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TSE:ALA
Owns this in a few accounts. It is a midstream company. The yield is very attractive. In this past week, she has noticed all of these energy infrastructure names, including the pipelines, have been pulling back. This represents an attractive entry point for people who want income. Dividend yield of 7.6%.
The acquisition 6 months ago was won in the US against potentially many US competitors, and this is a concern because why did they win this business. They are going into areas where perhaps Trump wakes up with Tweets against Canadian takeovers of US companies. You will not get certainty of the success of approvals on this for another year. You could go to another company where you can get certainty going forward. This one will be under pressure until the deal is done. The sub-receipts are the way to play it because there is a guaranteed payment if the deal does not go up, but you get it converted to stock if it does.
Had a good quarter, and the approval of their WGL acquisition is now just waiting for the regulatory side of things. One issue is commodity prices in Canada. Canadian gas production has been a headwind. Also, they made a foray into the US, to provide some natural gas infrastructure into the California grid. With the WGL acquisition they are looking to divest some of that and putting proceeds into the Washington DC area. Thinks this is just in “show me” mode. Dividend yield of 7.25%.
Has a lot of conviction in this company. When their acquisition in the US goes through, you will probably see the company get re-rated. The large US acquisition is somewhat transformational in that it creates a company with much more predictable cash flows, and reduces their sensitivity to commodity prices. Right now, it is a little bit of a mix between energy infrastructure and regulated utilities. The acquisition of WGL tilts it more towards stable cash flow regulated utility power generation. When the acquisition is completed, you have very visible cash flow and dividend growth. The “subscription receipts” will eventually convert into regular shares. The “subscription receipts” trades at a discount to the equities, so if you are going to buy this, you should buy it through the subscription receipts.
As an established mid-streamer, building an LPG extraction/export facility and in the process of purchasing WGL, is this a good integrated play on natural gas? All infrastructure companies are decent long-term holds, and are all relatively expensive, but have pretty good outlooks and are struggling to get Canadian projects approved. Thinks this is good and he would buy the stock.
Switch this out for Enbridge (ENB-T)? This just did a US acquisition that is accretive, which is probably going to hurt as the Cdn$ goes higher. This is more commodity focused and the recovery is taking longer to take hold. This company could be a good, but he is pretty excited about Enbridge, which trades at a lower valuation and has very visible EPS growth of about 11%. It could be a good idea in a neutral tax situation.
Will the deal in the US go through? He owns the receipts, which is the right way to play this. If the deal doesn’t go through you are buying the receipts at $29 which pays a 7% dividend. If the deal doesn’t go through, you get $31 back. He thinks the deal will go through. Things are quiet because it is going through the regulatory hearings.
He has been adding to this one at these levels. He likes it because it gets painted with the same brush as other oil companies, but it is much more diversified. There is a high degree of certainty for their revenues and cash flows. There is high visibility. They are starting to amass assets in the alternative energy space.
This runs between a quasi-utility and sort of a quasi-gas company. The chart shows a really big basing pattern from 2015. They just acquired something, which makes the company a little better, but the trend has gotten a lot tighter in the last little while, which is quite positive. Gas has seasonality, which starts kicking in right now. Anything below $30 on the stock is a really good deal. Dividend yield of 7%.
He used to own this, but sold it about a year ago. His concern was on valuation and interest rate sensitivity. This does midstream natural gas processing in Western Canada. Involved in a very large transaction to buy WGL Holdings in the US for about $6 billion. The market doesn’t like the transaction and the stock traded down quite sharply when they announced the deal. This company paid way, way more in dividends than their earnings. Also, the stock is quite expensive.