transcanada

Toronto symbol TRP, operates pipelines that transport natural gas, mainly from Alberta to markets in central and eastern Canada. TransCanada owns or holds interests in over 20 power plants in Canada and the United States.

Whether you’re an aggressive or conservative investor, we continue to recommend that you cut your investment risk by spreading your money out across the five main economic sectors (Manufacturing & Industry; Resources; Consumer; Finance; and Utilities). Generally speaking, stocks in the Resources and Manufacturing & Industry sectors expose you to above-average volatility, and stocks in the Utilities and Canadian Finance sectors entail below-average volatility. Consumer stocks fall somewhere in the middle. Most investors should have investments in most, if not all, of these five sectors. The proper proportions depend on your circumstances and whether you’re an aggressive or a more conservative investor....
TRANSCANADA CORP. $36 (Toronto symbol TRP; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Utilities sector; Shares outstanding: 684.4 million; Market cap: $24.6 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.6; Dividend yield: 4.4%; SI Rating: Above Average) operates a 60,000-kilometre pipeline network that pumps natural gas from Alberta to eastern Canada and the U.S. The company’s pipelines supply 20% of North America’s natural gas. In 2009, TransCanada’s pipelines accounted for 53% of its revenue and 73% of its earnings. The remaining 47% of revenue and 27% of earnings come from the company’s electrical power plants. TransCanada owns or has stakes in 20 plants in Alberta, Ontario, Quebec and the northeastern U.S. The company’s revenue rose 44.2%, from $6.1 billion in 2005 to $8.8 billion in 2007. Revenue fell 2.4%, to $8.6 billion, in 2008. However, revenue rose 4.0%, to $9.0 billion, in 2009, mainly because of the contributions of new power plants....
We’ve long admired TransCanada Corp. for its high-quality operations and the predictable cash flows they generate. The company is now building several new pipelines and power plants to spur its growth. The $22 billion cost of these projects nearly equals TransCanada’s market cap (the value of all its outstanding shares). But they should pay off for decades to come. TRANSCANADA CORP. $36 (Toronto symbol TRP; Conservative Growth Portfolio, Utilities sector; Shares outstanding: 684.4 million; Market cap: $24.6 billion; Price-to-sales ratio: 2.6; Dividend yield: 4.4%; SI Rating: Above Average) operates a 60,000-kilometre pipeline network that pumps natural gas from Alberta to eastern Canada and the U.S. The company’s pipelines supply 20% of North America’s natural gas. In 2009, TransCanada’s pipelines accounted for 53% of its revenue and 73% of its earnings....
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, but you will quickly make these back because of the low management fees. 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....
GREAT-WEST LIFECO $27 (Toronto symbol GWO; Shares outstanding: 945.3 million; Market cap: $25.5 billion; SI Rating: Above Average; Dividend yield: 4.6%) is Canada’s largest insurance company, with $458.6 billion in assets under administration. The company also operates in the U.S. and Europe. Aside from insurance, Great-West sells wealth management and other financial services. In the three months ended December 31, 2009, Great-West’s earnings, excluding one-time items, fell 15.6%, to $443 million or $0.47 a share. A year earlier, it earned $525 million, or $0.59. Revenue fell 4.3%, to $14.7 billion from $15.3 billion....
TRANSCANADA CORP., $34.78, Toronto symbol TRP, has set aside $22 billion for new growth projects. The company already spent $10 billion of these funds. It will spend the remaining $12 billion over the next four years. TransCanada will invest some of these funds in the Keystone pipeline, which will pump crude oil from Alberta to refineries in Illinois. Keystone should begin operating later this year. The company will also build new natural-gas-fired power plants in Ontario and Arizona. As well, it plans to refurbish reactors at the Bruce nuclear-power station in Ontario (TransCanada owns 48.8% of these reactors), and build new wind farms in eastern Canada....
Dividend 15 Split Corp., $11.69, symbol DFN on Toronto (Shares outstanding: 11.2 million; Market cap: $131.2 million), is a split-share investment corporation that holds shares of 15 companies: BCE Inc., CI Financial Corporation, AGF Management, TransAlta Corporation, SunLife Financial, Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce, TransCanada Corporation, Manulife Financial, TD Bank, TMX Group, Royal Bank of Canada, Loblaw, Bank of Montreal, Telus Corporation and Enbridge. The company can also invest up to 15% of its portfolio in other equity issues. Dividend 15 Split Corp. has two share classes: Dividend 15 Split Corp. capital shares (Toronto symbol DFN), and Dividend 15 Split Corp. preferred shares (Toronto symbol DFN.PR.A)....
ISHARES CDN BOND INDEX FUND $29.67 (CWA Rating: Income) (Toronto symbol XBB; buy or sell through a broker) mirrors the performance of the DEX Universe Bond Index. This index consists of a wide range of investment-grade Canadian government and corporate bonds with terms to maturity of more than one year. The 301 bonds in the portfolio have an average term to maturity of 8.62 years. The fund’s MER is 0.30%. The bonds in the index are 85.1% government and 14.9% corporate. The fund sticks with high-quality government bonds from issuers such as Canada Housing Trust, Government of Canada and Province of Ontario, plus high-quality corporate bonds from issuers such as Bank of Montreal, TransCanada Pipelines, Bank of Nova Scotia and Bell Canada....
We generally advise against investing in bonds right now, because today’s low interest rates make them unattractive. That’s especially so in light of the potential rise in inflation that may follow the heavy deficit spending and rapid expansion of the money supply that is now underway. However, if you need stable income and want to hold bonds, here are two bond funds that have low fees and high-quality holdings. ISHARES CDN SHORT BOND INDEX FUND $29.35 (CWA Rating: Income) (Toronto symbol XSB; buy or sell through a broker) mirrors the performance of the DEX Short-Term Bond Index....
ISHARES DIVIDEND INDEX FUND $18.40 (Toronto symbol XDV; buy or sell through a broker) holds the 30 highest-yielding Canadian stocks based on dividend growth, yield and average payout ratio. The weight of any one stock is limited to 10% of of the fund’s assets. The fund’s MER is 0.50%. iShares Dividend Index Fund has a 3.7% yield. Top holdings are CIBC, 7.3%; Bank of Montreal, 6.3%; Manitoba Tel, 5.7%; National Bank, 5.5%; TD Bank, 5.3%; IGM Financial, 4.5%; Royal Bank, 4.4%; Bank of Nova Scotia, 4.3%; Telus, 4.2%; Sun Life, 3.6%; Power Financial, 3.4%; and TransCanada Corp., 3.4%....