encana

Toronto symbol ECA, and New York symbol ECA, is a leading North American producer of natural gas and oil.

TRIMARK CANADIAN RESOURCES FUND $18.69 (CWA Rating: Aggressive) (AIM Funds Management Inc., 5140 Yonge Street, Suite 900, Toronto, Ontario M2N 6X7. 1-800-631-7008; Website: www.aimfunds.ca. Buy or sell through brokers.) includes firms we’d rate as Speculative in its top picks. However, we like Trimark Canadian Resources Fund’s value-seeking, conservative approach to picking stocks in the volatile resource sector. The $626.7 million fund’s top holdings are Talisman Energy, EnCana Corporation, Labrador Iron Ore Royalty Income Fund, West Fraser Timber Co. Ltd., Enerflex Systems, Plum Creek Timber Co. REIT, Mayr-Meinhof Karton AG, Savanna Energy Services, Umicore S.A. and Range Resources Corp. Trimark Canadian Resources Fund is broken down by sector as follows: Energy, 34.3%; materials, 37.6%; and Consumer discretionary, 2.7%....
TD RESOURCE FUND $37.66 (CWA Rating: Aggressive) (TD Asset Management, P.O. Box 7500, Station A, Toronto, Ontario. M5W 1P9. 1-800-386-3757; Web ite:www.tdcanadatrust.ca. No load — deal directly with the bank) invests in companies with superior asset bases, proven management and the ability to internally finance growth. The $279.9 million TD Resource Fund’s top stock holdings are mostly of ‘Average’ quality or higher. The fund’s holdings include Suncor Energy, EnCana Corporation, Talisman Energy Inc., Goldcorp, Yamana Gold, Petro-Canada, Nexen, Alcoa, BHP Billiton, Husky Energy, Chevron Corporation, Marathon Oil Corporation and Weatherford International. TD Resource Fund’s industry breakdown is: Energy, 58.5%; and Basic materials, 39.2%. Its MER is 2.17%....
Resources stocks may indeed be headed much higher in years and decades to come. But there will be inevitable declines along the way. So we think you should cut your risk in this volatile sector by investing mainly in resource stocks of profitable, well-established companies that have an asset base they acquired when asset prices were much lower — or in mutual funds that hold those resource stocks. Here are two Aggressive resource funds that expose investors to two different levels of risk, measured by the resource stocks they hold. Both have done very well for us over the last few years. We think they have further gains ahead. TD RESOURCE FUND $37.66 (CWA Rating: Aggressive) (TD Asset Management, P.O. Box 7500, Station A, Toronto, Ontario. M5W 1P9. 1-800-386-3757; Web ite:www.tdcanadatrust.ca. No load — deal directly with the bank) invests in companies with superior asset bases, proven management and the ability to internally finance growth....
ISHARES CDN LARGECAP 60 INDEX FUND $83.94 (Toronto symbol XIU; buy or sell through a broker) (formerly called iUnits S&P/TSX 60 Index Participation Fund) is a good low-fee way to buy the top stocks on the TSX. The units hold a basket of stocks that represent the S&P/TSX 60 Index. The index is made up of the 60 largest and most heavily traded stocks on the TSX. Expenses on the units are just 0.17% of assets. Most of the 60 stocks in the index are good quality companies. However, to meet the requirement that all sectors are represented, the index holds a few firms we wouldn’t include, such as Biovail Corp. The index’s top holdings are: Potash Corporation, 6.2%; EnCana Corporation, 5.9%; Royal Bank, 5.2%; Research in Motion, 5.0%; Suncor Energy, 4.6%; Canadian Natural Resources, 4.6%; Manulife Financial, 4.5%; TD Bank, 4.4%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 3.9%; Barrick Gold, 3.4%; Goldcorp, 2.8%; BCE Inc., 2.4%; Petro-Canada, 2.3%; Canadian Oil Sands Trust, 2.2%; and Sun Life Financial, 2.0%. The shares trade on the TSX, just like stocks. Prices are quoted daily in newspaper stock tables. You’ll have to pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell the units, although you’ll quickly make that back by paying lower management fees....
We still think high-quality mutual funds with a long-term focus will beat indexes over long periods. If funds invest as we advise — sticking with well-established companies and spreading their assets out across the five main economic sectors — they will tend to lose a lot less than the market indexes in periods when the indexes fall sharply. That’s because big market slides are particularly hard on the hottest, most popular stocks of the preceding market rise, and investing as we do leads you to avoid excessive investment in the hot stocks. Index funds, in contrast, do tend to load up on the hottest, most popular stocks as they rise. That’s because, as they rise, these stocks make up a rising proportion of the index. The most recent example is Potash Corporation of Saskatchewan., which now has the highest market cap on the Toronto exchange on the strength of soaring fertilizer and agriculture prices....
ENCANA CORP. $88 (New York symbol ECA; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 749.7 million; Market cap: $66.0 billion; WSSF Rating: Average) produces oil and gas in Canada and the United States. Unlike Chevron (see at left), it favors unconventional production sources such as oil sands and shale gas deposits. Unconventional deposits take more time and money to bring into production, but they tend to have longer lives. Unlike regular natural gas, shale gas pools inside rock formations and does not easily flow to the surface. Gas producers use specialized techniques to release gas, such as cracking the rock with high water pressure and sand. That makes extracting shale gas about twice as expensive as production from traditional gas wells. EnCana’s daily gas output now runs to 3.7 billion cubic feet. It just bought new shale gas properties in British Columbia, Texas and Louisiana. In several years, EnCana feels each of these deposits could produce 1 billion cubic feet of gas a day....
BCE INC. $35.15, Toronto symbol BCE, has deferred declaring its second quarter common share dividend of $0.365 a share. That will save the company $294 million. BCE feels holding on to the cash will help make the $42.75-a-share takeover price more attractive to the buyers. The buyers may wind up paying less for BCE in the wake of tighter bank lending and lower stock markets. But if the dividend deferral pushes up the ultimate price, and you hold your shares outside an RRSP, you will wind up better off — the tax rate on the capital gains you’ll realize on the takeover is less than the tax you would have paid on the dividend. BCE is still a buy....
ENCANA CORP. $93 (Toronto symbol ECA; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 750.0 million; Market cap: $69.8 billion; SI Rating: Average) is a leading North American producer of natural gas and oil. The company took its current form in April 2002 through the merger of PanCanadian Energy Corp. and Alberta Energy Corp. Soon after, it sold most of its conventional properties to focus on what it calls “key resource plays”, including early-stage natural gas fields and oil sands. We thought this was a great idea. These assets cost more to develop, at least initially, but can last decades longer than conventional properties. Thanks to this strategy, plus higher oil and gas prices, EnCana’s earnings jumped from $1.44 a share (total $1.4 billion) in 2003 to $5.36 a share ($4.1 billion) in 2007 (all amounts except share price and market cap in U.S. dollars). Cash flow per share rose from $3.90 in 2003 to $11.06 in 2007. Revenue grew from $10.2 billion in 2003 to $21.5 billion in 2007....
EnCana encountered some skepticism when it shifted its focus from conventional energy production into unconventional gas and oil sands properties. These properties are costlier to develop and slower to generate a profit, but they have much greater long-term potential. The company’s latest move to add value is its plan to split itself into separate oil and gas companies. It drew acclaim rather than skepticism, and it helped push the stock up to a new all-time high of $98. We feel further gains are likely. ENCANA CORP. $93 (Toronto symbol ECA; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 750.0 million; Market cap: $69.8 billion; SI Rating: Average) is a leading North American producer of natural gas and oil....
Watch Pat McKeough’s June 20 interview on the Business News Network “Market Call” program with Michael Hainsworth. Click here to see the interview. Or, go to www.bnn.ca and you’ll find the link on the lower right side of the page. BCE INC. $34.60, Toronto symbol BCE, should move higher next week now that the Supreme Court of Canada has ruled against a lawsuit launched by the company’s bondholders. The bondholders claimed that the takeover of BCE by a consortium headed by the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan would reduce the security of their investments. While this latest ruling greatly improves the chances the $42.75-a-share takeover will go through, problems in the debt markets could still prompt some of the consortium members to back out. That could force the buyers to delay, reprice or scrap the deal. If so, the stock will probably fall, but it is likely to stay above its pre-takeover level of around $30 a share....