It's June and in the last week in May, it was about the Big Bank earnings and the expected loan loss provisions set by the bank authority here in Canada. All banks are above the minimum threshold required while some banks added extra billions.
The US initiated trade war with Canada will bring more layoffs with sectors affected along with companies laying off to restructure to boost earnings. Certainly makes it tougher on people where everything has gotten more expensive since Covid.
Unfortunately, there's no trade deals involving Canada to date. Perhaps even escalating again with a possible 50% on steel and aluminium coming from the US
In their books. loss provisions are recorded as a hit to their earnings but all are in good shape with The Bank of Nova Scotia, BNS.TO being the laggard this time around. With a 6% yield, the bank increased their dividend by 3.8% on a positive note.
TD Bank, TD.TO is the big story rising above their past US debacle while investors like their moves and a new CEO in charge while the stock has risen above $90 CAD making a run for closer to $100 per share possibly this year.
I'll be adding to both banks in my portfolio. I usually tend to lean more towards the laggard bank after quarterly earnings which is BNS and undervalued by the Graham Number.
Last year, TD was the down trodden bank working through their US issues and paying a huge fine. Its onwards and the bank has moved on from that while making changes internally.
The sector of interest to me after the Banks is energy and pipelines. Pembina Pipeline, PPL.TO with a favourable 1st quarter report for 2025 has an ex-dividend date of June 16th with a current 5.52% yield. More of my energy related stocks will have ex-dividend dates in the second half of June and I'll be looking at them mid month.
An experienced investor, Gordon Pape recently updated his high yield portfolio in the Globe and Mail which continues to gain near 10% on average since he started it in March of 2012 with an initial amount just shy of $25,000 and today worth $83,340 with many of the stocks I own in the 10 stock portfolio, PPL.TO included.
The stock I sold before the recent dividend cut was BCE.TO ... the telecom in his portfolio. It's wise not to copy a portfolio but do your own research and if questions about a stock keep swirling around in my head about performance and management moves with unfavourable news, I sell it and move the funds into another stock I prefer.
It's not only about dividends but share price growth as well where one of my stocks, Sun Life Financial, SLF.TO (also in Mr Pape's portfolio) gained close to $10 since my last buy in February of this year when the US tariff threats ramped up.
I continue to buy JP Morgan Canada's JEPQ (Nasdaq holdings) and JEPI (S&P 500 related holdings) with their fluctuating monthly distributions from these ETFs. They move in price with what's going on in the US as well and investor sentiment, averaging out around $24+ CAD each at this time.