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Alaris Equity Partners Income 5 50 convertible unsecured subordinated Debentures T.AD.DB

Alternate Symbol(s):  T.AD.DB.A | T.AD.UN | ADLRF

Alaris Equity Partners Income Trust (the Trust) is a Canada-based private equity company. The Trust, through its subsidiaries, provides alternative financing to private companies. The Trust’s operations consist primarily of investments in private operating entities. The principal objective of the Trust is to generate stable and predictable cash flows for payment of distributions to unitholders of the Trust. The Trust offers a range of services, which include services, healthcare services, industrial services, professional services, information technology services, and construction-related services. The Company’s investments are made through a wholly owned Canadian corporation, Alaris Equity Partners Inc., and its American investments are made through, Alaris Equity Partners USA Inc. (Alaris USA) and Salaris USA Royalty Inc. (Salaris USA). The Trust also has a wholly owned subsidiary in the Netherlands, Alaris Cooperatief U.A. (Alaris Cooperatief).


TSX:AD.DB - Post by User

Comment by TickerTwiton Nov 11, 2022 1:19pm
205 Views
Post# 35091940

RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Goods results

RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Goods results There isn't enough time left in my cancer-riddled existence to go through all my missed investing opportunities :).

My investing goal is income and income growth combined. I want to leave my family a sustainable income that's built on steady-growth enterprises in sectors with high barriers to entry (utilities, banks, telecoms, pipelines).

Accordingly, I track dividend growth alongside a company's ability to sustain that dividend growth (positive trends in revenues, margins, free cash flow, equity, and good debt management).

As an income-focussed investor I think it's important to compare dividend growth to inflation, because utlimately it's the buying power of my income that matters. If in future I could not find companies that kept their dividends in line with (or better than) inflation, I would have to consider switching to a capital gains strategy to generate income. But that is a far greater burden to hand over to my family when I die -- it requires much deeper analysis and general awareness of market trends.

I realize this doesn't answer your question, but it's a harder question to answer than it seemed at first.

.
babedinkleman wrote: Interesting.....I've never put that much thought into it.....and to be perfectly honest I'm pretty sure I'm not capable of doing so....so I'll have to live with that.
Have you run into situations where such analysis has made you miss out on making money on some stocks that don't meet that criteria but still perform well?

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