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Fairfax Financial Holdings Ltd T.FFH.PR.E


Primary Symbol: T.FFH Alternate Symbol(s):  FRFHF | T.FFH.PR.C | FXFLF | FRFZF | T.FFH.PR.D | FRFGF | FXFHF | T.FFH.PR.F | FAXRF | T.FFH.PR.G | FAXXF | T.FFH.PR.H | FRFXF | T.FFH.PR.I | T.FFH.PR.J | T.FFH.PR.K | FRFFF | T.FFH.PR.M | FFHPF

Fairfax Financial Holdings Limited is a Canada-based holding company. The Company, through its subsidiaries, is engaged in property and casualty insurance and reinsurance and the associated investment management. The Company’s segments include Property and Casualty Insurance and Reinsurance, Life insurance and Run-off and Non-insurance companies. The Property and Casualty Insurance and Reinsurance segment includes North American Insurers, Global Insurers and Reinsurers and International Insurers and Reinsurers. The Life Insurance and Run-off segment include Eurolife and Run-off. The Non-insurance companies segment includes restaurants and retail, Fairfax India, Thomas Cook India and others. Eurolife underwrites traditional life insurance policies (endowments, deferred annuities, whole life and term life), group benefits, including retirement benefits, and accident and health insurance policies. The North American Insurers include Northbridge, Crum & Forster and Zenith National.


TSX:FFH - Post by User

Post by retiredcfon Dec 28, 2022 3:11pm
449 Views
Post# 35194147

Gordon Pape

Gordon Pape

There are two key things I look for in choosing a dividend stock.

The first is the sustainability and grown potential of the dividend. I want stocks that are dependable and have a track record of increasing their payouts on a regular basis,

The second is price stability. If a stock price drops more than its dividend payout, we’re left in a loss position no matter how high the yield.

Unfortunately, that happened quite often this year, as rising rates put pressure on interest-sensitive securities, driving down their price. REITs and utilities were especially vulnerable.

That’s only a temporary blip – they’ll recover as central banks slow or suspend rate increases in 2023. In the meantime, several of my recommendations continued to pay respectable dividends in 2022 and also generated some healthy capital gains as well. Here are five of them. Prices are as of Dec. 23.

Pason Systems 

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Pason Systems provides specialized data management systems for drilling rigs. Its solutions include data acquisition, wellsite reporting, remote communications, and web-based information management, enabling collaboration between the well and the office. The comeback in the energy sector has boosted revenue and profit this year. Pason was recommended in my Income Investor newsletter in February 2016.

 

The stock ended 2021 at $11.54. At the close on Dec. 23, it was trading at $16.10 for a capital gain of 39.5 per cent. The dividend was raised by 50 per cent, to $0.12 a quarter ($0.48 a year), effective with the December payment. That gives the stock a yield of 3 per cent.

Freehold Royalties Ltd. 

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Freehold is an oil and gas royalty company based in Calgary. It has assets in five provinces and eight U.S. states. Its primary focus is to acquire and actively manage royalties, while providing a lower-risk income vehicle for shareholders. Freehold has land holdings totaling more than 6.4 million gross acres in Canada and 0.9 million gross drilling unit acres in the United States.

 

This has been a great year for virtually all energy-related stocks. Freehold recently reported record third-quarter production and a jump of 68 per cent in funds from operations. The stock ended 2021 at $11.65 and closed Friday, Dec. 23, at $16.12 for a year-to-date gain of 38.4 per cent. The company raised its dividend three times this year and is now paying $0.09 per month ($1.08 per year), to yield 6.7 per cent. A word of warning though: Freehold will cut the dividend if business conditions worsen. It’s in the company’s DNA.

Capital Power Corp. 

Edmonton-based Capital Power has 28 operating facilities across the U.S. and Canada, driven by clean energy sources such as wind, solar, and thermal. Its total production capacity is 7,400 MW. Projects in advanced development include approximately 385 MW of owned renewable generation capacity in North Carolina and Alberta and 512 MW of incremental natural gas combined cycle capacity, from the repowering of Genesee 1 and 2 in Alberta.

After a slump in October, the stock rebounded strongly and closed at $47.19 on Dec. 23. That represents a capital gain of 19.6 per cent year- to -date. The company recently raised its quarterly dividend by 5.8 per cent, to $0.58 per share ($2.32 annually), to yield 4.9 per cent.

Intact Financial Corp.

Intact is by far the largest property/casualty (P&C) insurance company in Canada. It controls almost 20 per cent of the market share as the result of its acquisition of RSA’s Canadian business last year. The deal also expanded Intact’s geographical reach, with the acquisition including RSA’s UK and Irish business.

The stock reached an all-time high earlier this year of $209.57 and is trading just below that level now. Capital gain year- to- date is 20.7 per cent. The shares pay a quarterly dividend of $1 ($4 annually) to yield 2 per cent. That may not seem like much but Intact has a solid history of regular dividend increases. The company is also actively repurchasing its stock.

Pembina Pipeline Corp. 

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Pembina owns and operates an integrated system of pipelines that transport various products derived from natural gas and hydrocarbon liquids produced primarily in western Canada. The company also owns and operates gas gathering and processing facilities and an oil and natural gas liquids infrastructure and logistics business.

Pipeline companies have performed well this year. They tend to be interest sensitive, but that headwind has been more than offset by the sharp rise in oil and gas prices and the recovery of the energy industry in general.

The stock has gained 20 per cent year-to-date and the company recently boosted its monthly dividend to $0.2175 ($2.61 a year) for a yield of 5.7 per cent. It’s worth noting that the company did not cut the dividend during the oil price crunch at the start of the pandemic. That provides a measure of confidence that it won’t be slashed at the first sign of economic problems.

Many other of my recommendations in the Income Investor newsletter posted a combination of capital gains and dividend cash flow this year, including Boralex, Enbridge, Fairfax Financial, and North West Company.

For next year, we’re looking for a recovery of interest-sensitive securities, especially in the REIT sector.

Gordon Pape is Editor and Publisher of the Internet Wealth Builder and Income Investor newsletters.

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