Michael SprungLabrador Iron Ore RoyaltyLIF.TOUnspecifiedDec 12, 2022
It is an interesting company which typically has a great yield. However its capital fluctuates based on the underlying commodity. Don't buy it if you don't like volatility.
Owns this personally. Earnings and dividends are erratic, depending on the volatile price of iron ore. But once in a while they pay an amazing, special dividend. Pays a 5.6% dividend.
He likes materials now and this is a materials stock. It's coming off its support level and has made a descending triangle (lower peaks in the past 2 years, but the low has been steady). This could, maybe, breakout. Looks okay. Could benefit if money rotates out of high-flying tech.
Unsure on direction share price (short term). Good company for the long term investor. At current price is a bit expensive. Weakening pricing hard for business model (cyclical business). Hard to predict short term prospects.
Model price of $60.72, 116% upside. Lots of questions here, such as what's going on in China and macro factors. Lots of value, but not big value. He'd be cautious.
Can be extremely volatile. Dividend depends on iron ore market and can fluctuate wildly. A good company to own, tuck it away, don't look at it, and collect the dividends. Over time, he's earned as much in dividends as he has in capital gains and losses in the stock. Tremendous company.
Dividend fluctuates dramatically year to year. If you hold it for the longer term, it works out to a good rate of return. Iron ore can have pretty wide swings, and going into a recession will probably be under significant pressure.
Dividend safe? Dividend fluctuates. They take a royalty, so if the price of iron fluctuates, the dividend will fluctuate too. Look first at China, as it's the biggest consumer of iron ore by a mile. No operating risk, but susceptible to downturns in the price.
Did well earlier this year in the base metals rally, but inflation and the Russian invasion hit and wider market sentiment has since plunged. Long-term, LIF is great, though. Their royalty structure creates nice cash flow, and it pays a variable dividend that should remain reasonably high. Shares have fallen a lot, so you can start looking into an entry point.
There is a risk in buying this for income since the dividend is lofty, though a small cut still yields good income. Some analysts are cutting targets but it is attractive at this price. Has a good profile.
High dividend yield. Iron ore prices were over $200/tonne, but now they're $100, still extremely high. Steel looks particularly weak. Even in a recession, we won't go back to $50, but the yield should normalize closer to 7%. Wait and see, start to dabble in Q4.
Royalty on each shipment, not mining themselves. Good way to play the sector. Good yield. Entry point is important. If you own it, hold. They pay out to shareholders what they receive. High yield could be a warning, but this company trades solidly between $20 and $40. Yield is 13%.
Easy money has been made. Remains a good play on economic recovery, good dividend. He no longer owns it personally, but owns it indirectly through the royalties of ALS.
Be careful. Yield of 13% was what they paid out last year. Variable dividend policy. Not participating in the commodities rally. Economically sensitive. If you're trying to play the last 20% of the rally, decent entry point. Too volatile for him.
At all-time highs. Model price of $69, but it's a cyclical. EPS of $3.92, but payout of $3.25. Balance sheet not growing. If earnings dip, you'll have a negative rate of return.