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My latest crack at a "Retirement Portfolio"

Sunday, October 16, 2022

Recommendations discussed with a friend

Yesterday, I heard from a friend who is not a senior and yet both he and his wife are retired. I respect his thoughts on the market. This husband and wife team have a solid track record when it comes to investing. After our chat, I sent him an email listing some of the stocks we had discussed. The following is from that email.

  • Cogeco (CGO) down 37% -- $54.24 at close Friday -- 4.61% dividend
  • Brookfield (BAM.A) down 33% -- $52.64 at close Friday -- 1.36% dividend
  • Quebecor (QBR.B) down 27% -- $23.87 at close Friday -- 5.03% dividend
  • Restaurant Brands (QSR) Only down about 7% but be patient. May tumble.
  • Vanguard ex NA High Dividend (VIDY) down 20% -- $22.21 at close Friday -- 4.82% dividend
  • BMO Europe High Dividend Covered Call Hedged to Cdn (ZWE) -- $16.86 at close Friday -- 7.83% dividend
  • I am mixing VIDY and ZWE for my ex N.A. exposure.
  • You are right. TC Energy is down much more than Enbridge. TRP may be a better capital gain play than ENB and this may easily negate the dividend yield advantage enjoyed by ENB. My friend also mentioned that TRP is not carrying as much debt as ENB. With rising rates, the extra debt could be a deciding factor.
  • Algonquin Power and Utilities (AQN) down 29% -- $14.24 at close Friday -- 6.82% dividend
I neglected to mention the one ETF that I actually tried to buy just a few days ago -- RIF. It is an ETF for those looking for REIT exposure. Most of the REITs are Canadian but about 10% are U.S. REITs. RIF is down more than 30% today and it is yielding more than 5%. I may buy 1000 shares in the coming week. And if drops another 10%, I will buy another 1000 shares at least.

Both Algonquin and Quebecor are begging to be bought at present prices. I'm trying to be patient and wait but I make no promises. I live on dividends and these two are looking damn good.


1 comment:

  1. I bought. Oops! And now we all know I should have waited. AQN was a dividend value trap. A DVT is a stock with a very high dividend yield but the underlying company is, at the very least, potentially in trouble. The stock is set to tumble when the full extent of the bad news becomes public. Today AQN was threatening to drop below the $9 threshold. I have suffered a big loss in a short length of time.

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