1 Ideal TSX Dividend Stock, Down 44%, to Buy and Hold for a Lifetime
Alex Smith
1 week ago
A dividend stock thatâs down can be a sneaky lifetime buy because you get paid to wait while the price catches its breath. The market often knocks down even great businesses for reasons that have little to do with long-term value, like rates, rotations, or a few quarters that look âless perfect.â If the dividend stays covered and the business keeps compounding, a lower share price can boost your starting yield and your long-run return. The trick is simple: you want a temporary dip, not a permanent impairment. Which is why we’re looking at this dividend stock on the TSX today.
TRI
Thomson Reuters (TSX:TRI) sits in a sweet spot for buy-and-hold investors as it sells mission-critical tools to professionals. It serves legal, tax and accounting, and corporate customers with workflow software, content, and data, plus it owns the Reuters news operation. Much of its revenue comes from subscriptions, which keeps the business steadier than most âtechâ names. That stability matters when you want a dividend you can rely on for years.
The share price has clearly had a rough stretch. The dividend stock recently traded around $168, which sits almost on its 52-week low of $167.25, and far below the 52-week high of $299.24. It’s therefore down about 44% from its 52-week high, which is exactly the kind of setup that gets long-term dividend investors interested again.
Zoom out, though, and the long-term chart still looks like a compounding story with a bad year, not a broken one. Over the past year, the stock is down roughly 24%, but it still sits up about 61% versus five years ago. Thatâs a useful reminder for anyone thinking in TFSA decades. Short-term pain can show up even in high-quality names, and thatâs often where the better entry points appear.
Earnings support
Now to the numbers that actually matter. In its third quarter of 2025, Thomson Reuters reported revenue of $1.8 billion and adjusted earnings per share (EPS) of $0.85. It also reported free cash flow of $526 million in the quarter, down year over year, largely tied to higher capital spending. That mix tells you growth remains real, but the dividend stock is also investing heavily, which can dent near-term cash flow.
The operational story still looks solid, especially in the parts that drive recurring revenue. The âBig 3â segments delivered 9% organic revenue growth, and the dividend stock reaffirmed its 2025 guidance for organic revenue growth of 7% to 7.5%. It also raised its adjusted earnings before interest, taxes, depreciation and amortization (EBITDA) margin expansion forecast to 100 basis points. This signals confidence in profitability even while it pours money into product development.
The valuation still asks you to pay for quality, even after the drop. Shares trade around 31 times earnings at writing, with forward multiples still elevated for a âsleep well at nightâ stock. The dividend yield sits around the 2% range, so this is not a high-yield income play. Youâre buying dividend growth, buybacks, and steady compounding, with the risk that the market keeps compressing the multiple if rates stay higher or if AI competition heats up faster than expected.
Bottom line
So, is Thomson Reuters a strong buy while itâs down? It can be, especially if you want a durable, subscription-heavy business that can grow through cycles and youâre comfortable holding for a decade or longer. The dividend stock is basically sitting on its 52-week low, which gives you a much better setup than it did near $300. And here’s what even $7,000 could bring in from dividends alone.
COMPANYRECENT PRICENUMBER OF SHARESANNUAL DIVIDENDANNUAL TOTAL PAYOUTFREQUENCYTOTAL INVESTMENTTRI$168.9641$3.30$135.30Quarterly$6,937.36Iâd still keep expectations realistic. It probably wonât âsnap backâ overnight, and the dividend wonât thrill income hunters. But if your goal is lifetime TFSA compounding with a dependable business, TRI looks like the kind of dip that long-term investors can actually use.
The post 1 Ideal TSX Dividend Stock, Down 44%, to Buy and Hold for a Lifetime appeared first on The Motley Fool Canada.
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More reading
- Here’s the Average Canadian TFSA and RRSP at Age 35
- Top Canadian Stocks to Buy With $10,000 in 2026
- Hereâs the Average Canadian TFSA at Age 50
- Last Chance for a Fresh Start: 3 TSX Stocks to Buy for a Strong January 2026
Fool contributor Amy Legate-Wolfe has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has no position in any of the stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool has a disclosure policy.
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