royal bank

The performance of these five large funds — one from each of Canada’s big-five banks — has suffered over the last year. That’s because they held high weightings in Financial services and Resources stocks. Financial services have dropped due to turmoil in credit markets. Resources have fallen along with commodity prices on fears that an economic slowdown will cut demand for resources. We still feel that the best way to profit in the stock market is to stick with high-quality, well-established companies, and to diversify among the five sectors, and within each sector. However, you won’t go too far wrong with these five funds. They continue to stick with high-quality issues with sound fundamentals, so their concentrations in certain sectors doesn’t add a lot of risk over the long term. Each has its quirks, but overall they are well positioned for low-risk returns....
RBC CANADIAN EQUITY FUND $19.69 (CWA Rating: Conservative) (RBC Mutual Funds, P.O. Box 7500, Station A, Toronto, Ontario. M5W 1P9. 1-800-463-3863; Web site: www.royalbank.com. No load — deal directly with the bank) invests mostly in larger-capitalization stocks, but also looks for opportunities in small- and mid-cap stocks. The fund’s 10 largest holdings are Royal Bank, Manulife, EnCana, TD Bank, Potash Corp., Bank of Nova Scotia, Canadian Natural Resources, Suncor Energy, Research in Motion and BCE Inc. The $4.2-billion fund holds 41.3% of its holdings in resource stocks. It also holds 30.7% in finance. Over the last ten years, RBC Canadian Equity posted a 9.5% annual rate of return. That’s just under the S&P/TSX’s gain of 9.7%. The fund lost 14.9% over the last year, compared to the loss of 14.4% for the S&P/TSX. The fund’s MER is 1.96%....
This downturn is going a lot further down that I ever expected. I still see it as a financial panic, rather than an indicator of the depth of the recession that now seems to have started. In other words, the market drop reflects a drying up in lending activity and fear of a depression, rather than a drying up in business activity. In the depths of a market downturn, some observers always predict that we are on the verge of another 1930s depression. In the 1930s, however, the U.S. and other governments did all the wrong things. They raised taxes, raised tariffs and did nothing to halt bank failures. The U.S. and other governments are doing all the right things to revive lending and credit, in my view. They are injecting funds into the financial system, arranging takeovers of failing financial companies, and moving to protect depositors. Eventually these efforts will pay off. Lending will then swiftly revive, and the market will go through a sharp recovery. There is no way to tell when that will happen, but you can bet that it will spur widespread disbelief, and warnings that it is just a temporary reprieve and that the downturn will soon resume....
ROYAL BANK OF CANADA $50 (Toronto symbol RY; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 1.3 billion; Market cap: $65.0 billion; SI Rating: Above average) earned $0.92 a share in its third fiscal quarter ended July 31, 2008, down 13.2% from $1.06 a year earlier. The drop is largely due to writedowns of bad loans at its U.S. banking operations, plus securities tied to U.S. subprime mortgages. However, if you disregard all unusual items, Royal earned $1.12 a share in the latest quarter, exceeding the consensus estimate of $1.07. This was mostly due to gains for Royal’s Canadian retail banking, where profit surged 19%. The bank’s wealth management and insurance businesses also reported strong earnings growth. Revenue grew 7.9%, to $5.9 billion from $5.4 billion. Royal Bank is a buy.
ISHARES DIVIDEND INDEX FUND $20.44 (Toronto symbol XDV; buy or sell through a broker) began trading in December, 2005. The fund currently holds the 30 highest yielding Canadian stocks. These stocks are included in the index based on their dividend growth, yield and average payout ratio. The weight of any one stock in the fund is limited to 10% of the fund’s assets. Its MER is 0.50%. The fund now yields 3.8%. The fund’s top holdings are: CIBC at 7.3%; Manitoba Telecom at 5.6%; National Bank, 5.6%; Bank of Montreal, 5.5%; Russel Metals, 5.3%; TD Bank, 4.7%; Royal Bank, 4.5%; Transcontinental Inc., 4.3%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 4.0%; IGM Financial, 3.8%; and Telus Corp., 3.8%....
AIC DIVERSIFIED CANADA FUND $42.87 (CWA Rating: Conservative) mainly holds shares of Canadian companies of average or above-average quality. It also holds stocks of some U.S. firms. The $1.0 billion fund’s 10 largest holdings are Power Financial, Canadian Oil Sands Trust, TD Bank, Shoppers Drug Mart, FedEx, Thomson Reuters Corporation, Brookfield Asset Management, Royal Bank of Canada, Manulife Financial and Johnson & Johnson. AIC Diversified Canada holds just 17 stocks. The fund holds 49.6% of its assets in Financial services stocks. The rest of the portfolio breaks down as follows: Energy, 15.2%; Consumer staples, 10.6%; Consumer discretionary, 8.0%; Health care, 7.4%; Industrials, 3.6%; and Conglomerates, 2.3%....
These two AIC funds hold much of their portfolios in financial services stocks. This sector has moved down lately, mostly on concerns over a lack of liquidity for asset-backed securities and exposure to the U.S. subprime residential mortgage market. We prefer diversified funds. But if you must focus on something, the finance sector still offers sound long-term prospects. If you invest in these funds, be sure to adjust the rest of your portfolio so you won’t overly concentrate your stock and mutual fund holdings in the financial sector. AIC AMERICAN ADVANTAGE FUND $5.70 (CWA Rating: Aggressive) (AIC Group of Funds, 1375 Kerns Road, Burlington, Ont., L7R 4X8, 1-800-263-2144; Web site: www.aicfunds.com. Buy or sell through brokers) invests mostly in U.S. stocks, with over 99% of assets in the financial services area....
FIDELITY GROWTH AMERICA FUND $18.32 (CWA Rating: Conservative) (Fidelity Investments Canada, 483 Bay St., Suite 200, Toronto, Ont. M5G 2N7. 1-800-263-4077; Web site: www.fidelity.ca. Load fund — available from brokers) uses a broad “bottom-up” approach to identify undervalued companies using fundamentals such as earnings, dividend yield, book value, cash flow and low debt. The $262.1-million Fidelity Growth America Fund’s top holdings include Exxon Mobil, Apple, Hewlett-Packard, Medco Health Solutions, Agco, National OilWell Varco, Travelers Companies, CF Industries Holdings, Lockheed Martin and ENSCO. Fidelity Growth America Fund is broken down by economic segment as follows: 15.7% in financials, 15.6% in information technologies, 13.4% in health care, 12.9% in energy, 11.9% in industrials, 10.1% in consumer staples, 9.5% in consumer discretionary, 3.9% in materials, 3.4% in utilities and 2.9% in telecommunication services. The fund’s one-year loss in Canadian dollars is 21.4%, compared to a loss of 14.4% for the S&P 500 in Canadian funds over the same period. The fund’s MER is 2.59%....
Bank stocks have struggled since late last year, due to fears that the problems with subprime mortgages in the United States will spread to Canada. Most of Canada’s big five banks have some exposure to these troubled loans, and writedowns have hurt their recent earnings. Despite the losses, Canada’s major banks have enough capital to continue making new loans. We feel every Canadian investor should own at least two of these five banks. Bank of Nova Scotia is still our top choice for new buying. Royal Bank of Canada $48 (Toronto symbol RY; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 1.3 billion; Market cap: $62.4 billion; SI Rating: Above average) is Canada’s largest bank, with total assets of $627.5 billion....
ROYAL BANK OF CANADA $48 (Toronto symbol RY; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Finance sector; Shares outstanding: 1.3 billion; Market cap: $62.4 billion; SI Rating: Above average) is Canada’s largest bank, with total assets of $627.5 billion.

Royal is taking advantage of the slowing U.S....