The dividend calculator is a nice visual but most of use will be buying monthly shares etc , My first goal for a Divy stock is to qualify for DRIP ASAP. for example Fortis share 55.87 - you need 111 shares for drip $6201 or my Favourite ENB 49.16 60 shares Divy 0.835 you only need to spend $2950 or TD share 86.91 divy .79 110 shares $9560 its all about the drip compounding
AQN is my go-to Utilities company. CU is in massive debts and I would've chosen Fortis, but the potential of AQN is there and the higher dividend yield doesn't hurt.
It can't be stated enough..compounding is the answer...especially in the TFSA account! Invest to the maximum amount each year.... retire early with your tax free dividend flow into your pocket or just build more.... fantastic opportunity for all Canadians who have the funds to invest 🇨🇦
I have CU and Fortis since January. I'll be adding to CU to get a drip going. I have 13 dividend stocks, mostly in banking and energy. Thanks for the analysis.
What's crazier is if you assume only a 1% dividend growth rate and a 9.017% increase in share price (FTS average since 1995). Still end up with over $35K in dividends/year, with a stock price of $484.78/share and a market value over $1M ... on a $56K/investment!!
I was thinking they could also be sitting on excess cash that they have saved up over the years, and maybe decided to pay out extra to support investors through the pandemic and maintain confidence in the company to prevent people from panic-selling and crashing its value?
Payout ratio based off of earnings isn’t accurate as earnings included depreciation of assets(book loses). Distributable cash flow are what to look at.
How about mentioning the dividend yield of all the stocks you recommended? Out of the five stocks mentioned, only CU.to delivers attractive dividend yield.
@@davidho6806 Canadian Western Bank (CWB) is a dividend aristocrat and it has risen the dividend each year for many years. In my point of vue, it is an excellent blue chip to buy. I personally own shares of that company.
I think better comparison would have been if you would have taken the calculation for the dividend calculator over past year performances it would have been more pleasing to the viewers as the 6 percent projection is anticipating future scenarios
"You simply reinvested dividends". With zero estimated capital appreciation you will be purchasing a disproportionally larger number of shares. For example let's presume that capital appreciation is in line with the base dividend increase of 6%. At the end of the 25 years you're looking at $14,764.97 vs your $38,627.79. If you're throwing DRIPs into the calculation it seems ridiculous to not take into account the movement of the stock price.
Exactly, if fortis is valued at only 56 dollars 25 years from now, it will be the cheapest stock on the market and the company will be completely broke. This video is pure spills for views.
Good stuff! In the near future, can you make a comparison of the various brokerage/trading platforms for Canadian investors? I've used the Binance platform for trading and Wealthsimple for investing, and I feel that WS is lacking features I'd like to use when buying stock, etf's, etc for investing. ie depth of market, order book, recent trades. Are these features available on other brokerages and I haven't discovered them yet?
Hey Brandon, I’m new to dividend investment and I bought a good portion of Fortis shares recently. My question is about dividend payout. Let’s say in the next 3 months this company pays 30 cents per share and I own 500 of these shares. This should equate to $150. So, would Fortis a)send me a check of $150, or b)They convert the $150 into #of shares, ie. 3 shares at $50 each, and automatically add those to my total shares which becomes 503, or c)I’ll get the $150 via some other forms?
friends like Emera as they have guaranteed profits and return on expenditure on power from Nfld, main concern is with companies having to dump billions into new power sources, But only options are Nuclear and hydro. so emera into hydro is a plus.
@@lesliemcfarlane783 guaranteed profits and quick repayment on capital expenditures on their fixed link from Nfld are a bonus with being an eligible dividend too.
I'm not sure I'm understanding the example at the end. Is Fortis share price expected to stay the same for 25 years? And has any company really increased their dividend by 6% or more every year for 25 years? Does that happen?
Brandon, I am completely new to your channel and investing via Wealth simple. Where can I get more information about Companies that are performing well. Thank you.
The calculation you used assumes the stock price does not go up, so in year 25 you will be buying FTS with a 14% dividend yield? The stock price will likely be over $200-$250 by then- so you will not be buying as many shares with dividend payouts along the way. I would say divided payout in year 25 would be 17-22k based off the SP rising yearly. But SP would be in 200's Get your point though. Great vid.
if you buy monthly dividemd stocks and compound dividends every month will your account grow fsster the if you re invest your dividens quartely or annually
Yes, the more frequently the dividends are paid, the faster it will compound. So monthly will compound faster than quarterly, and quarterly compounds faster than yearly paying dividend stocks . However, from what I understand there's usually a trade off. Monthly payers may compound faster, but they usually don't have much growth in its dividends and share price compared to their quarterly and yearly counterparts.
Way to go Brandon, this is how investing should be done (i.e. put your money in blue chip stocks that pay a nice and consistent dividend). You did also great at showing the magic of compound interest and DRIP on our portfolio in the long run. You don’t need to put your money in risky stocks such as penny stocks, bitcoins or dubious startups to build a nice nest egg for your old days. As a suggestion, It would be great if you and/or Mark could do a similar top 5 video for the Canadian REITS. Most of them have a nice distribution yield comparable to the dividend stocks mentioned in your video. However, I find REITS more difficult to evaluate as the key metrics to identify the good ones are slightly different than for regular dividend stocks. For example, which ones have a steady dividend and/or have increased their dividend over the years; the more growth potential; the best asset allocation; the best AFFO ratio, etc. Keep up the good work!
What is your opinion on Magna Stock? It has more than doubled it's price since the pandemic and reached an all time high a while ago. It is Canada's largest automobile components supplier. Yield is low as the company participates in profit sharing with employees. Is this not a good long term buy if the shares do come down to a good value?
Hi Brandon! Aspiring investor here, I'm try.ing to get into wealth simple but I haven't taken the leap justyet. trying to save up a bit more. I know next to nothing about investing but have been really interested in dividend investing. Since you said WealthSimple automatically rebalances your portfolio and picks out stocks for you. How would you set it to be more dividend focused? sorry if this is a stupid question sincerely, A freshly immigrated new Permanent resident of Canada. thank you!
3 года назад+3
wealthsimple has two things: wealthsimple invest (robo advisor you are referring to) and wealth simple trade. If you go with invest, you choose your risk level (aka equity vs. security %) but you don't have a choice in what stock they pick because the robo does it for you. I chose the Socially responsible investment, balanced risk, for my kids RESP and they use the wsrd and wsri etfs, as well as bonds and gold. I am satisfied with it but wealthsimple invest may not get you where you want to go since I don't think they set you up with high yield ETFs. You could be more active, use wealth simple trade instead, and you'd pick your stocks or ETFs. With this, you can pick reliable stocks with high yields, as well as high div yield ETFs. Just be careful with the % of securities and equities. That depends on your risk level but it's something you may need to decide on before jumping in. Wealthsimple trade has fewer available stocks than questrade, but zero fees on trades which is awesome, so you really don't have to wait to save more to jump in - honestly, I'd say just test the waters even with 1k will open your mind to a lot. I'd highly recommend them and their customer service is awesome. Good luck! A formerly permanent resident and now Canadian citizen ;-)
@ Great information Agnes. I am also new to the world of investing and my Colleague was advising me to open Questrade account. There's a fee but there's more stocks to choose and also mo conversion fees required. What is your take on Questrade? Thank you.
3 года назад
@@aunties5798 I also have Questrade accounts and my take with it is that I really got killed on fees when I started. I hadn't realized it, but in short, ETF purchases are virtually free, but for each stock buy, there is a minimum 5$ fee to a max of 10$ per trade (the amount depends on the # of shares you buy). So, if you were to buy just one share of FTS, you'd need to pay 5$ if that was considered one trade. So my major mistake with Questrade was that I tried to diversify right away, and bought too many individual stocks buying very little shares of each and had to pay fees for each of those stocks. Instead, I should have been more selective, maybe picked 3 stocks, and invested 500$ in each, that way the 5$ fee would not have been felt that much. What I do now to go around this is that I reinvest dividends into ETFs, that way I reinvest right away, for free. Whatever cash I can save, I will invest in individual stock with a minimum of 500$ so the 5$ fee feels more acceptable. Overall, Wealthsimple is really, really simple, I truly like the way they outline their website, and it's super user friendly. I for sure don't use Questrade to its full potential but I don't mind. My goal was to be independent, and I appreciate the available choices in stocks and ETFs. I think that with how Wealthsimple is developing, it's only a matter of time until they have more options for stocks. Both options are good ones, you just need to know how they work; if you think that you want to stick to blue chips and ETFs that are found on the TSX, I'd go with Wealthsimple. If you want lots of options right now, go with Questrade but know that there are trade fees. Brandon actually has a video on each and partner links you can use to get free trades. Questrade has improved on customer service as well.
The best one out of the bunch is Thompson Reuters. The energy companies including utilities are being massively disrupted. The weather outside is one of the catalysts. The longer the dividend run has been going, the sooner I expect it to end.
@@robertyoung406 The top two are Fortis and Canadian Utilities, both have vast distribution networks dedicated to supplying electricity from hydrocarbons. When we get extreme weather, the grid can fail and utilities face fines from regulators and suits from customers. Oil and gas will also become more expensive as we shift to renewables and the oil and gas industry is starved of new investments. Sure, Fortis and CU can shift their strategies and become green, but it will take a lot of time and billions in infrastructure investments. Against this social, environmental, and political backdrop, I believe their dividends, let alone div. increases, will not be safe.
Reuters has been raising the dividends for 28 years and it is still under 2%. Canadians NEED oil, gas and electricity. We DO NOT NEED newspapers or data mining software. Your thinking seems completely backward. You're overestimating the green movement. We are many, many decades away from being able to get off hydrocarbons. You've been drinking way too much of that KoolAid.
If you increased the value of the shares by a minimum of 6 percent per year your calculation would be way more accurate. If the dividend increase so much there is no way you would pay the same price for 25 years.
Hey Brandon, love your content, I think I've watched half a dozen videos today alone 😂 Question for you. How do you feel about aplit share funds? Such as those offered by Quadravest, or Brompton. I'd be curious to hear your thoughts.
can you make good dividend stockds that arent fully recovered from pre covid prices so we have better value not only for dividends but fot price appreciaton. all time high stocks like you are showing arent very attractive to me
📈📚 As always, if you're a beginner to the Stock Market in Canada and you're looking for a step-by-step blueprint on how to get started... Find out more about our Investing Academy here - bit.ly/theinvestingacademy What do you think of these stocks? Leave a comment and thumbs up below! Thanks for watching! :D *EDIT - I noticed I messed up a slide and it came up black :( sorry...
Yes, I really like this content.
Solid canadian dividend stocks! Thanks for the video!
Brandon, I would like to say a huge Thank you for doing such a good job. Sharing your knowledge and taking us step by step on investing. Stay awesome!
..All my stocks in my portfolio got from your videos .. I'm so happy for it. So I keep investing..Thanks for the help.
The dividend calculator is a nice visual but most of use will be buying monthly shares etc , My first goal for a Divy stock is to qualify for DRIP ASAP. for example Fortis share 55.87 - you need 111 shares for drip $6201 or my Favourite ENB 49.16 60 shares Divy 0.835 you only need to spend $2950 or TD share 86.91 divy .79 110 shares $9560 its all about the drip compounding
Fortis!! My favourite ~~~
Love this type of video and thanks for the dividend growth calculator. It reminds people the power of dividends and dividend growth.
Watched and liked, thanks Brandon.
I love your content, keep it up.
Very hopeful that AQN becomes the next Fortis. Immense potential!
Yes, I'm hoping the same 😂
Been loading up on this dip, I hope so as well!
AQN is my go-to Utilities company. CU is in massive debts and I would've chosen Fortis, but the potential of AQN is there and the higher dividend yield doesn't hurt.
@@filb Wow, have you checked out AQN's debt lately? I hope you sold off before they flopped.
It can't be stated enough..compounding is the answer...especially in the TFSA account! Invest to the maximum amount each year.... retire early with your tax free dividend flow into your pocket or just build more.... fantastic opportunity for all Canadians who have the funds to invest 🇨🇦
The TFSA limit is too small. I wish the Liberals did not change the TFSA plan the Conservatives set.
@@khuo0219 I agree.. but add the max allowable for 30 years and with 8% return compounded...the result is amazing.....
@@ronbatt756 I will not need 30 years if luck has it :)
Next video suggestion -> top 5 Canadian & US growth stocks to buy now! Great content
what a great video! i love your research, and i love the way you present it!!
I have CU and Fortis since January. I'll be adding to CU to get a drip going. I have 13 dividend stocks, mostly in banking and energy. Thanks for the analysis.
Great video… I have small holding of Fortis and CU … but that is thanks to your channel…
25 years ago i was 14...so whatever i was doing it was cool and edgy, with attitude (it was the 90s afterall)
Great video Brandon, some of mine I hope to see on the 25+ year list are BCE, RCI.B and AQN! I know you've talked about these companies before 😉
Thank you … good job
Excellent Mr Brandon
You are great.
Suhail from Waterloo
Great video Brandon, Buying Fortis and CU tomorrow to rebalance my portfolio, just what i have been looking for for about a month.
17:52 year 25*
Big ups for the content Brandon 💪 I wasn’t even born 25 years ago 🤣
Very informative video is there any place I can download dividend calculator
looking back now on caniadian western bank would you say its a buy now or do you think it will be affected by silicon valley bank?
What's crazier is if you assume only a 1% dividend growth rate and a 9.017% increase in share price (FTS average since 1995). Still end up with over $35K in dividends/year, with a stock price of $484.78/share and a market value over $1M ... on a $56K/investment!!
Alimentation Couche-Tard
Reiterated
Could you share the link to that dividend calculator please?
Awesome video, very much enjoyed! Will definately take a look at CU now!
How can I msg u for advice
Excellent Video buddy!! Thank you so much!!
Thanks Brandon for the very informative video! What’s your opinion on LIF Labrador Iron Ore? They just increased the dividend to $1.75!!
Brandon I think I hear the ice cream truck in your background...
Let's go! Awesome picks man!
What are you/your dad’s thoughts on SAVA? And biotech stocks in general?
CU payout over 100% doesnt seem safe to me. Is that a covid thing or have they been borrowing money to pay increasing dividends?
I was thinking they could also be sitting on excess cash that they have saved up over the years, and maybe decided to pay out extra to support investors through the pandemic and maintain confidence in the company to prevent people from panic-selling and crashing its value?
Payout ratio based off of earnings isn’t accurate as earnings included depreciation of assets(book loses). Distributable cash flow are what to look at.
looking back at the video 1 year later now, seems like your hunch about TID was right Brandon!
ghaint nice 😎 bro 👍
Passive income baby!
Awesome content
How about mentioning the dividend yield of all the stocks you recommended? Out of the five stocks mentioned, only CU.to delivers attractive dividend yield.
Just take an attentive look to CWB!!!
@@michelayotte2531 Sorry, what is CWB. I was enquiring about dividend yield, is that related to this mysterious CWB?
@@davidho6806 Canadian Western Bank (CWB) is a dividend aristocrat and it has risen the dividend each year for many years. In my point of vue, it is an excellent blue chip to buy. I personally own shares of that company.
@@michelayotte2531 Thank you for the lead.
I hold CU and also ENB which just made it to 25 years.
Any utilities ETF?
Gold !
Enbridge
BIG THUMBS UP
Hey Brandon, I think you have made a mistake towards the end. 17:56 I think you meant Year 1 = $1,680 and Year 25 : $38,627 lol
Yeah I also checked what he was talking about but He talked correctly but there is typo of 2 instead 25 but we understood 😊
Good you commented
I'm holding AQN and expecting it to increase in value soon....Any insight into this stock???
I think better comparison would have been if you would have taken the calculation for the dividend calculator over past year performances it would have been more pleasing to the viewers as the 6 percent projection is anticipating future scenarios
"You simply reinvested dividends". With zero estimated capital appreciation you will be purchasing a disproportionally larger number of shares. For example let's presume that capital appreciation is in line with the base dividend increase of 6%. At the end of the 25 years you're looking at $14,764.97 vs your $38,627.79.
If you're throwing DRIPs into the calculation it seems ridiculous to not take into account the movement of the stock price.
Exactly, if fortis is valued at only 56 dollars 25 years from now, it will be the cheapest stock on the market and the company will be completely broke. This video is pure spills for views.
Good stuff!
In the near future, can you make a comparison of the various brokerage/trading platforms for Canadian investors? I've used the Binance platform for trading and Wealthsimple for investing, and I feel that WS is lacking features I'd like to use when buying stock, etf's, etc for investing. ie depth of market, order book, recent trades. Are these features available on other brokerages and I haven't discovered them yet?
What do you think about ENB ?
Hey Brandon, I’m new to dividend investment and I bought a good portion of Fortis shares recently. My question is about dividend payout. Let’s say in the next 3 months this company pays 30 cents per share and I own 500 of these shares. This should equate to $150. So, would Fortis a)send me a check of $150, or b)They convert the $150 into #of shares, ie. 3 shares at $50 each, and automatically add those to my total shares which becomes 503, or c)I’ll get the $150 via some other forms?
neither, you will see the dividend in whatever account you own it as cash flow.
friends like Emera as they have guaranteed profits and return on expenditure on power from Nfld, main concern is with companies having to dump billions into new power sources, But only options are Nuclear and hydro. so emera into hydro is a plus.
I'm thinking of adding Emera. Maxed out at the moment.
@@lesliemcfarlane783 guaranteed profits and quick repayment on capital expenditures on their fixed link from Nfld are a bonus with being an eligible dividend too.
I'm not sure I'm understanding the example at the end. Is Fortis share price expected to stay the same for 25 years? And has any company really increased their dividend by 6% or more every year for 25 years? Does that happen?
Brandon, I am completely new to your channel and investing via Wealth simple. Where can I get more information about Companies that are performing well. Thank you.
The calculation you used assumes the stock price does not go up, so in year 25 you will be buying FTS with a 14% dividend yield?
The stock price will likely be over $200-$250 by then- so you will not be buying as many shares with dividend payouts along the way.
I would say divided payout in year 25 would be 17-22k based off the SP rising yearly. But SP would be in 200's
Get your point though. Great vid.
Just curious how is it sustainable to have a payout ratio of more than 100 !
if you buy monthly dividemd stocks and compound dividends every month will your account grow fsster the if you re invest your dividens quartely
or annually
Yes, the more frequently the dividends are paid, the faster it will compound. So monthly will compound faster than quarterly, and quarterly compounds faster than yearly paying dividend stocks .
However, from what I understand there's usually a trade off. Monthly payers may compound faster, but they usually don't have much growth in its dividends and share price compared to their quarterly and yearly counterparts.
Seeing as equities are getting changed from time to time in an ETF does compunding work the same way with ETF's as they do with idividual stocks?
Yes
Way to go Brandon, this is how investing should be done (i.e. put your money in blue chip stocks that pay a nice and consistent dividend). You did also great at showing the magic of compound interest and DRIP on our portfolio in the long run. You don’t need to put your money in risky stocks such as penny stocks, bitcoins or dubious startups to build a nice nest egg for your old days.
As a suggestion, It would be great if you and/or Mark could do a similar top 5 video for the Canadian REITS. Most of them have a nice distribution yield comparable to the dividend stocks mentioned in your video. However, I find REITS more difficult to evaluate as the key metrics to identify the good ones are slightly different than for regular dividend stocks. For example, which ones have a steady dividend and/or have increased their dividend over the years; the more growth potential; the best asset allocation; the best AFFO ratio, etc. Keep up the good work!
Awesome video, big thumbs up!
Why not dividend ETF instead of one stock?
25 years ago I was pooping in diapers LOL! Keep up the quality content as always sir!
I was 25 days old 25 years ago haha
Great video Brandon, I like to have your opinion on horizon BetaPro S&P 500® 2x Daily Bull ETF. Is it wise to buy. Thanks
I was five years old 25 years ago in elementary school.
We would love to see a video about ethical (I know it’s subjective) Canadian companies to invest in!!! 🇨🇦
What is your opinion on Magna Stock? It has more than doubled it's price since the pandemic and reached an all time high a while ago. It is Canada's largest automobile components supplier. Yield is low as the company participates in profit sharing with employees. Is this not a good long term buy if the shares do come down to a good value?
Do you always re-invest your dividends.or take the cash
25 years ago, I just gave birth to my fourth child.
BAM, BEP, BIP
Hi Brandon! Aspiring investor here, I'm try.ing to get into wealth simple but I haven't taken the leap justyet. trying to save up a bit more. I know next to nothing about investing but have been really interested in dividend investing. Since you said WealthSimple automatically rebalances your portfolio and picks out stocks for you. How would you set it to be more dividend focused?
sorry if this is a stupid question
sincerely,
A freshly immigrated new Permanent resident of Canada.
thank you!
wealthsimple has two things: wealthsimple invest (robo advisor you are referring to) and wealth simple trade. If you go with invest, you choose your risk level (aka equity vs. security %) but you don't have a choice in what stock they pick because the robo does it for you. I chose the Socially responsible investment, balanced risk, for my kids RESP and they use the wsrd and wsri etfs, as well as bonds and gold. I am satisfied with it but wealthsimple invest may not get you where you want to go since I don't think they set you up with high yield ETFs. You could be more active, use wealth simple trade instead, and you'd pick your stocks or ETFs. With this, you can pick reliable stocks with high yields, as well as high div yield ETFs. Just be careful with the % of securities and equities. That depends on your risk level but it's something you may need to decide on before jumping in. Wealthsimple trade has fewer available stocks than questrade, but zero fees on trades which is awesome, so you really don't have to wait to save more to jump in - honestly, I'd say just test the waters even with 1k will open your mind to a lot. I'd highly recommend them and their customer service is awesome. Good luck!
A formerly permanent resident and now Canadian citizen ;-)
@ thank you so much!!!
@ Great information Agnes. I am also new to the world of investing and my Colleague was advising me to open Questrade account. There's a fee but there's more stocks to choose and also mo conversion fees required. What is your take on Questrade? Thank you.
@@aunties5798 I also have Questrade accounts and my take with it is that I really got killed on fees when I started. I hadn't realized it, but in short, ETF purchases are virtually free, but for each stock buy, there is a minimum 5$ fee to a max of 10$ per trade (the amount depends on the # of shares you buy). So, if you were to buy just one share of FTS, you'd need to pay 5$ if that was considered one trade. So my major mistake with Questrade was that I tried to diversify right away, and bought too many individual stocks buying very little shares of each and had to pay fees for each of those stocks. Instead, I should have been more selective, maybe picked 3 stocks, and invested 500$ in each, that way the 5$ fee would not have been felt that much. What I do now to go around this is that I reinvest dividends into ETFs, that way I reinvest right away, for free. Whatever cash I can save, I will invest in individual stock with a minimum of 500$ so the 5$ fee feels more acceptable. Overall, Wealthsimple is really, really simple, I truly like the way they outline their website, and it's super user friendly. I for sure don't use Questrade to its full potential but I don't mind. My goal was to be independent, and I appreciate the available choices in stocks and ETFs. I think that with how Wealthsimple is developing, it's only a matter of time until they have more options for stocks. Both options are good ones, you just need to know how they work; if you think that you want to stick to blue chips and ETFs that are found on the TSX, I'd go with Wealthsimple. If you want lots of options right now, go with Questrade but know that there are trade fees. Brandon actually has a video on each and partner links you can use to get free trades. Questrade has improved on customer service as well.
There seems to be a bot in the comments impersonating Brandon. Careful out there.
The best one out of the bunch is Thompson Reuters. The energy companies including utilities are being massively disrupted. The weather outside is one of the catalysts. The longer the dividend run has been going, the sooner I expect it to end.
Why would their dividends end as a result of the weather?
@@robertyoung406 The top two are Fortis and Canadian Utilities, both have vast distribution networks dedicated to supplying electricity from hydrocarbons. When we get extreme weather, the grid can fail and utilities face fines from regulators and suits from customers. Oil and gas will also become more expensive as we shift to renewables and the oil and gas industry is starved of new investments. Sure, Fortis and CU can shift their strategies and become green, but it will take a lot of time and billions in infrastructure investments. Against this social, environmental, and political backdrop, I believe their dividends, let alone div. increases, will not be safe.
@@khuo0219 I love how wrong this turned out to be. 😂 fortis is up 15% on the year just from stock appreciation.
Reuters has been raising the dividends for 28 years and it is still under 2%. Canadians NEED oil, gas and electricity. We DO NOT NEED newspapers or data mining software. Your thinking seems completely backward. You're overestimating the green movement. We are many, many decades away from being able to get off hydrocarbons. You've been drinking way too much of that KoolAid.
Nice content, just wondering, do you have asian or latin descent :)
I'd guess Indigenous North American.
power corp pays high dividends
If you increased the value of the shares by a minimum of 6 percent per year your calculation would be way more accurate. If the dividend increase so much there is no way you would pay the same price for 25 years.
138% payout ratio !? I'm surprised you didn't have more to say about that. Surely a big red flag..
Today January 2023 their payout ratio is at 78% pretty scary
I was like 11 playing with barbies, 25 years ago
i like fortis more than cu because look at the graft on cu it goes up and down and up and down past 5 years it has 0 real growth vs fortis.
👍🏾👍🏾👍🏾
Hey Brandon, love your content, I think I've watched half a dozen videos today alone 😂
Question for you. How do you feel about aplit share funds? Such as those offered by Quadravest, or Brompton. I'd be curious to hear your thoughts.
25 Years ago: Would have been physically abused by my step mom. That's what I was up to back then.
Investing academy is very expensive for one time investment
I know it’s not the video for this comment but I found a covered call ETF on wealth simply trading at $4.82 with a yield of 8.42% the ticker is NXF
can you make good dividend stockds that arent fully recovered from pre covid prices so we have better value not only for dividends but fot price appreciaton. all time high stocks like you are showing arent very attractive to me
CU has the best value of all 5 imo the rest arent really worth investing in at this momen
25 years ago I still wore a diaper hahaha
I wasn’t born 25 years ago
📈📚 As always, if you're a beginner to the Stock Market in Canada and you're looking for a step-by-step blueprint on how to get started... Find out more about our Investing Academy here - bit.ly/theinvestingacademy
What do you think of these stocks? Leave a comment and thumbs up below! Thanks for watching! :D *EDIT - I noticed I messed up a slide and it came up black :( sorry...