Canadian UtilitiesCU.TOTOP PICKJun 18, 2015Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 23, 2026. Market Open.
Billy Kawasaki’s Insights - Billy’s most-liked answers from 5i Research. There is no news that would account for the correction. Dividend stocks may see some weakness if there are rate fears. The stock also fell below its 50-day moving average so this may have caused some technical selling. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free
They're focused on Alberta. Likes it. They've transitioned well to having more regulated cash flows, but there's less growth than Northland Power or Boralex, but CU has a cheaper PE. It's a steady eddy.
He likes utilities; defensive and paying good dividends in a low rate environment. CU depends on Alberta, which is challenged by oil. He prefers Fortis and Boralex, Innergex and AQN-T, which will maintain or increase current stock levels. If you own this, hold it and wait for a recovery; the dividend is safe.
CU vs. H Hydro One had serious issues, but a decent dividend. If he had to pick one right now, he'd pick CU. Looks a bit steadier. Hydro One is in nosebleed territory, and looks as though it's starting to come off. CU is consolidating, and looks to go higher short-term. $35 is a good stop level to sell CU, $22 for Hydro One.
This is a bit of a contrarian play. Everything has gone wrong for them. There was the oil collapse, an NDP victory in Alberta, rising yields recently which really soured sentiment. However, it has gotten to a level which he thinks is just too cheap to ignore. Trading at 14X 2016 earnings, versus the group at around 21. Thinks you will get your non-regulated assets for free, and yet they have multi-years of robust utility growth, regardless of what happens to the Alberta economy. Pristine balance sheet and low risk. Dividend yield of 3.35%.