canadian dividend

Investment Advice
Every Tuesday we bring you “Best Canadian Stocks.” You get our specific recommendation on the stocks we profile, with a full explanation of how we arrived at our opinion. You’ll read about stocks making moves you should know about, from coverage in one of our three newsletters featuring Canadian stocks—The Successful Investor, Stock Pickers Digest and Canadian Wealth Advisor.

BCE is facing regulatory hurdles, but the company is improving its services while keeping its operating costs down. That should let it maintain its high dividend yield.

BCE INC. (Toronto symbol BCE; www.bce.ca ) is Canada’s largest provider of telephone services, with 5.0 million customers in Ontario and Quebec. It also has 2.2 million high-speed Internet customers and 2.3 million TV subscribers.

BCE also sells wireless services to 7.8 million customers across Canada, and its Bell Media segment owns CTV Television, specialty channels and radio stations.

The company recently offered to buy the 56% of Bell Aliant (Toronto symbol BA) that it doesn’t already own. Bell Aliant sells phone and Internet services to 2.3 million clients in Atlantic Canada and rural Ontario and Quebec. It also provides wireless services through an alliance with BCE.

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Canadian stock market
Bombardier recently had to suspend test flights of its CSeries passenger plane because of a problem with its Pratt & Whitney engines, which are 20% more fuel-efficient than current models. This was the first major issue with this new engine in over three years of testing. The delay will probably add to the CSeries’ development costs, but Bombardier still expects to begin deliveries in the second half of 2015. BOMBARDIER INC. (Toronto symbols BBD.A and BBD.B; www.bombardier.com) is the world’s third-largest commercial aircraft maker, behind Boeing and Airbus. It is also the world’s leading passenger railcar manufacturer....
BOMBARDIER INC. (Toronto symbols BBD.A $3.88 and BBD.B $3.83; Aggressive Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 1.7 billion; Market cap: $6.5 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 0.4; Dividend yield: 2.6%; TSINetwork Rating: Average; www.bombardier.com) is the world’s third-largest commercial aircraft maker, behind Boeing and Airbus. It is also the world’s leading passenger railcar manufacturer.

In the three months ended March 31, 2014, Bombardier’s earnings fell 3.2%, to $151 million from $156 million a year earlier (all amounts except share prices and market cap in U.S. dollars). Earnings per share were unchanged at $0.08. Revenue rose 0.3%, to $4.35 billion from $4.34 billion.

Revenue at the railcar division (52% of the total) rose 8.8%, as the company continues to win orders from public transit systems. This business ended the quarter with a record backlog of $38.4 billion, up 18.5% since the start of 2014.

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Bombardier recently had to suspend test flights of its CSeries passenger plane because of a problem with its Pratt & Whitney engines, which are 20% more fuel-efficient than current models. This was the first major issue with this new engine in over three years of testing.

The delay will probably add to the CSeries’ development costs, but Bombardier still expects to begin deliveries in the second half of 2015.

Uncertainty over the CSeries adds to Bombardier’s risk, and weighs on its stock price....
BMO S&P/TSX Laddered Preferred Share Index ETF, $14.48, symbol ZPR on Toronto (Units outstanding: 70.1 million; Market cap: $1.0 billion; www.etfs.bmo.com), holds Canadian floating-rate preferred shares. Issuers include Bank of Montreal, Enbridge, BCE, TransCanada and Canadian Utilities. The ETF’s MER is 0.45%. It currently yields 4.3%. Note that the dividends you receive from this fund do benefit from the Canadian dividend tax credit. Floating-rate preferred shares pay dividends that fluctuate with changes in interest rates. The dividend rate may range from 50% to 100% of (usually) the prime bank rate. As interest rates rise, so do floating-preferred dividend yields....
Flaherty & Crumrine Investment Grade Fixed Income Fund, $12.36, symbol FFI.UN on Toronto (Units outstanding: 9.1 million; Market cap: $112.5 million; www.bromptongroup.com), mainly holds preferred shares of U.S. companies. Firms in the banking, insurance, utilities and financial services industries make up a combined 87.7% of the fund’s portfolio. Corporate bonds comprise 6.9%, and the remaining 5.4% is cash. The fund’s MER is 1.0%. The fund is hedged against movements of the U.S. dollar against the Canadian dollar. Its value rises and falls solely with the stocks in its portfolio, so it would not give you U.S. dollar exposure. However, hedging costs money, and we feel these outlays are wasted. They can cut the fund’s volatility from one year to the next, but they won’t add to its performance. In addition, we see U.S. dollar exposure as a plus—a valuable form of diversification....
Going beyond the banks for high-yielding financial stocks
In our flagship Canadian advisory, The Successful Investor, we recommend that when you select investments in the financial sector, you start by looking at Canada’s big-five banks. But we also recommend diversifying your holdings with non-bank finance stocks. Two weeks ago, we covered one such stock that more aggressive investors might consider, Home Capital (see the article here). Today we examine two conservative non-bank stocks....
ING purchase keeps adding to profits at Bank of Nova Scotia
An old fashioned ‘Bank’ sign on a building exterior. Please see also: [url=file_closeup.php?id=16363514][img]file_thumbview_approve.php?size=2&id=16363514[/img][/url]
George Clerk
In the latest issue of The Successful Investor, we analyzed each of Canada’s big five banks. All of the banks have now reported earnings, except for Bank of Nova Scotia, which reports its first-quarter earnings tomorrow, March 4....
iShares S&P/TSX Canadian Dividend Aristocrats Index Fund ETF, $24.56, symbol CDZ on Toronto (Units outstanding: 37.6 million; Market cap: $923.5 million; ca.ishares.com), seeks to replicate the performance of the S&P/TSX Canadian Dividend Aristocrats Index. The ETF’s MER is 0.66%, and it yields 3.2%. The S&P/TSX Canadian Dividend Aristocrats Index only includes stocks or trusts that have increased their dividends every year for five years—although it has changed that to include stocks or trusts that have maintained the same dividend for a maximum of two consecutive years within that five-year period. That means the index excludes a number of sound companies that pay dividends but haven’t increased them every year, such as three of Canada’s big-five bank stocks. The ETF’s top 10 holdings are AGF Management, 4.3%; AG Growth International, 3.7%; Bird Construction, 3.5%; Reitmans (Canada), 3.1%; Exchange Income Corp., 3.1%; Northern Property REIT, 2.9%; Enbridge Income Fund Holdings, 2.9%; IGM Financial, 2.5%; Laurentian Bank of Canada, 2.4%; and Emera Inc., 2.4%....
As pipeline capacity lags, CN ships more oil
CANADIAN NATIONAL RAILWAY CO. (Toronto symbol CNR; www.cn.ca) operates Canada’s largest railway. Its 32,350-kilometre network stretches across the country and through the U.S. Midwest to the Gulf of Mexico....