1 Practically Perfect Canadian Stock Down 56% to Buy and Hold Forever
Alex Smith
5 hours ago
Sometimes, itâs best to forget about trying to uncover the perfect stock to buy and to look for a name thatâs underpriced and out of favour on Bay Street. Undoubtedly, itâs hard to be buying on minor dips, let alone 56% meltdowns. Thatâs not just a valuation reset; itâs a vicious crash, and one thatâs sure to scare away a lot of long-term investors and dip-buyers.
Indeed, nobody wants to be caught skating offside with a name caught on the wrong side of a disruptive trend. With AI and the so-called fourth industrial revolution causing investors to second-guess some software names on the way down, there seems to be a wide-open door for the deep-value crowd.
Is this âsoftware scareâ an opportunity for dividend hunters?
Software has never really been considered all too cheap, at least until recently. Whether thatâs attributed to the impressive margins, the excitement factor, or something else, software has been a corner of the market thatâs typically commanded a premium. Now that itâs priced at a discount, though, should investors act? Or has something fundamentally changed?
In case you missed it, investors have been panic-selling anything touching software for the past couple of months over fears that AI will drive down the price of software towards zero. Indeed, could software titans face increased competition as AI tools make it easier for firms to build their own software platforms from scratch?
Most definitely. But software isnât at a standstill. Theyâre in the AI game, too, and, in many cases, itâs these software companies that may already be a country mile ahead of the AI-equipped firms aiming to take away the lunch of the incumbents.
Thomson Reuters: A new AI-savvy dividend stock on the block
Enter shares of Thomson Reuters (TSX:TRI), a media and software firm, thatâs taken a hit to the chin in the past year. I think the damage is overdone. And while the name isnât known for having a huge yield (itâs typically in the ballpark of 1.2.âÂÂ1.4% or so), the crash has caused the yield to swell above the 2.7% mark. If a revisitation of prior lows or a plunge below is in the cards as the relief rally runs out of steam, a 3% yield could arrive.
If it does, I think investors should be buyers of shares despite the scary chart. The stock might be so cheap that even management canât resist buying shares. With a $600 million buyback in place, I do think Thomson Reuters is making the right move in a moment of industry-wide panic.
As a content-driven software firm with impressive AI offerings of its own, Iâd much rather bet on Thomson Reutersâ pivot than bet against an AI-equipped firm that doesnât have the same dataset or client relations. Whether itâs legal, accounting, or something else, Thomson Reuters still seems to be the horse to bet on, even if it is playing defence as agents rise. With Reuters also launching a foundation model, I think itâs about time to think of the firm as more of a firm that can win in AI.
So, is Reuters really that misunderstood? Itâs hard to say, but letâs just say that fear is in the driverâs seat. And with that, there will be pricing mistakes in the market. Perhaps itâs a great bet once the firm can show more evidence that it can not only stand its ground but also use AI to power a wave of growth.
The post 1 Practically Perfect Canadian Stock Down 56% to Buy and Hold Forever appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- 1 No-Brainer Dividend Stock to Buy on the Dip
- Whatâs the Average TFSA Balance at Age 30 in Canada?
- 3 Top-Tier Canadian Stocks That Just Bumped Up Dividends Again
- 3 Dividend Stocks Every Canadian Should Own
- 3 Canadian Dividend Stocks for Passive Income That Keeps Growing
Fool contributor Joey Frenette has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool recommends Thomson Reuters. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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