Canadian Dividend Portfolio Analysis

10
August 25
Published 14 years ago By Admin

About a month ago, I reviewed a US Dividend Portfolio that is being offered by a broker I know. Since the broker is Canadian, he also had a Canadian Dividend portfolio he presents to his clients. I thought of taking a look at this portfolio too and adding my grain of salt.


So here’s the Canadian Dividend Portfolio:

CompanyTickerPriceSectorPayout Ratio (%)Dividend Yield (%)P/E
BCE IncBCE33,9Telecom Services74,185,412,31
Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce/CanadaCM76,54Commer Banks Non-US131,234,5512,66
Bank of MontrealBMO60,21Commer Banks Non-US91,784,6513,06
Power Corp of Canada/CanadaPOW27,1Life/Health Insurance80,794,2814,42
National Bank of CanadaNA66,3Commer Banks Non-US50,063,7411,83
Bank of Nova ScotiaBNS54,58Commer Banks Non-US59,213,5914,58
Royal Bank of CanadaRY55,29Commer Banks Non-US77,773,6215,32
Toronto-Dominion Bank/TheTD74,93Commer Banks Non-US70,273,2612,73
Cascades IncCAS6,43Paper&Related Products26,672,498,04
SNC-Lavalin Group IncSNC53,6Engineering/R&D Services25,221,2721,48
TELUS CorpT46,57Telecom Services60,224,2913,46
Husky Energy IncHSE25,6Oil Comp-Integrated72,034,6918,63
Shaw Communications IncSJR/B22,42Cable/Satellite TV65,743,9315,38
Rogers Communications IncRCI/B40,15Cellular Telecom48,783,1913,01
Thomson Reuters CorpTRI38,73Multimedia113,193,0926,05
Average45,4969,813,7414,86


The Canadian portfolio give about the same result


Funny enough, you can build this Canadian dividend portfolio with $20,470$ (including 15 buy transactions at $6 each…you can get $4.95/trade at Questrade 😉 ). Then again, you would own 30 shares of each stock and it would pay… the same yield which is 3.74% (tables are dated October 7th 2010 to make sure we compare apples with apples). So for about the same amount of money, you can get the same level of distribution with Canadian companies. Therefore, if you are scared of the currency risk of trading us stocks, you can get about the same result with a Canadian portfolio.

Enough with the similarities, What is wrong with the Canadian Portfolio

If I compare both holdings, I would go for the US portfolio without hesitation. Why? Because of many reasons:


Diversification: When you take a closer look at the Canadian stocks, you will notice that 7 out of 15 companies are linked to the financial sector. While I think that Canadian banks are a solid investment, I don’t think you should consider investing 50% of your portfolio in a single sector. What if banking rules change? What if they don’t generate as much profit as before because of new compliance rules? You can put all your eggs in one financial basket!


Investment Opportunities: The US P/E Ratio is at 15.62 and the Canadian stocks show a 14.86 ratio. So technically, you should have a better expectation of portfolio growth with the Canadian portfolio. However, I think there is much more money sitting on the side line (in the money market or cash accounts) in the US. Investors seem to be waiting for solid indicators that they are going forward with a more stable economy. Once they are convinced, chances are that these stocks will continue to grow.


Payout Ratio: While the difference is not much, the US portfolio represents a dividend payout ratio of 65% and the Canadian portfolio shows a 69% ratio.  If you have to take one or the other, I think that this 4% should still come into play.

Maybe the key for a great dividend portfolio would be a marriage of the two?

While writing this article, I have noticed that both portfolios generate the same level of dividends while having different strengths and weaknesses. I’m thinking of looking at the 30 stocks and building a 15-18 stock dividend portfolio with both Canadian and US companies.


Which one would you chose? Why?

Do you have any preferred stock picks among the Canadian or the US stocks? What else can be added? I’ll be working on building a mixed dividend portfolio and will talk about it later on. Stay tuned!



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