Brookfield Stocks: Which Shares to Hold? [Podcast]

 

Which shares to hold from the Brookfield family? That is an often asked question now answered in detail! Which one between Brookfield Infrastructure, Renewable, Properties and Asset Management best suits your portfolio?

Let’s shed some light on these well-known Canadian stocks that also trade in the U.S.!

You’ll Learn

  • Why Brookfield Asset Management (BAM) can be considered as the mother of the “Brookfield family”.
  • What are the differences between partners, trusts and corporate shares.
  • What’s happening with Brookfield Property Partners.
  • Each company’s strenghts and weaknesses: BAM, BIP and BEP.
  • How come Brookfield Business Partners (BBU) is not on our radar.
  • Why considering Brookfield stocks as interchangeable can be harmful for an investor’s portfolio.
  • Mike’s favorites among the family!

Related Content

To clear up each company’s business segments and BAM’s ownership, we’ve added some tables or images right below.

Brookfield Asset Management

BAM is an excellent fit for growth investors, but also offers robust long-term stability. Its structure is relatively complex as the company has stakes in all “Brookfield family members”:

Brookfield Infrastructure

BAM ownerhsip: 28%

One major disadvantage most utilities have is their lack of diversification. Many of them excel at a specific type of service (electric transmission, natural gas, etc.) and show a limited geographic footprint. You break both barriers with BIP as the company operates in multiple business segments and manages assets all over the world. The company is divided into four different business segments, each of them including multiple activities:

Brookfield Renewable

BAM ownership: 48%

Like BIP, BEP offers a great diversification for investors when it’s time to select a renewable energy producer. BEP shows about 55% of its activities in North America, opening the door for good geographic diversification. The company is on its way to more than double its energy generation capacity once it completes its development pipeline. BEP is operating across multiple business segments:

Between January 6th and March 22nd, renewable energy stocks have fallen over 20%. What’s happening and how should you react? Should you want to know more, Mike answered to that question and also discussed Brookfield Renewable in the video below.

The post Brookfield Stocks: Which Shares to Hold? [Podcast] appeared first on The Dividend Guy Blog.

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