are around the same cost per share ($25.00).
Q: While Savaria does not have a rating yet, would you expect it to start with a similar rating to Prism, given its size and liquidity issues? Or would it fair a bit better with slightly higher liquidity and a good level of insider ownership?
Q: I seem to be noticing a trend over the last few earning seasons (particularly this last quarter and in Canada). If a company’s earnings (and general outlook) surprise to the upside, the stock price may move up a bit but usually not by much. If earnings are in-line with consensus estimates, the stock price might just hold steady but more often drops anyway. If there is a small earnings miss the stock gets severely punished, and on a large miss the reaction is often brutal (i.e down 30%-50% in the following days ex. Amaya). The daily moves that some supposedly steady large cap names can encounter these days on a single piece of news is getting more and more exaggerated. It almost makes me believe that selling an entire portfolio before earnings season and buying back immediately after could make a lot of sense. The downside risk seems to be so much more amplified versus the upside potential when quarterly numbers are released. I would obviously never expect you to endorse such a timing strategy, so my question is simply: 1)Am I imagining this or have you noticed this trend? 2) If this is in fact the case, what are your thoughts on the reasons why and when /what might stop it? Is it just a function of current investor sentiment?