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Timbercreek FinancialTF.TOHOLDSep 05, 2014Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 19, 2026. Market Open.
Pool of money that trades on the TSX and is lent out short-term to the real estate industry. They charge a premium on that. Like owning just the mortgage department of a bank. Payout of over 8% is fully taxable income, not a dividend. Avoid the tax by putting it in your RRSP. Risk/reward is good. One loan didn't go well, with the result that the company is left with a building to sell. Because of this, combined with market nerves about small things, trades at a discount to NAV of $8.40. He'll trade around the NAV. Stock doesn't grow, it just distributes income.
Billy Kawasaki’s Insights - Billy’s most-liked answers from 5i Research. A decent company and the stock price is decently cheap. The dividend has not been changed since being lowered in 2016. Shares have not passed 2011 levels. An income investment. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free
$300 million market cap. A very stable mezzanine financed building. They lend money for short-term real estate loans and are tight lending the money. If there is no loan to be done, there is no yield. If they do a loan, they just flow the income back to you. A very consistent business. Putting this into a TFS account is a wonderful vehicle. Yield of about 9%.
(A Top Pick May 5/14. Down 3.53%.) The trouble was repayment issues last year. They lend short-term to developers. They are underinvested, which hurts their bottom line. They have kind of solved that problem and it is cheap, trading at a 10% discount to its NAV. The mortgage market is still earning a very good rate of return on a risk adjusted basis. He thinks this does recover and does well over the next year.
(A Top Pick Feb11/14. Down 1.52%.) You are just basically getting a 7% rate of return, but he’d like to see the NAV stabilize, which it kind of has. The biggest concern is that rates are so low and there is more competition in the space. It’s like they are on a treadmill. Once the mortgage gets paid down they have to go out and re-distribute the money. It is challenging, because they are always trying to get ahead of themselves. Cheap at these levels.
A mortgage REIT. They are smart people. The return is safe. You should be income focused. It should react well in a rising rate environment. It is not exciting, however.