Investment
Investing in Canadian Dividend Stocks: What You Need to Know
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Written by Jed Lloren at The Motley Fool Canada
Dividend stocks are excellent to hold in an investment portfolio because of the passive income you could generate. Fortunately, the Canadian stock market offers investors a plethora of outstanding dividend stocks. However, even with that many excellent options, it’s important that investors be prudent and choose the best stocks to hold in their portfolio.
In this article, I’ll discuss three characteristics that investors should keep in mind when choosing dividend stocks.
Look for stocks with a long history of paying dividends
When looking for dividend stocks to add to your portfolio, it’s important to know how long a company’s been paying its investors a dividend. Companies with longer histories of dividend distributions should be preferred over other companies. The reason for that being that those companies have proven that they prioritize maintaining a stable dividend.
In the Canadian banking industry, investors can find many companies that have been paying shareholders a portion of their earnings for more than a century. Bank of Nova Scotia (TSX:BNS) in particular has been paying its shareholders a dividend since July 1, 1833. Since then, it has never missed a dividend payment. That represents nearly 190 years of continued dividend distributions.
Some companies are great at increasing their distributions over time
In addition to a long history of distributing dividends, some companies are known for increasing their dividend rate over time. This is important because a stagnant dividend could cause investors to lose buying power over time due to inflation. In my opinion, investors should look for stocks that raise dividends by 5% on an annual basis.
Canadian National Railway (TSX:CNR) is an example of a company that has done an excellent job of raising its dividend over time. This stock first started distributing a dividend to shareholders in 1996. At that time, investors were paid a dividend of $0.016667 per share. Canadian National’s most recent dividend was $0.79 per share. That represents a compound annual growth rate of nearly 16% over the past 26 years, helping investors stay much ahead of inflation.
Keep in mind a company’s payout ratio
Finally, investors should take note of a company’s payout ratio. Simply put, this is the ratio between a company’s dividend and its earnings. A lower payout ratio should be preferred, as it suggests that a company’s dividend is more secure should it experience a slowdown in earnings or revenue. Generally, I look for stocks that maintain a payout ratio of 30% or lower.
Alimentation Couche-Tard (TSX:ATD) is an example of a company that maintains an exceptional payout ratio. This stock has raised its dividend in each of the past 11 years. However, despite those raises, Alimentation Couche-Tard’s payout ratio is still only 12.7%. That makes me very confident that Alimentation Couche-Tard could continue to offer investors a reliable dividend for many years to come. This stock deserves consideration for your dividend portfolio today.
The post <a href=”https://www.fool.ca/2023/05/10/investing-in-canadian-dividend-stocks-what-you-need-to-know/” rel=”sponsored” target=”_blank” data-ylk=”slk:Investing in Canadian Dividend Stocks: What You Need to Know;elm:context_link;itc:0″ class=”link “><strong>Investing in Canadian Dividend Stocks: What You Need to Know</strong> appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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Investment
Downtown decay: Greater investment needed to reverse decline


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In Part 3 of its Downtown Decay series, CTV News Toronto examines the path forward for the city’s slumping core—and what can be done to reverse the troubling trend.
It is lunch hour in Toronto’s core, and the Front Street patio tables are set. It’s midweek, it’s May, and the skies are clear—but the office crowd is scarce, and the chairs sit empty.
It’s a tell-tale sign that fewer people are downtown these days, with plenty of reasons to avoid the area.
“Transportation has been a hot mess,” said Jay Daye, who lives downtown. “It has been a struggle to get around.”
“I have never seen this much construction at a single time,” said Akash Thomas, who moved here from India three years ago.
Improving the commute into the core, and the ease with which people can move around within it, is key to revitalizing a slumping city centre, said Matti Siemiatycki, director of the Infrastructure Institute at the University of Toronto’s School of Cities.
A ‘for sale’ sign in the window of a commercial building in downtown Toronto. (CTV News Toronto)
“It’s just like a litany of transportation challenges in that area, to the point where politicians are in some cases saying ‘Don’t come into downtown,’ which is the opposite of what we need right now,” he said.
“We’re talking about a downtown core that is struggling, and needs huge numbers of people to come in and out, and be able to do that easily.”
With activity levels at just 47 per cent of what they were in the core pre-pandemic, the data suggests a downtown decline spurred by a lockdown-led drop in the nine-to-five office crowd. But with hybrid and remote work here to stay in at least some capacity, some experts suggest reorganizing the role of Toronto’s core in the city’s economy.
“If you’re not able to attract people to work, attract people for amenities,” said William Strange, who teaches urban economics at the University of Toronto. “The stronger are the amenities, the happier people are going to be to go into their office anyway.”
“What I see is a huge opportunity for downtown Toronto to remake itself,” Karen Chapple, director of the University of Toronto’s School of Cities, told CTV News Toronto.
The key, she said, would be to reinvent the area as a mixed-use community, a model other urban centres have demonstrated to be successful.
“What I just hope, though, as we’re attracting sectors back, is that they are not nine-to-five sectors, because that’s what killed some of these downtowns.”
The revitalization of the core will be a critical challenge for the city’s next mayor, Siemiatycki said, who warned service cuts could worsen an already-spiralling problem.
But investment won’t be possible without a rethink of the city’s fiscal framework, according to Matt Elliott, publisher of City Hall Watcher.
“If you look at the city’s budget hole and you say, ‘We’re just going to keep doing what we’re doing,’ and you’re not going to have a real plan to fill that budget hole, that gets into some really dicey territory,” Elliott said. “Because that’s when you start looking at really deep cuts.”
It’s not ideology, he said—it’s math.
“I don’t think we’ve realized that we’ve fallen down this ladder in terms of our prosperity,” Giles Gherson, incoming Toronto Region Board of Trade president, told CTV News Toronto.
Gherson warned that without a new financial deal for the city, which heavily supports services that should be the responsibility of Ottawa and the province, Toronto’s downtown would fall further behind.
“We’re poor,” he said. “We’re a poorer place than we used to be.”
The core, he argued, is in need of a correction, if the city is to salvage its productivity, maintain job growth, and remain competitive globally.
“We haven’t been paying attention,” he said. “We’ve been sleeping, and it’s falling off. So that’s what we need to fix—and that’s a big deal.”





Investment
FTX: Singapore state fund Temasek cuts pay after failed investment – BBC


Singapore state-owned investment fund Temasek Holdings says it has cut the pay of staff responsible for its investment in cryptocurrency exchange FTX, which collapsed last year.
In November, the fund wrote off all of the $275m (£222.8m) it invested in FTX.
Mr Bankman-Fried has pleaded not guilty to the charges.
“The investment team and senior management, who are ultimately responsible for the investment decisions made, took collective accountability and had their compensation reduced,” Temasek said in a statement on Monday.
The sovereign wealth fund also said it was “disappointed with the outcome of our investment, and the negative impact on our reputation.”
Temasek did not indicate how much salaries were reduced by.
It had invested $210m and then another $65m in FTX in two funding rounds between October 2021 and January 2022.
Last year, the state-owned fund said that before making those investments it had spent eight months evaluating the cryptocurrency exchange. This included the review of an audited financial statement “which showed it to be profitable.”
As of March 2022, Temasek was worth more than S$403bn ($298.1bn; £241.3bn), so the money it had put into the cryptocurrency platform accounted for a small percentage of its investments.
However, Singapore’s deputy prime minister Lawrence Wong said in December that Temasek’s losses in FTX had caused damage to the fund’s reputation.
“The fact that other leading global institutional investors like BlackRock and Sequoia Capital also invested in FTX does not mitigate this,” added Mr Wong, who is also the country’s finance minister.
Sovereign wealth funds are like a savings account for a country, and they typically invest in shares, currencies, property or other assets.
FTX, which a year ago was valued at $32bn, filed for bankruptcy protection in November. It has been estimated that $8bn of customer’s funds was missing.
Mr Bankman-Fried, who co-founded FTX in 2019, was one of the most high-profile figures in the cryptocurrency industry, known for his political ties, celebrity endorsements and bailouts of other struggling firms.
US federal prosecutors have accused Mr Bankman-Fried of stealing billions of dollars from FTX users to pay debts at his other firm, Alameda Research, and to make other investments.
In December, prosecutors announced eight criminal charges against Mr Bankman-Fried, including wire fraud, money laundering and campaign finance violations. Another five charges were levied against him in March. Financial regulators have also brought claims against Mr Bankman-Fried.
FTX co-founder Gary Wang and Caroline Ellison, the former head of Alameda, have also been charged over their alleged roles in the company’s collapse.
Mr Bankman-Fried was arrested in December in the Bahamas, where he lived and FTX was based.
In an interview with BBC News just days before his arrest, he said: “I didn’t knowingly commit fraud. I don’t think I committed fraud. I didn’t want any of this to happen. I was certainly not nearly as competent as I thought I was.”
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Investment
Singapore’s Temasek cuts compensation for staff responsible for FTX investment
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May 29 (Reuters) – Singapore state investor Temasek Holdings (TEM.UL) said on Monday it had cut compensation for the team that recommended its investment in the now-bankrupt FTX cryptocurrency exchange, as well as for its senior management team.
The move comes around six months after Temasek initiated an internal review of its investment in FTX, which resulted in a writedown of $275 million.
“Although there was no misconduct by the investment team in reaching their investment recommendation, the investment team and senior management, who are ultimately responsible for investment decisions made, took collective accountability and had their compensation reduced,” Temasek Chairman Lim Boon Heng said in a statement posted on Temasek’s website on Monday.
Temasek did not detail the amount of compensation cut.
Temasek had said its cost of investment in FTX was 0.09% of its net portfolio value of S$403 billion ($304 billion) as of March 31, 2022, and that it currently had no direct exposure in cryptocurrencies.
Temasek also said last year it had conducted “extensive due diligence” on FTX, with its audited financial statement then “showed it to be profitable”.
FTX’s other backers such as SoftBank Group Corp’s (9984.T) Vision Fund and Sequoia Capital had also marked down their investment to zero after FTX, founded by Sam Bankman Fried, filed for bankruptcy protection in the U.S. last year.
“With FTX, as alleged by prosecutors and as admitted by key executives at FTX and its affiliates, there was fraudulent conduct intentionally hidden from investors, including Temasek,” Lim said in the statement on Monday. “Nevertheless, we are disappointed with the outcome of our investment, and the negative impact on our reputation.”
Temasek seeks to deliver sustainable returns over the long term by investing into early-stage companies, Lim said.
“While there are inherent risks whenever we invest, we believe that we have to invest in new sectors and emerging technologies to understand how these areas may impact the business and financial models of our existing portfolio, and whether they would be drivers of future value in an ever changing world,” Lim added.
($1 = 1.3245 Singapore dollars)





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