MCAN Mortgage CorpMKP.TOCOMMENTAug 22, 2013Stock price when the opinion was issued
As of May 29, 2026. Market Open.
Lending in real estate finance. Very interest-rate sensitive. If you think interest rates are going to rise, as in 2022, then it will underperform significantly. Will do better if rates fall. Thinks the BOC has a bit more to go on that, so there could be a bit more upside.
But the stock's already rallied back to highs of 2021, so risk/return not that attractive. Risk/return looks more interesting around $16-17. He'd call it neutral to underweight at this point.
Basically paying out all of its income as dividend, so you are not going to get growth, just dividend. Thinks the dividend is relatively safe as long as the Canadian housing market holds up. If you like growth in the sector, he likes Equity Financial (EQI-T). Their lending book growth was something like 178% last quarter.
Has a small short position as part of a basket that is against his biggest Long Equity Financial Holdings (EQI-T) (?) in that sector. He is short this because it is one of the few publicly traded mortgage companies originators that has some pretty significant Western Canadian exposure, which will act as a bit of a headwind. Trading at close to 2X BV, whereas the company that he likes better is trading below its BV. 7.8% dividend yield is safe as long as the real estate market in Canada holds up and interest rates stay low. At some point we are going to see residential real estate in Canada roll over, and certainly in areas that are going to be hit by the decline in energy.
Mortgage Investment Corporation (or a MIC) and to qualify, they have to pay out all their profits each year so they don’t retain any of their profits. You don’t get any growth in retained earnings. 7.9% yield is all you get. Really like buying a high-yield bond. He is shooting for more than 8% for his clients..
Shorting Canadian housing with Home Capital Group (HCG-T,) and Genworth MI Canada (MIC-T). Is a little bit early but he has seen the housing bubble build and believes it has now peaked and is now on the downside. If right and Canadian housing prices fall 20%-30% over the next 2 years, then these companies are not going to just be at risk of earnings but also at risk of solvency.
Good company and there has probably been an overreaction to a slightly disappointing quarter or something like that. Insiders are buying which is a good sign. 8.9% dividend yield.