teck resources
Every Wednesday, we publish our “Investor Toolkit” investing advice series. Whether you’re a new or experienced investor, these weekly updates are designed to give you our specific advice on successful investing. Each Investor Toolkit update gives you a fundamental piece of investing advice and shows you how you can put it into practice right away. Tip of the week:“It can be profitable to pay a little more for your shares.” Some Canadian companies, such as Bombardier and Teck Resources, have two classes of common shares: voting and non-voting (or multiple voting and subordinate voting)....
BANK OF NOVA SCOTIA, $51.63, Toronto symbol BNS, continues to build up its operations in China. This week, Bank of Nova Scotia agreed to buy 19.99% of the Bank of Guangzhou; the Chinese government owns the remaining 80.01%. This bank is the 29th largest in China, with 84 branches. Bank of Nova Scotia will pay $719 million when the deal closes in December 2011. To put that in context, it earned $1.2 billion, or $1.11 a share, in the three months ended July 31, 2011....
CANADIAN PACIFIC RAILWAY LTD. $55 (Toronto symbol CP; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Manufacturing & Industry sector; Shares outstanding: 169.4 million; Market cap: $9.3 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 1.9; Dividend yield: 2.2%; TSINetwork Rating: Above Average; www.cpr.ca) transports freight between Montreal and Vancouver. It also connects with hubs in the U.S. Midwest and Northeast. CP gets 25% of its revenue from the U.S. In 2010, CP got 28% of its revenue by hauling shipping containers that contain a variety of goods. Another 23% of its revenue came from hauling grain, followed by consumer and industrial products (19%), coal (10%), fertilizers (10%), automotive products (6%) and forest products (4%). CP’s revenue rose 16.7%, from $4.6 billion in 2006 to $5.3 billion in 2008, as increasing trade with Asia pushed up freight volumes. CP’s 2008 purchase of Dakota, Minnesota & Eastern Railroad Corp. (DM&E) for $1.5 billion also added to its revenue. DM&E operates a 4,000-kilometre rail network in eight midwestern states....
CP’s earnings have suffered lately, mainly due to bad weather. Avalanches during the winter disrupted its operations in western Canada, and spring floods washed out some of its lines in the Canadian Prairies and the U.S. Midwest. However, these are short-term setbacks. As well, the company is now working on a number of improvements that should make it more efficient, and push up its profits. CP’s upgrades mainly include improving its tracks and expanding its loading facilities so they can handle longer trains. That will extend the lives of CP’s locomotives, because they will have to make fewer stops and starts. These improvements will also help the company profit as shipping volumes rise....
Teck Resources Ltd., Toronto symbol TCK.B, is a leading producer of metallurgical coal, a key ingredient in steelmaking. It also produces other metals, including lead, copper and zinc. In the three months ended June 30, 2011, the resource stock’s earnings jumped 89.8%, to $1.12 a share from $0.59 a year earlier. Revenue rose 27.2%, to $2.8 billion from $2.2 billion. Teck saw higher prices for silver (up 111%), coal (up 49%), lead (up 32%), copper (up 30%), zinc (up 11%) and molybdenum (up 6%). However, higher operating costs and the strong Canadian dollar slightly offset these gains....
Slowing economic growth and concerns about high U.S. and European debt continue to dampen prices for commodities, like oil, coal and copper. However, rising demand from fast-growing regions, such as Asia and Latin America, should help support resource prices over the long term. The best way to protect the Resources part of your portfolio from volatile commodity prices is with high-quality companies, such as these three. They also trade at attractive multiples to earnings and cash flow. CENOVUS ENERGY INC. $37 (Toronto symbol CVE; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Resources sector; Shares outstanding: 754.1 million; Market cap: $27.9 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 1.8; Dividend yield: 2.6%; TSINetwork Rating: Extra Risk; www.cenovus.com) operates three oil-sands properties in Alberta and one in Saskatchewan. Cenovus ships the heavy bitumen from these projects to refineries in Illinois and Texas. ConocoPhillips (New York symbol COP) owns 50% of these refineries, as well as 50% of Cenovus’ two main oil-sands projects. Cenovus also owns conventional oil and natural gas properties....
ISHARES S&P/TSX 60 INDEX FUND $19.21 (Toronto symbol XIU; buy or sell through a broker; ca.ishares.com) is a good, low-fee way to buy the top stocks on the TSX. The units are made up of stocks that represent the S&P/TSX 60 Index, which consists of the 60 largest, most heavily traded stocks on the exchange. Expenses are just 0.17% of assets. Most of the stocks in the index are high-quality companies. However, as it must ensure that all sectors are represented, it holds a few we wouldn’t include, such as Yellow Media Inc. The index’s top holdings are: Royal Bank, 6.9%; TD Bank, 6.3%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 5.4%; Suncor Energy, 5.2%; Potash Corp., 4.1%; Canadian Natural Resources, 3.9%; Barrick Gold, 3.9%; Goldcorp, 3.2%; CN Railway, 3.1%; Bank of Montreal, 3.1%; Manulife Financial, 2.6%; CIBC, 2.6%; BCE, 2.5%; TransCanada Corp., 2.5%; Cenovus Energy, 2.3%; and Teck Resources, 2.2%....
ISHARES MSCI CANADA INDEX FUND $31.84 (New York symbol EWC; buy or sell through brokers; ca.ishares.com) is like a market-cap-based index fund, but its managers try to improve performance by tinkering with the index-fund formula. They do this through their Morgan Stanley Capital International Canada Index. The fund has an MER of 0.50%. The index’s top holdings are Royal Bank, 6.0%; TD Bank, 5.4%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 4.8%; Suncor Energy, 4.7%; Potash Corp., 3.6%; Canadian Natural Resources, 3.4%; Barrick Gold, 3.4%; Goldcorp, 2.9%; Bank of Montreal, 2.6%; CN Railway, 2.6%; CIBC, 2.4%; Manulife Financial, 2.3%; TransCanada Corp., 2.3%; and Teck Resources, 2.2%. If you want to own a Canadian index fund, you should buy the iShares S&P/TSX 60 Index Fund. You’ll pay about a third of the management fees....
Exchange-traded funds (ETFs) may have a place in your portfolio. That’s because, unlike many other financial innovations, they don’t load you up with heavy management fees, or tie you down with high redemption charges if you decide to get out of them. Instead, they give you a low-cost, flexible, convenient alternative to mutual funds. ETFs trade on stock exchanges, just like stocks. Prices are quoted in newspaper stock tables and online. You’ll have to pay brokerage commissions to buy and sell ETFs. However, ETFs’ low management fees still give them a cost advantage over most conventional mutual funds. As well, shares are only added or removed when the underlying index changes. As a result of this low turnover, you won’t incur the regular capital-gains bills generated by the yearly distributions most conventional mutual funds pay out to unitholders....
PLEASE NOTE: Our next Hotline will go out on Thursday, June 30, 2011. ROYAL BANK OF CANADA, $53.92, Toronto symbol RY, is selling its struggling U.S. retail-banking operations, which consist of 424 branches in six southeast states. The buyer, PNC Financial Services Group Inc. (New York symbol PNC), is also purchasing Royal’s U.S. credit-card operations. Royal will hang onto its U.S. wealth-management and brokerage businesses. PNC is paying $3.6 billion U.S. for these assets, with an option to pay up to $1 billion U.S. of the purchase price in PNC shares. That would give Royal a 3% stake in PNC....