no_free_lunch
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Everything posted by no_free_lunch
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I want out of investing - options
no_free_lunch replied to no_free_lunch's topic in General Discussion
The mutual fund / etf debate comes down to my belief that most of the market is in a bubble and that value investing isn't dead. I know from my own investing experience that are still stocks that are ballpark reasonable, that is what I want to own. I don't want to own everything. I am hoping to find mutual funds that have similar style to myself. I have already seen a large divergence in small cap canadian stocks. There is an ishares etf xcs.to which has basically gone nowhere for a decade while many small cap funds are up 50-100%. I also have a small investment in one of the funds and had the same experience so I am not really cherry picking. It just makes sense when you look at the garbage in the etf vs what the funds are holding. The other way to look at it is risk reduction. We are financially far enough along that I don't need to swing for the fences, I can get by with singles. If I can find a fund that can use a garp or qarp strategy, I can see how that might have a tighter range of outcomes. I really don't care if I get 7% when the market gets 10% over the next decade, I just don't want to get a -2%. The other way to look at it, if we don't believe that a fund can out-perform then why are we on this site? Obviously we still believe there is alpha out there. It is not so much that I can't do the type of investing we do on this site or don't think that it will work. Like Lakesider I will continue to do some investing on individual high conviction names. For entertainment if nothing else. I just simply do not have time for a full portfolio. A small position is still like a years worth of saving so even small positions take me 4,5,6 hours and then there are dozens of positions that i research and drop. Just too much work. -
I find it increasingly difficult / impossible to run my portfolio. It is simply too time consuming to research individual stocks given how diversified I like to be. I am looking for options. I am a Canadian investor. I know i should buy ETFs but I just don't like how popular they are. I feel that mutual funds are my best option. I am hoping someone can provide some good suggestions. Mawer and Beutel Goodman look interesting. Are there any other names people like?
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Does anyone know how the $50 payout to Celgene is categorized as far as taxes? I assume it is not a dividend, is it return of capital?
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ISV.TO. I see returns as 5% dividend + 5-6% growth. The dividend should protect the downside. In a niche market. Just a 1% position.
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Yes, thanks for sharing Saluki. I can see Chile being a good alternate retirement destination. The real estate is cheaper but I assume food, utilities, public transport, services are all cheaper as well. If you have citizenship and can get healthcare, even better.
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I believe I could invest directly. I have an interactive broker account and have bought in other foreign markets. However, my preference would definitely be an etf. Having spent some more time on it, I am probably going to let this one pass. I just don't see what value has been created in chile over the past decade in equities. This concerns me as GDP growth has been okay. As frequently happens, it seems the gdp growth is not translating to equities.
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Is time to invest in Chile? I have had the country on my "watchlist" for years, they are considered the most free market country in South America and yet are hitting economic issues and are now facing huge protests. Government debt is tiny, around 27% of GDP. Population demographics are not fantastic but it's still growing. The GDP per capita is still well below most European countries or Canada/US, so at least in theory there is still plenty of catch up that can be done. If you look at the chile etf ECH, it is right around 2009 lows. However the dividend yield is still only around 2.5% so based on that simple metric, not so cheap. Is anyone else looking at this, can anyone recommend a good way to play it?
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NHI. Just a defensive pick. Trying to put a bit of my cash to work.
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This is great Kab. Thanks for posting. I came so close to LNR back when it was below $40 but just didn't pull the trigger. It is still cheap on FCF basis but it's hard having seen the run-up. Maybe I will have another look. Already own MO and MOTR. I will have a look at ULTA. It doesn't seem cheap at all but I will do some digging.
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I don't know about taxes as I hold it in tax free accounts. It's about 70% CMHC bonds, 20 provincial binds, 10 bank bonds. The cmhc is backed by the government of Canada. Probably more risk than money markets.
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I agree with both of you. So many variables. In my case I am far enough along that my "stake" is not really replacable and close enough to my retirement amount that it's not worth reaching. I am making the assumption that most people here are fairly far along with their portfolio. Take this survey with a grain of salt, just one data point.
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I don't do well with bull markets and I am holding more and more cash these days. I usually run 20%, dropped down to 15% during the december crash but I back up to around 25%. Just curious where others are at. Also curious what people use for cash alternatives. In Canada I mainly use xfr.to.
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As far as betting odds, you should be looking at the odds of Warren winning the democratic ticket. She is heavily favored, her odds are more than double that of Biden who is ranked second. Only once she becomes the official candidate will we get good odds data on her chance of winning the election. At this point, there is a very real chance it is Warren on the ticket. I also think this is very appropriate for an investing board. If Warren is elected you are crazy to invest in a number of different sectors. In particular, I sold out of Fannie preferred's mainly due to the timeframe stretching out past the election.
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I'm not sure about Germany but the Nordic countries havhaved a very different taxation policy than what Warren is proposing. Their corporate tax rates are comparable to the US but personal tax is much higher in particular for the middle class. So Warren will reference these countries when it suits her but ignore the details she doesn't care for. I think this Nordic model makes more sense. You want health care? No problem but you are gonna pay via your taxes. There needs to be some more personal responsibility, you can't just push it all in business. Why would anyone want to start a business, why would they want to ramp up hiring?
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Trans Mountain Pipeline Construction
no_free_lunch replied to SharperDingaan's topic in General Discussion
Sd, Do it. I will point out that you talk and talk but the carbon tax is now in effect and we aren't doing likewise to our imports. You are going to have to do this because these carbon taxes are going to work their way through the cost structure and affect all natural resources and manufacturing too. It will affect the east eventually and we all know that cannot be. -
Trans Mountain Pipeline Construction
no_free_lunch replied to SharperDingaan's topic in General Discussion
I guess I don't quite follow how shifting to these external producers is going to help canada's environmental impact. It just seems like a big lie so that we can pretend we are doing something when really we just outsource the pollution. The only way to prevent that is to impose the environment regulations on the way in. -
Trans Mountain Pipeline Construction
no_free_lunch replied to SharperDingaan's topic in General Discussion
Tarriff's are very much in our control, just like a carbon tax is in our control. You can spin it any way you want but you aren't helping the environment if you just start replacing Canadian goods with foreign goods that don't have a carbon tax on them. -
Trans Mountain Pipeline Construction
no_free_lunch replied to SharperDingaan's topic in General Discussion
SD, You ignored my main point. If you really want to help the environment, why are you not carbon taxing (tarriffs) imports? If our local producers have the burden of carbon taxing, economics 101 says the production will just shift to localities that don't have that cost. -
Trans Mountain Pipeline Construction
no_free_lunch replied to SharperDingaan's topic in General Discussion
Point 5 is just plain sexist. Why don't you just get the best people? You are just trying to virtue signal. You clowns put these carbon taxes in place. Fine. However we import huge volumes of products from countries without carbon taxes. Shouldn't you put a carbon tax on imports? In general how are we going to compete internationally when our trading partners don't have a carbon tax? -
Bought some CAKE today. Not going to get rich on this one but it's got a good long term track record and should still be able to slow mo compound. Throw in 3.75 pct dividend and it can work for me. It's also trading at a pe of around 15 so there is some optionality on pe expansion.
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Thanks for the feedback. I will track the exchange down when j gave a bit more time.
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I know, that's what i thought. But that was hours ago (between 2-3pm Eastern) and when I look at the data for that period I don't see any trades above $11.02.
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Thanks Gregmal. In my case i am Canadian, my broker is Canadian, the account is Canadian dollars, etc.
