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Dividend Growth Split Corp T.DGS

Alternate Symbol(s):  DDWWF | T.DGS.PR.A

The Funds investment objectives are to provide holders of Preferred shares with fixed, cumulative, preferential, quarterly cash distributions and to return the original issue price of 10.00 per Preferred share to shareholders at maturity; and to provide holders of Class A shares with regular monthly cash distributions, targeted to be at least 0.10 per Class A share, and the opportunity for growth in Net Asset Value per Class A share. The Fund invests, on an approximately equally weighted basis, in a portfolio consisting primarily of equity securities of Canadian dividend growth companies. In addition, the Fund may hold up to 20% of the total assets of the portfolio in global dividend growth companies for diversification and improved return potential, at the Managers discretion.


TSX:DGS - Post by User

Comment by flamingogoldon Feb 07, 2024 11:50am
136 Views
Post# 35867615

RE:CIBC's Tal comments on latest Freeland move

RE:CIBC's Tal comments on latest Freeland moveThis is a smoke and mirrors move by the Libs. It makes them look good politically but are not addressing the problem full on.

A foreign ban helps on one hand but on the other hand they are allowing amortizations to be extended to 50, 60, 70+ years? By tampering with the natural law of economics there will be no immediate solution to the housing problem. They should not have provided a safety net to the over-extended and over-indebted, mostly specu-investors (both foreign and local) and allowed natural economics to unfold. This would have forced many to sell unfortunately at losses but on the positive it would have increased the housing stock at the same time.

Unfotunately, people losing money doesn't lead to votes. Most will blame government and not own up to a bad decision... buying real estate at the absolute lowest interest rates in history.

mouserman wrote: The Financial Post reports in its Wednesday, Feb. 7, edition that Ottawa's decision to extend a ban on foreign home buyers for an additional two years is a reasonable move, but will not go far to address the country's housing affordability crisis, said CIBC economist Benjamin Tal. The Post's Denise Paglinawan writes that the plan to extend the ban, which came into effect on Jan. 1, 2023, and was set to expire on Jan. 1, 2025, was announced on Sunday by Deputy Prime Minister Chrystia Freeland. The ban will now expire on Jan. 1, 2027. Mr. Tal says that while the ban is "reasonable policy" and "a step in the right direction," he does not consider it a major macroeconomic move. Mr. Tal notes that foreign buyers are an easy target for a government eager to show it is taking action on housing. Mortgage strategist Robert McLister said the foreign buyer ban is "like a magician's handkerchief" that diverts attention from the actual problem of too many incoming immigrants relative to the number of homes built. Under the ban, foreign commercial enterprises and people who are not Canadian citizens or permanent residents are prohibited from purchasing residential property in Canada either directly or indirectly.


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