royal bank

RBC CANADIAN DIVIDEND FUND $46.18 (RBC 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) has 43.5% of its portfolio in Financial services stocks. It has a further 19.4% in Energy stocks and 6.5% in Consumer discretionary. The $9.6 billion RBC Canadian Dividend Fund’s top stock holdings are Royal Bank of Canada, Bank of Nova Scotia, Toronto-Dominion Bank, Manulife Financial, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, EnCana Corporation, Bank of Montreal, Sun Life Financial and Power Corporation. Over the last five years, RBC Canadian Dividend Fund has posted a 13.1% annual rate of return. That’s less than the S&P/TSX’s gain of 18.2% over the same period....
BMO DIVIDEND FUND $44.99 (BMO Mutual Funds, 77 King Street West, Suite 4200, Royal Trust Tower, Toronto, Ont., M5K 1J5, 1-800-665-7700; Web site: www.bmo.com. No load — deal directly with the bank) (CWA Rating: Conservative) currently holds about 36.3% of its portfolio in the Financial services industry. Its next-largest holdings are Energy at 24.4% and Consumer discretionary at 9.1%. BMO Dividend Fund’s largest holdings are Manulife Financial, Bank of Nova Scotia, CIBC, Royal Bank of Canada, Power Financial Corporation, Toronto-Dominion Bank, TransCanada Corporation, Imperial Oil, Suncor Energy, EnCana Corporation, Enbridge Inc., Husky Energy and Sun Life Financial. Over the last five years, the $5.2 billion BMO Dividend Fund has posted a 12.1% annual rate of return. That’s under the S&P/TSX’s gain of 18.2%. However, the S&P/TSX index held a high 40% or so of its holdings in Resources shares. That’s been one of the best-performing, although riskiest, sectors. The fund lost 5.6% over the last year, compared to a gain of 6.8% for the S&P/TSX index. BMO Dividend’s MER is 1.71%....
BMO Dividend and RBC Canadian Dividend hold mostly high-quality stocks. Even high-quality stocks sometimes run into trouble and go through lengthy struggles, just like lesser investments. Eventually, though, most solve their problems and go on to thrive anew. Both funds hold a high proportion of their assets in financial services stocks. However, if you must focus on something, finance is a relatively stable sector, at least in Canada. If you do invest in these funds, be sure to adjust the rest of your portfolio so these funds won’t overly concentrate your holdings in the financial sector....
BCE INC. $39.25, Toronto symbol BCE, gained $4 last Friday after it agreed to stop paying common share dividends as part of a new deal with the consortium headed by the Ontario Teachers’ Pension Plan that plans to buy BCE. The consortium will still pay $42.75 a share for BCE, and aims to close the transaction by December 11, 2008. However, suspending the dividend will save the company about $900 million, and make it easier for the consortium to secure the roughly $35 billion from lenders they need to complete the acquisition. The consortium has also agreed to pay BCE $1.2 billion if it backs out of the deal, up 20% from the original break-up fee of $1 billion. BCE is still a buy....
TRIMARK CANADIAN FUND $18.44 (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.) uses a bottom-up stock-picking style (using fundamentals such as earnings, cash flow and low debt) that looks at valuation measures and then tries to pick stocks selling at a discount to long-term value. The fund’s 10 largest holdings are Thomson Reuters Corp., TD Bank, Bank of Nova Scotia, MacDonald Dettwiler, Time Warner, Willis Group Holdings, Alimentation Couche-Tard, Power Corporation, Toromont Industries and Molex Inc. The fund’s portfolio breaks down by sector as follows: Financials, 26.3%; Consumer discretionary, 20.1%; Information technology, 10.8%; Materials, 9.8%; Energy, 4.2%; and Industrials, 7.8%....
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....
BOMBARDIER INC., Toronto symbols BBD.A $8.71 and BBD.B $8.72, rose 7% this week after reporting first quarter fiscal 2009 earnings and revenues that exceeded expectations. In the three months ended April 30, 2008, earnings per share jumped to $0.12 from $0.04 a year earlier (all amounts except share price in U.S. dollars). Revenue rose 20.0%, to $4.8 billion from $4.0 billion, due to strong demand for business aircraft, regional jets and railcars. Thanks to its improving outlook, Bombardier plans to resume quarterly dividend payments of $0.025 (Canadian) a share. That implies an annual yield of 1.1%. The class B subordinate voting shares will also receive an additional priority payment of $0.0015625 (Canadian) a share per year, payable quarterly. That gives the class B shares an annual yield of 1.2%. Bombardier is a buy for aggressive investors. The higher yielding ‘B’ shares are the better choice....
BMO EQUITY FUND $33.80 (BMO Mutual Funds, 77 King Street West, Suite 4200, Royal Trust Tower, Toronto, Ont., M5K 1J5, 1-800-665-7700; Web site: www.bmo.com. No load — deal directly with the bank) (CWA Rating: Conservative) generally invests mostly in ‘blue-chip” Canadian companies. These stocks are selected based on the manager’s outlook for the industry they operate in, the earnings record of each company, the strength of management and the potential for growth. BMO Equity Fund’s 10 largest holdings are Potash Corp., Manulife Financial, EnCana Corporation, Suncor Energy, Royal Bank of Canada, TD Bank, Canadian Natural Resources, Bank of Nova Scotia, Sun Life Financial and Research in Motion. The $2.1 billion fund currently holds 43.6% of its portfolio in the Resources sector. Its next-largest holding is Financial services at 24.4%....
RBC CANADIAN EQUITY FUND $29.08 (CWA Rating: Conservative) (RBC 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 EnCana, Potash Corp., Research in Motion, Manulife, Royal Bank, Suncor Energy, TD Bank, Canadian Natural Resources, Bank of Nova Scotia and Goldcorp. The $5.1 billion fund holds 45.3% of its holdings in Resources stocks. It also holds 27.7% in Finance. Over the last ten years, RBC Canadian Equity posted an 8.7% annual rate of return. That’s just over the S&P/TSX’s gain of 8.1%. The fund made 5.9% over the last year, less than the gain of 6.6% for the S&P/TSX. The fund’s MER is 1.99%....