PrefLetter

PrefLetter to Accept Subscriptions Next Week

I’ve written about PrefLetter a few times in the past two months and I’m pleased to say that next week it will be going live.

The April edition will be produced in accordance with the announced schedule: recommendations will be based on market conditions as of the close on the second Friday of the month (that’s this coming Friday, the 13th) and will be transmitted to subscribers prior to the opening on Monday 16th.

Except, of course, that there are no subscribers as yet! The website is just going through a few final modifications and until everything is perfect, I’m not going to unveil it. If you have received a sample issue in the past and you want to assure me that you will subscribe as soon as I’ve opened the ticket window, I’ll send you a copy as if you had signed up already.

Credit cards are accepted via secure hosting by Bell Canada with a certificate issued by Network Solutions. Credit Card processing will be handled by Chase Paymentech.

Note that subscribers must either be residents of Ontario or be registered with the Quebec Securities Commission.

Early next week, I’ll be unveiling the website, issuing a press release, commencing Internet advertising and accepting subscriptions. I’ll link to the press release in a post on this blog … so watch this space!

Subscribers may choose any of the following options:

– receive the prior issue immediately for $29 + tax

– receive the next issue upon publication for $29 + tax

– subscribe for a full year of twelve monthly issues commencing with next issue, and receive the prior issue immediately as a bonus, for $185 + tax.

Note that by “immediately”, I mean “immediately”. Prior issues will be sent automatically by eMail upon payment. I will accept cheques, but only for full year subscriptions.

There has been a lot of interest expressed in this venture, and my “practice” issues have been well received. Next week is going to be fun!

Market Action

April 11, 2007

Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30
Index Mean Current Yield (at bid) Mean YTW Mean Average Trading Value Mean Mod Dur (YTW) Issues Day’s Perf. Index Value
Ratchet 4.15% 4.12% 47,353 17.07 2 -0.8161% 1,041.7
Fixed-Floater 4.98% 3.98% 88,663 17.12 6 +0.0805% 1,027.0
Floater 4.58% -17.80% 58,087 0.13 4 -0.1275% 1,054.5
Op. Retract 4.72% 3.15% 84,881 2.13 17 +0.0050% 1,034.2
Split-Share 5.00% 3.77% 160,236 3.18 12 +0.0935% 1,049.4
Interest Bearing 6.51% 3.65% 64,109 2.29 5 +0.3053% 1,046.6
Perpetual-Premium 5.04% 3.95% 189,738 5.07 53 +0.0707% 1,058.8
Perpetual-Discount 4.53% 4.55% 933,621 16.32 11 +0.0366% 1,065.6
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
BCE.PR.H RatchetRate -1.0396% I thought ratchets weren’t supposed to do this! These will be exchangeable into BCE.PR.G (fixed-reset) May 1, 2011. The BCE.PR.H are currently paying $0.09375 monthly = $1.125 annually = 4.5% = 75% of Canadian Prime.
W.PR.H PerpetualPremium +1.0960% On volume of 6,291 shares, an active day for this issue. It traded as high as 27.00, closing at 26.75-89, 1×1. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.15% based on a call 2013-2-14 at $25.00
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
AL.PR.F Scraps (would be Floater, but there are volume concerns) 164,229 Went ex-dividend today, and the indefatigable traders at Global were crossing 82,000 for cash at 25.87, and the same number for regular settlement at 25.58.
CM.PR.J PerpetualDiscount 108,500 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.54% based on a bid of 24.77 and a limitMaturity
ACO.PR.A OpRet 101,011 Scotia crossed 50,000 at 27.65, then another 50,000 at the same price. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 2.44% based on a bid of 27.51 and a call 2008-12-31 at $26.00. There is obviously at least one buyer hoping for the softMaturity 2011-11-30 at $25.00, which will yield 3.56%. There are many such optimists: see Retractible Preferreds and Bonds.
BNS.PR.M PerpetualDiscount 71,800 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.53% based on a bid of 24.92 and a limitMaturity.
CM.PR.I PerpetualPremium 28,860 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.55% based on a bid of $25.26 and a call 2016-03-01 at $25.00.

There were seven other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.

Market Action

April 10, 2007

Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30
Index Mean Current Yield (at bid) Mean YTW Mean Average Trading Value Mean Mod Dur (YTW) Issues Day’s Perf. Index Value
Ratchet 4.13% 4.08% 47,493 17.13 2 +0.0000% 1,050.2
Fixed-Floater 4.98% 3.98% 88,531 17.11 6 -0.4102% 1,026.2
Floater 4.57% -19.13% 58,497 0.13 4 +0.1183% 1,055.9
Op. Retract 4.72% 3.09% 84,569 2.13 17 +0.0822% 1,034.2
Split-Share 5.01% 3.82% 162,068 3.26 12 -0.0663% 1,048.4
Interest Bearing 6.53% 5.60% 64,134 2.29 5 +0.1210% 1,043.4
Perpetual-Premium 5.04% 3.95% 191,024 5.20 53 +0.0257% 1,058.0
Perpetual-Discount 4.53% 4.55% 946,431 16.32 11 -0.1058% 1,065.2
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
BCE.PR.R FixedFloater -1.1160%  
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BNS.PR.M PerpetualDiscount 72,600 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.54% based on a bid of 24.87 and a limitMaturity.
BCE.PR.A FixedFloater 44,700 Becomes exchangeble to Series “AB” Ratchet Rate Preferred 2007-09-01. The dividend rate paid on the BCE.PR.A will be reset at that time … I bet it will be less than the current $1.3625!
SLF.PR.D PerpetualDiscount 24,585 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.52% based on a bid of 24.70 and a limitMaturity.
GWO.PR.H PerpetualPremium 22,185 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.44% based on a bid of 25.73 and a call 2014-10-30 at $25.00.
CM.PR.J PerpetualDiscount 19,970 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.54% based on a bid of $24.76 and a limitMaturity.

There were fifteen other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.

Indices and ETFs

Claymore Preferred ETF : Some Realism, Please!

You can’t make a silk purse out of sow’s ear, but you can always flog investments by spouting meaningless figures.

The Claymore Preferred ETF started trading on the TSX today, and the TSX advises us that 300,000 shares of the “Common Class” (CPD) are outstanding, as are 200,000 of the “Advisor Class” (CPD.A). So, assets of about $10-million. It’s a fair start, and it’s a bigger fund than Malachite Aggressive Preferred!

What has raised my ire, however, is their reporting of yield, which was largely supported by the S&P press release and relayed in the Globe & Mail in Rob Carrick’s column:

The yield on preferred shares is unspectacular at 4 to 5 per cent in most cases, but you get preferential tax treatment through the newly enhanced dividend tax credit. In fact, a 4.5-per-cent dividend yield is equivalent to a bond yield of about 6 per cent on an after-tax basis….The yield for the preferred share index is about 4.66 per cent. Factor in the 0.45-per-cent management expense ratio of the Claymore preferred share ETF and you’re left with a real-world yield of about 4.21 per cent.

The Claymore website reports “Weighted Average Yield” as 4.86% and “Weighted Average Dividend (Coupon)” as 5.26%. OK, let’s get things a little straight, here. The last figure, “Weighted Average Dividend (Coupon)” is a fairly meaningless figure, used to give an idea of whether a particular index is trading at a premium or not. Claymore does not specifically define this term, but I don’t see that it can possibly be anything other than Dividend / Par Value.

“Weighted Average Yield”, beloved of Claymore, S&P and Rob Carrick, is the Current Yield – again, the various participants are far too ashamed of themselves to define the term, but it can’t be anything else than Dividend / Market Price. This is a thoroughly nonsensical value to use, as it does not account for amortization of the premium to the expected call date – it assumes that nothing will ever be called.

As I discussed in A Call, too, Harms (and applied to the analysis of other closed-end funds in Closed End Preferred Funds: Effects of Calls), Yield-to-Worst is a much better, conservative, analytical measure than either of the two measures given above. When discussing bonds, for instance, the Globe and Mail does not report “Average Coupon”, or “Current Yield” – they use yield to maturity – equivalent to Yield-To-Worst for bonds with a single maturity and no embedded options.

The calculation of Yield-to-Worst is discussed in my article Yield Ahead, which includes a reference to Keith Betty’s Yield Spreadsheet (which is linked on this blog as an “Online Resource”). 

The holdings of the fund have been published (well, disclosed as percentages, anyway) and Claymore has done a very good job in making the list downloadable as an Excel Spreadsheet. I’ve taken that raw material and filled in Yield-to-Worst from the HIMIPref™ pre-tax bid-YTW calculations.

In a few cases, I had to guess which issues they really meant; in others I replaced a negative YTW with zero – if anything, the figures shown will overstate the actual mean average Yield-to-Worst of the portfolio.

The value is 3.84%.

That’s probably comparable with the value for the other ETFs on the market, but I haven’t updated my calculations for those funds. The holdings of the Claymore ETF itself are an entirely reasonable market index (which means easy to beat! An active manager doesn’t have to hold the stuff with bond-like interest-equivalent yields-to-worst, even ignoring the potential for trading!) BUT THE YIELD CANNOT BE CLAIMED TO BE OVER 4.5% BY ANY RESPONSIBLE PERSON, without an awful lot of caveats to explain to Granny Oakum that there is good reason to believe that such a yield (Current Yield, Coupon Yield) will not be realized as actual money-in-the-bank yield.

This should not be taken as a knock against the Claymore ETF, or as a reason, in and of itself, to avoid the issue. It’s an ETF, it reflects the overall market, full stop. If an investor wants a passive fund then (subject to more intensive analysis), I’m sure it’s basically as good as any other. And comparing the Index Returns disclosed on the Investor Fact Card doesn’t have me quaking in my boots about the potential for active management.

Annual Returns
Year S&P Index MAPF
2003 10.49% 33.54%
2004 5.74% 13.42%
2005 3.30% 5.92%
2006 4.56% 6.89%

See the main Malachite Aggressive Preferred Fund page for more information. Past performance is not indicative of future returns, and I most particularly do not expect to see returns such as 2003’s again! I don’t WANT to see them again … that was a result of Bombardier Preferreds going completely crazy and represented a recovery from a horrible 2002. MAPF returns are shown after expenses, but before fees.

But there will always be investors who want a brand name rather than performance, so the index funds will do just fine.

I’ll probably be writing a full analysis of the Claymore fund in the near future. Hat tip to Financial Webring Forum for a discussion of this issue that made me realize how much of the yield disinformation is accepted at face value even by knowledgable retail investors.

Update: For comparison purposes, one may find current yields and yields-to-worst reported daily with the HIMI Preferred Indices, reported in this blog in the Market Action category. The Weighted Average Current Yield for MAPF at the close today was 5.05%; the Weighted Average Yield-to-Worst was 4.42%.

Market Action

April 9, 2007

Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30
Index Mean Current Yield (at bid) Mean YTW Mean Average Trading Value Mean Mod Dur (YTW) Issues Day’s Perf. Index Value
Ratchet 4.13% 4.09% 46,156 17.12 2 +0.0199% 1,050.2
Fixed-Floater 4.96% 3.97% 85,926 17.14 6 +0.1675% 1,030.4
Floater 4.58% -18.14% 59,641 0.09 4 +0.0100% 1,054.6
Op. Retract 4.73% 3.18% 84,566 2.19 17 +0.0338% 1,033.3
Split-Share 5.00% 3.80% 164,934 3.27 12 -0.0935% 1,049.1
Interest Bearing 6.54% 4.38% 62,821 2.28 5 +0.0640% 1,042.2
Perpetual-Premium 5.04% 3.95% 192,316 5.38 53 -0.0716% 1,057.7
Perpetual-Discount 4.53% 4.54% 962,934 16.33 11 -0.0400% 1,066.4
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
There were no index-included issues with major price moves today.
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BNS.PR.M PerpetualDiscount 58,290 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.54% based on a bid of 24.87 and a limitMaturity.
CM.PR.D PerpetualPremium 43,349 TD crossed 35,000 at 26.67. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 3.26% based on a bid of 26.59 and a call 2008-5-30 at $26.00.
WN.PR.E PerpetualDiscount 20,093 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.80% based on a bid of 24.86 and a limitMaturity. Not bad, if the credit stays good!
SLF.PR.E PerpetualDiscount 17,020 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.54% based on a bid of 24.91 and a limitMaturity.
RY.PR.F PerpetualDiscount 15,500 Recent new issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.52% based on a bid of $24.80 and a limitMaturity.

There were six other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.

Miscellaneous News

Claymore Preferred ETF Changes Name, to Commence Trading 4/10

Well, when it was announced it was the “Claymore S&P CDN Preferred Share ETF”. Now, however, Claymore has announced that:

The Claymore S&P/TSX CDN Preferred Share ETF is comprised of preferred share issues listed on the Toronto Stock Exchange that meet criteria relating to market capitalization, liquidity, and issuer rating.
    “We are very pleased to be able to launch this new ETF based on the S&P/TSX Preferred Share Index, which will be the first ETF based on the Canadian Preferred share market…”

I thought something might be up when the TSX announced a new index!

It should prove to be a lucrative market for Claymore and some advisors … Claymore gets a management fee of 45bp and advisor-class units will charge another 50bp on top of that. To be sure, Claymore will be paying fund expenses out of their take – but, as I read the prospectus anyway, Claymore will receive extra compensation to cover these expenses, up to a limit of the amount of securities lending revenue earned by the fund.

The ticker for the fund is CPD.

There is, as yet, no further information regarding this ETF on the Claymore website.

Miscellaneous News

Preferred Shares are Equities, says CIFSC

The Canadian Investment Funds Standards Committee

was formed in January 1998 by Canada’s major mutual fund database and research firms with a self-imposed mandate to standardize the classifications of Canadian-domiciled mutual funds.

They have now released a new classification scheme of funds’ underlying investments and provided schematics of how funds may be categorized.

Preferreds and Convertible Preferreds are both considered to be equities. It is not clear to me whether a preferred that converts into common at a variable rate based on the market price is considered a convertible preferred, or whether this status is reserved for preferreds that convert into a fixed number of common and can therefore ‘trade off the stock’.

At any rate, I find the classification of preferred shares as equities by default to be more than just a little bit puzzling, and have sent them a query:

I note that preferred shares are considered to be equities by default, although you note that you may treat them as fixed income on an exception basis.

How did you arrive at the conclusion that this was the correct classification? Did you, for instance, perform a correlation analysis between historical returns preferred shares, equities and bonds?

On what basis will exceptions be considered?

We shall see!

Hat tip to Financial Webring for publicizing this development.

Market Action

April 5, 2007

Note that these indices are experimental; the absolute and relative daily values are expected to change in the final version. In this version, index values are based at 1,000.0 on 2006-6-30
Index Mean Current Yield (at bid) Mean YTW Mean Average Trading Value Mean Mod Dur (YTW) Issues Day’s Perf. Index Value
Ratchet 4.14% 4.09% 48,057 17.12 2 +0.0000% 1,050.0
Fixed-Floater 4.97% 3.99% 87,413 17.14 6 -0.5028% 1,028.7
Floater 4.58% -17.77% 61,718 0.09 4 -0.0392% 1,054.5
Op. Retract 4.73% 3.16% 84,998 2.14 17 +0.0757% 1,033.0
Split-Share 5.00% 3.74% 168,106 3.20 12 -0.0298% 1,050.1
Interest Bearing 6.54% 3.45% 63,137 2.29 5 -0.1420% 1,041.5
Perpetual-Premium 5.04% 3.83% 195,008 5.12 53 -0.0435% 1,058.5
Perpetual-Discount 4.52% 4.54% 981,834 15.48 11 -0.0215% 1,066.8
Major Price Changes
Issue Index Change Notes
GWO.PR.H PerpetualPremium -1.1197% On volume of 11,555 shares, about average for this issue. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.50% based on a bid of 25.61 and a call 2014-10-30 at $25.00
Volume Highlights
Issue Index Volume Notes
BNS.PR.M PerpetualDiscount 724,590 New issue settled today. Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.54% based on a bid of 24.87 and a limitMaturity.
BCE.PR.C FixedFloater 62,000 Becomes exchangeable into the Ratchet-Rate series AD March 1, 2008. Until then, it pays a fixed dividend of $1.385 p.a. Afterwards … I bet it’s less!
PWF.PR.K PerpetualPremium 54,102 Now with a pre-tax bid-YTW of 4.51% based on a bid of $25.66 and a call 2014-11-30 at $25.00.
BCE.PR.A FixedFloater 52,330 Exchangeable into Ratchet-Rate series AB on September 1, 2007. Until then, it pays $1.3625 p.a. … afterwards … who knows?
BCE.PR.H RatchetRate 41,900  

There were thirteen other “$25 p.v. equivalent” index-included issues with over 10,000 shares traded today.

Data Changes

BNS.PR.M Arrives at Market Slightly Discounted

The Scotia new issue, announced March 21, closed its first day of trading at 24.87-89, on heavy volume of 724,590 shares. There was a tight trading range, 24.85-92.

Updated comparatives are:

Scotia Bank 4.45% Perp New Issue & Comparatives
Data BNS.PR.M BNS.PR.L RY.PR.E
Price due to base-rate 22.52 22.43 22.64
Price due to short-term -0.25 -0.25 -0.25
Price due to long-term 1.39 1.39 1.39
Price to to Cumulative Dividends 0.00 0.00 0.00
Price due to Liquidity 1.71 1.71 1.72
Price due to error -0.07 -0.07 -0.07
Curve Price (Taxable Curve) 25.30 25.22 25.43
Dividend Rate $1.125 $1.125 $1.125
Quote 4/5 24.87-89 24.97-98 25.15-23
YTW (at bid, after tax) 3.61% 3.58% 3.60%
YTW Date Infinite 2016-5-27 / Infinite Infinite
Credit Rating (DBRS) Pfd-1 Pfd-1 Pfd-1
YTW (Pre-Tax) 4.54% 4.50% 4.51%
YTW Modified Duration (Pre-Tax) 16.36 16.46 16.24
YTW Pseudo-Convexity (Pre-Tax) -35.01 -63.28 -51.92

Update: The issue has been added to the HIMIPref&trade database with the securityCode A41010, replacing the preIssue code of P50012. A reorgDataEntry has been added to the system.

The issue has been added to the HIMIPref™ PerpetualDiscount Index.

Index Construction / Reporting

LBS.PR.A : Financial Statements & Some Comparatives

I was asked on an old thread to comment on this issue in the light of the release of the split-share corporations first audited financials through Brompton’s dedicated web page.

LBS Balance Sheet, 2006-12-31 (Simplified by James Hymas)
Assets (thousands)
Good Assets 311,659
Assets only an accountant could love 14
Total Assets 311,673
Liabilities  
Misc. Liabilities 3,010
Preferred Shares 120,000
Total Liabilities 123,010
Shareholders’ Equity 188,663
Total Liabilities & Equity 311,673

OK, so remember from the example of Sixty-Split that the Asset Coverage Ratio is defined as Total Money Available / Total Money Required.

Total Money Required is the redemption value of the preferreds: $120-million.

Total Money available is the Shareholders’ Equity plus the amount already earmarked for the prefs less the miscellaneous liabilities (because they get paid first or, at least, earlier) and also less the ephemeral assets of $14-thousand (because they will evaporate prior to the preferreds coming due AND because if the company gets wound up tomorrow there’s no actual cash to be gained from them), or $188,663 + $120,000 – $3,010 – $14 = $305,639.

Correction, posted 2007-4-11 : There is an error in the above. There is no need to subtract the $3,010 in miscellaneous liabilities because they were never added in the first place, since the positive figures being used come from the liability side of the balance sheet. Thus, the cash available is $188,663 + $120,000 – $14 = $308,649 and the coverage ratio is 2.57:1.

Another way to arrive at this number is consider the total money available to the company on liquidation, less the amounts that have to be paid out before the prefholders get paid: $311,659 – $3,010 = $308,649.

Which just goes to show, you have to be careful with this stuff and, if possible, check it with a different method!

Therefore, the Asset Coverage Ratio is $305,639 / $120,000 = 2.55:1.

Or, to put it in DBRS terms, there’s downside protection of 60.7% … in other words, the assets could lose 60.7% of their value and there would still be enough in the kitty to pay off the preferred shareholders (although the capital unit holders would lose their shirts).

Just how much asset protection one wants is a function, in part, of just what the assets are. If LBS held a portfolio of Junior Uranium explorers I would be more concerned, but I take the view that the LBS portfolio of big Canadian Banks and Insurers isn’t going to drop by that much any time soon. I’m happy with the coverage.

By way of comparison, the recent DBRS rating of CFS.PR.A as Pfd-1 started off the summary with:

The rating of the Preferred Shares is based on the following:

(1) The available downside protection, which is 57% to the principal amount of the outstanding Preferred Shares at closing.

….

A full analysis is more complicated than that, obviously, but it is clear that on an Asset-Coverage basis, LBS.PR.A has nothing to be ashamed of. So now let’s go to the income statement:

LBS Income Statement (thousands) (Simplified by James Hymas)
Income  
Dividends, Interest & Lending 2,038
Expenses  
Fees (547)
Expenses (185)
Brokerage (66)
Total Costs (799)
Preferred Distributions (1,304)
Capital Unit Distributions (2,981)
Realized & Unrealized Capital Gains 26,858
Total Change In Net Assets 23,813

It should be remembered that these figures are derived from operations for the period October 17 (commencement of operations) to December 31. We’re interested in ratios, not absolute numbers, so we’ll assume – for now, for the purposes of this analysis only – that this INITIAL PARTIAL period gives a good indication of what may be expected (in terms of ratios) for FUTURE COMPLETE periods.

An assumption. For now.  

So: we want to find out the income coverage. Total income for the period is $2,038 [thousands throughout] and is of a nature that appears to be sustainable. We’ll cut the boys a little slack, and ignore the $66 transaction costs … they had to invest all their money in the period, their first since inception, and given that the corporation takes a passive stance towards the stock portfolio, it’s not very likely to recur to the same extent. At the end of the period, they held a total of just over six million shares, so their COMMISSSIONS paid amount to just over a penny a share, which is entirely reasonable.

We have no idea, from just these figures, whether their trading was done competently or not. It is entirely possible that these guys are the most reckless idiots in creation and overpaid for their stock big-time, to the amount of $1.00 per share. It is also possible that they’re the smartest, toughest negotiators & traders in the world and UNDERPAID for their stock, to the amount of $1.00 per share. This somewhat vital information, which may usually be relied upon to be a much greater number than piddly little commission expenses, is completely missing from such completely simplistic moronic idiocy as the Trading Expense Ratio, which, for instance, mutual funds are required to report by policy of the Canadian Securities Administrators, in an apparent effort to ensure that the gullible think they understand something.

But one way or another, we’ll exclude commission costs from the expenses, in the belief (hope?) that they were largely a one-time thing.

So to calculate income coverage, we come up with $2,038 – $547 – $185 = $1,306 presumably recurring net income after expenses, to cover preferred share distributions of $1,304.

Not quite an exact match, but close! We’ll say that income coverage is 100%, for purposes of this analysis. That’s pretty good! The figures shown in my article on split shares are even more out of date than they were when I wrote it, but serve as a reasonable benchmark. One Hundred Percent coverage implies that preferred shareholders may expect that there is a reasonable chance that they will get their dividends without the company having to dip into capital, thereby reducing the Asset Coverage Ratio.

All sorts of bad things could happen in the future, of course. What if the company is too generous in its distributions to the Capital Unit holders (there are limits to this under the prospectus; determining whether these limits are good enough is left as an exercise for the student)? What if all the banks cut their dividends to zero in response to taxation changes? You can never predict the future, but you can extrapolate the present … as long as you retain a healthy skepticism towards this and any other extrapolation (and watch the financials to ensure that you like what’s happening!), the income coverage on this issue looks quite good.  

Not quite as good as DBRS noted for CFS.PR.A:

(3) The Interest Coverage Ratio test of 1.5 times for the Preferred Shares, which ensures a high level of protection to the holders of the Preferred Shares.

but good enough for investment grade.

DBRS rates this issue Pfd-2. There’s a chance I might quibble about this rating if I did a very thorough analysis of comparable issues and historical performances … but there’s nothing in these financials that makes me suspect that such a rating is completely out to lunch.

I’m happy with the rating. That does not imply anything at all about whether I think that LBS.PR.A is a good investment at this time at the current price.

Remember the Tech Wreck? Everybody and his shoe-shine boy was telling everybody else that ‘The Internet is going to change all our lives, and therefore Nortel is a fantastic buy at $110!’. Well, yeah. The internet is going to change our lives. And Nortel is a fine company (although perhaps I should have chosen another example, a company that can keep a set of books, for instance). BUT. BUT. BUT. That does not imply it should be bought irregardless of price.

First you determine value. Then you determine price. Then you subtract. Then you make an investment decision.

So, anyway, I’m not going to comment much on the investment characteristics of LBS.PR.A. I’m happy to rant and rave on and on about issues I consider lousy, but for discriminating between “Weak Sell”, “Hold”, “Buy” and “Strong Buy” (which aren’t actually terms I use, but serve as examples), you’ve got to be a client.

Or, soon (very soon!) a subscriber to PrefLetter!

But, out of the kindness of my heart, I’ve uploaded a recent evaluation of the HIMIPref™ Split-Share Index, to give interested readers a place to start.