Tricon Capital Group Inc. (TSX:TCN) Provides Growth AND Value

Tricon Capital Group Inc. (TSX:TCN) recently appeared on the Globe and Mail’s weekly list of stocks that are overbought. Here’s why it provides both growth and value.

| More on:
The Motley Fool

Are you familiar with the Relative Strength Index (RSI)?

It’s a momentum indicator developed by technical analyst expert Welles Wilder that measures the velocity and magnitude of a stock’s price movement.

The RSI indicator ranges from zero to 100. A stock trading below 30 is said to be oversold; at above 70, it’s said to be overbought.

Tricon Capital Group Inc. (TSX:TCN), one of my favourite TSX stocks, was featured June 1 in the Globe and Mail’s weekly look at stocks overbought and oversold. At the time it had an RSI of 75, putting it in the overbought camp with heavily followed names like Great Canadian Gaming Corp. and Bombardier, Inc.

While I’ve never been a big technical analyst guy, it certainly made me sit up and take notice.

Is Tricon overbought?

Well, it is if you believe the charts don’t lie.

However, for everyone else who doesn’t know the difference between Bollinger Bands and the Money Flow Index, I’m here to tell you why I feel the real estate asset manager is both a growth and a value stock.

Why is it a growth stock?

As I stated in the beginning, I believe that Tricon is one of the best stocks on the TSX.

In March, when it was trading above $10, I’d recommended investors buy the 2.7% yield for three reasons, the most critical being its diversified revenue streams. It’s definitely not a one-trick pony, although its Tricon American Homes division is certainly a big reason it’s getting more attention from investors these days.

Caldwell Investment Management portfolio manager William Chin recently had this to say about the company on BNN Bloomberg’s Top Picks segment:

“Tricon has a good formula in place in which they’re essentially institutionalizing the SFR [single family housing rentals] market: they buy a single-family house in a growing market, complete some minor renovations and upgrades, increase the rent accordingly, centralize the maintenance costs and often get the added benefit of housing price appreciation,” Chin said June 5, while appearing on the show. “Tricon recently made a large and accretive acquisition in the SFR segment (Silver Bay Realty), which significantly grows its earnings power.”

It’s possible it will be able to do the same thing here in Canada if the housing market in places like Vancouver and Toronto ever collapses, like they did in 2007-2010 in the U.S.

Tricon itself recently said that 16 million American households rent single-family homes — a number that’s bigger than the entire Canadian housing market.

With that kind of growth ahead of it, it’s unlikely that it will bother with Canada, even if the unthinkable were to happen.

Why is it a value stock?

To answer this question, I’ll lean on Fool contributor Kay Ng for advice. She’s a value investor to the core and recently discussed the reasons why Tricon is good value at the moment.

Ng makes two really good points about the company.

The first has less to do with its value merits and everything to do about investing with asset managers who eat their own cooking.

“About 75% of its assets under management are the company’s principal investments and co-investments funded with its balance sheet, which means about 25% of the assets under management are from third-party investors, such as retail investors,” Ng stated June 5.

Do you know what other respected real estate asset manager does this?

Brookfield Asset Management Inc., one of the other four names on my list of the five best TSX stocks, putting it in very good company.

The second point she makes about value is that analysts have a 12-month price target of $14 on its stock, about 28% higher than where it’s currently trading.

The same analysts have a 2018 earnings-per-share estimate of $1.13, which means it’s currently trading at 7.4 times earnings. By comparison, Brookfield is trading around 18 times earnings.

Like Ng, I see very good value in Tricon stock.

By owning Tricon, you get growth, value, and a 2.6% yield — the best of both worlds.

Fool contributor Will Ashworth has no position in any stocks mentioned. The Motley Fool owns shares of BROOKFIELD ASSET MANAGEMENT INC. CL.A LV.

More on Investing

Retirees sip their morning coffee outside.
Tech Stocks

2 Technology Stocks With the Kind of Potential That Could Make Millionaires

Two tech stocks with impressive growth trajectories amid elevated volatility are potential millionaire-makers.

Read more »

a man celebrates his good fortune with a disco ball and confetti
Dividend Stocks

Where Will Enbridge Stock Be in 3 Years?

Enbridge stock has raised its dividend for 31 straight years. With a $39B project backlog and 5% growth ahead, here's…

Read more »

Train cars pass over trestle bridge in the mountains
Dividend Stocks

Why the Market May Be too Quick to Write Off These Railway and Telecom Stocks

Discover why the railway and telecom markets are experiencing significant declines and what it means for investors and value growth.

Read more »

Lights glow in a cityscape at night.
Dividend Stocks

2 Dividend Stocks I’d Buy Today and Feel Good Holding for at Least 5 Years

Want dividend income that will last for the five years to come? These two dividend stocks are leaders in Canada.

Read more »

A plant grows from coins.
Dividend Stocks

2 Canadian Dividend Stocks Yielding 4% That Appear to Have the Goods to Back It Up

These Canadian dividend stocks are dependable investments, offer attractive yield of over 4%, and are backed by solid businesses.

Read more »

Investor reading the newspaper
Dividend Stocks

A 3.9% Dividend Stock That Looks Safer Than It Seems

Transcontinental just reshaped its business with a $2.1 billion sale, and that cash could make its dividend look safer than…

Read more »

Young adult concentrates on laptop screen
Retirement

What the Typical 25-Year-Old Canadian Has Saved in a TFSA and RRSP

If you are around 25-years of age, here are some ideas on how to use both your RRSP and TFSA…

Read more »

infrastructure like highways enables economic growth
Energy Stocks

This Canadian Stock Could Rule Them All in 2026

Canadian Natural Resources just posted record production and 26 straight years of dividend hikes. Here's why CNQ stock could dominate…

Read more »