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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 4:00pm
228 Views
Post# 35092496

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

RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:RE:Goods results You have $8 income in your example. If that $8 income remains constant, it loses 6.54% of its remaining buying power every year.

Your example indicates you intend to collapse the principal before you can no longer buy the original $100 of goods. You have less than five years to do so. At the end of the 5th year you have $140 and goods cost 140.26, and the gap in buying power grows exponentially afterward.

In my real life example, the principal is not to be touched because I want income for my (and my family's) entire future. Losing 6.54% of the income's buying power each year would be crushing after a few years.

But the occasional weak year is okay. If Alaris has one poor growth year among four good years, that would be fine over the long-term.

.
mickeymouse wrote: If the inflation rate is 7% the goods that cost you $100 today will cost you $107 this time next year - If you take that $100 right now and invest it in Alaris you will receive $8 in dividends over the course of the year - so if your original $100 investment stays static for the year you would have $108 - the cost of whatever you are purchasing is $107 - your future purchasing power in a year will exceed the cost of the goods you are purchasing - if the yield on whatever investment you have exceeds the rate of inflation your purchasing power will increase corresponding to the differential in these two numbers

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