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Emera IncEMA.TOCOMMENTJun 18, 2013Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of Jun 12, 2026. Market Open.
Delivers power and that thesis is still going strong, no matter if price of oil drops. Nova Scotia has been tough, but Florida/Mexico is positive. Still getting dividend yield and growth. Will continue to grow steadily, though pace of growth won't be what we've just seen.
Hard to buy at these levels, but his firm is happy to hold -- capital gain is deferred and embedded. If your position is way overweight, you could trim.
She loves utilities. Is at all-time highs, but is adding shares. Is a diversified utility. They operate in places like Florida, which enjoys strong population growth and a regulatory environment. Nova Scotia may uncap rates, which would benefit EMA. They can add more solar projects in FLA. They keep growing the 4% dividend.
(Analysts’ price target is $71.17)Leverage has historically been a problem, but now more de-levered. Higher-beta Canadian utility. Take a step back and ask if this is the best diversified utility? Probably not. For example, NEE has a similar footprint and is in the US.
Stretched payout ratio has been an issue in the past, though not right now. Yield is 4.3%.
In clients' TFSAs. Electricity producer in Maritimes and Tampa, Florida. Growth of rate base will determine where the stock price goes. Lower interest rates help them. Growing customer base, which means profits will jump, and dividends will grow. Company estimates dividend growth probably in 3-6% range over next few years. Challenge after that is how to grow the business -- either by acquiring or building out.
Right space, right time. Still a buy as demand for electricity appears to be on the rise.
Likes it. Up 21% YTD. They do what they say they're going to do. Nova Scotia now coming out of its rate freeze, should see earnings increase in 2026. Asset sales mean that debt level is OK. Dividend can still be increased, though at lower levels than historically. Has trouble trimming a name that's been really good to her, especially as she's a long-term investor.
Utilities is her favourite sector. If economy rolls over, $$ will come out of the high-torquey sectors and move to defensive.
A boring, stable utility. Pretty much discarded last year with people chasing the AI trend. Big move since January with the flight to safety. Outlook was upgraded from Negative to Stable. Good job reducing leverage. Florida just approved storm reparation costs from 2 hurricanes in 2024.
Nova Scotia-based utility with Nova Scotia Power as its main asset. Also, has some pipelines, some assets in Maine and it is behind the expansion out of Churchill Falls. Considers this as Canada’s growth utility. Price has not contracted as much as some of the other utilities but it is looking at little peaky at this point. For now you have seen the bulk of the capital gains. Dividend is quite safe and probably will grow. If you are looking for capital gains, you’ll have to look somewhere else for now. 4% dividend yield.