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Dividend 15 Split Corp T.DFN

Alternate Symbol(s):  DFNPF | DVSPF | T.DFN.P.A

Dividend 15 Split Corp. is a Canada-based mutual fund, which invests primarily in a portfolio of dividend yielding common shares, which includes approximately 15 Canadian companies. The Company offers two types of shares, including Preferred shares and Class A shares. Its investment objectives with respect to Preferred Shares are to provide holders with fixed cumulative preferential monthly cash dividends in an amount of $0.04583 per Preferred share to yield 5.5% per annum on the $10 repayment amount and to return the $10 repayment amount to their holders on the termination date. Its investment objectives with respect to Class A Shares are to provide holders with regular monthly cash distribution targeted to be $0.10 per Class A share and return the original issue price to their holders on the termination date. The net asset value per unit must remain above the required $15 per unit threshold for distributions to be declared. Its investment manager is Quadravest Capital Management Inc.


TSX:DFN - Post by User

Post by mousermanon Feb 02, 2024 9:17am
208 Views
Post# 35859080

BOC comments on HIGH shelter costs

BOC comments on HIGH shelter costsThe Financial Post reports in its Friday, Feb. 2, edition that Bank of Canada governor Tiff Macklem says the central bank cannot solve the housing crisis with interest rates because the root cause is a supply shortage. A Canadian Press dispatch to the Post reports that Mr. Macklem appeared before MPs on the finance committee Thursday following its interest rate decision last week and faced multiple questions on housing affordability. The governor acknowledged that high interest rates are feeding into higher housing costs, but he noted that shelter price inflation has been high both during times of low and high interest rates. He says government should be focused on increasing housing supply to improve affordability, and warns policies that increase demand will worsen it. Last week, the Bank of Canada continued to hold its key interest rate at five per cent and signalled it has begun considering the timeline for rate cuts. It also singled out rapidly rising shelter costs as the primary reason why inflation is still above the 2 per cent target.
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