Latest Stock Advice
Warner Music Group Corp. is well-positioned for higher-margin catalog revenues, added streaming adoption, and new AI monetization opportunities.
Top pick Linamar Corp. is trading cheaply despite delivering higher sales and profits.
Gen Digital Inc. is trading quite cheaply for a firm that just grew revenue nearly 26% while providing plenty of cash flow for innovation, dividends and buybacks.
AT&T Inc. offers a 4.2% yield at an attractive valuation as it’s tapped to generate over $18 billion in free cash flow while continuing to build ultrafast wireless and fibre-optic networks.
Become a Successful Investor
Staying away from the most volatile penny stocks will help you build a more stable and diversified portfolio of higher-quality stocks
Helium stocks, often associated with balloons and airships, is not just about a light-hearted gas; helium is a vital element.
We think conservative investors could hold up to 10% of their portfolios in foreign stocks. One way to do that is to buy carefully chosen exchange traded funds (ETFs) that have an overseas focus. The best ETFs offer very low management fees and well-diversified, tax-efficient portfolios of highquality stocks. Here’s a look at four international ETFs we see as buys, and two we feel you should hang on to:...
CANADIAN REIT $43.00 (Toronto symbol REF.UN; Units outstanding: 73.0 million; Market cap: $3.1 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk; Dividend yield: 4.2%; www.creit.ca) owns 197 properties, including retail, industrial and office buildings, across Canada and in Chicago. These holdings contain 24.9 million square feet of leasable area. The trust’s occupancy rate is 93.8%. In the three months ended December 31, 2015, Canadian REIT’s revenue rose 1.0%, to $110.6 million from $109.5 million a year earlier. Cash flow per unit gained 1.3%, to $0.76 from $0.754. The trust aims to expand by developing its own properties rather than through large acquisitions. Over the next two to three years, it’s developing 12 projects to add 1.1 million square feet of space. Canadian REIT takes on partners to help carry out big projects....
IBM $136.30 (New York symbol IBM; Shares outstanding: 970.1 million; Market cap: $130.4 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; Dividend yield: 3.8%; www.ibm.com) will buy Truven Health Analytics, a private firm that provides hospitals and pharmaceutical companies with analytic data services. Truven will become part of IBM’s Watson Health business. It uses advanced artificialintelligence technology to process and analyze large volumes of data, including patient records, drug information and insurance claims. That helps hospitals and clinics reduce errors and cut their costs. IBM will pay $2.6 billion for Truven when it completes the purchase later this year....
H&R REIT $18.72 (Toronto symbol HR.UN; Units outstanding: 279.6 million; Market cap: $5.2 billion; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk; Dividend yield: 7.2%; www.hr-reit.com) owns or has a stake in 517 office buildings, industrial properties and shopping malls in Canada and the U.S. In all, these holdings include 47.2 million square feet of leasable space. In December 2014, Canadian REIT sold part ownership in 101 industrial properties, or a total of 19.5 million square feet, for $731 million. The buyers included the Canadian Public Sector Pension Investment Board. H&R kept a 50% interest in the Canadian properties and a 49.5% stake in the U.S. portfolio. It continues to manage these assets and receives fees for doing so. H&R also held on to full ownership of 14 other industrial properties....