2 TFSA-Worthy Financial Stocks With Single-Digit P/E Multiples

Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (TSX:CM)(NYSE:CM) and another battered single-digit P/E stock to buy right now.

| More on:

It’s a tough time for Canadian investors. The TSX index suffered a lost decade with no returns, thanks mainly to commodities and materials companies, the American greenback continues strengthening against the loonie, short-sellers have begun targeting Canadian companies with half-baked theses, and the TSX only seems to follow in the footsteps of the S&P 500 when it’s heading in a downward trajectory.

Given the investment environment, many Canadians find that they’re between a rock and a hard place. The USD/CAD exchange rate is abysmal at $0.73 at the time of writing, so by overweighting U.S. securities, you’re taking a hit that could bite you should you end up selling if the Canadian dollar finds relief. Add U.S. dividend withholding taxes into the equation and it’s clear that now isn’t an opportune time to go on the hunt for U.S. stocks unless the risk/reward trade-off is enough to offset the unfavourable rate that exists today.

So, what’s a Canadian to do with a fresh $6,000 in TFSA funds?

It’s time to pick individual Canadian stocks. More specifically, the severely undervalued stocks of solid businesses that aren’t as bad as their stock charts suggest. There are financially healthy, free-cash-flow-generative, growing businesses out there that are the cheapest they’ve been since the Great Recession.

Worried about a recession? Some TSX stocks are already trading as if a recession were already a given, especially the single-digit P/E stocks that are now abundant.

Consider Industrial Alliance (TSX:IAG) and Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (TSX:CM)(NYSE:CM), two stocks that have jaw-droppingly low trailing P/E multiples of 7.9 and 8.7, respectively. Both companies have nothing dire going on behind the scenes, yet both names trade at a substantial discount to book relative to their respective historical averages.

Industrial Alliance, the Canadian insurance and wealth management service provider, has a not-so-impressive 3.8% dividend yield but has the capacity to hike its dividend by a very generous amount for many years to come. For investors willing to sacrifice a bit of upfront yield, there’s tremendous value to be had, as the company could easily deliver a huge double-digit dividend hike and still have enough wiggle room to pursue growth opportunities.

CIBC caters to the more income-oriented of value investors with its 5.4% dividend yield, the highest it’s been in recent memory. The financials, especially the big banks, have been hit really hard due to geopolitical issues, among other macro fears that wouldn’t bode too well for banks or insurers.

With an improving business down south, CIBC is starting to prove to its bigger brothers in the Big Five that it can compete and operate at a level high level. Unfortunately, investors don’t seem to care too much about the progress made over the past year, as the perennially cheap stock just continued to become cheaper.

For those with a long-term time horizon, CIBC is a steal. The dividend aristocrat will continue to reward investors with a dividend, even if the worst fears of investors come true. Although CIBC was caught with its pants down in the last recession, the bank is better-equipped to weather the next storm.

Foolish takeaway

Whether you want a deep-value insurance play or an income play, both Industrial Alliance and CIBC is absurdly cheap stocks that could bounce in a big way if the recession fears are unwarranted.

The economy, while slated for a slowdown in 2019, is still hot and because of this, interest rates are heading higher. A rising rate environment bodes really well for these two dirt-cheap financial firms, so I’d pounce on both names before they correct upwards.

Stay hungry. Stay Foolish.

Fool contributor Joey Frenette owns shares of CANADIAN IMPERIAL BANK OF COMMERCE.

More on Dividend Stocks

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks
Dividend Stocks

Want Decades of Passive Income? Buy This Index Fund and Hold it Forever

This $3.5 billion exchange traded fund (ETF) paying monthly dividends is designed to be a "set-and-forget" cornerstone of your retirement.

Read more »

workers walk through an office building
Dividend Stocks

Down 60%, This Dividend Stock Is Worth a Closer Look

The ugly slide in Allied Properties REIT shares means its yield is about 8%, but the real bet is whether…

Read more »

iceberg hides hidden danger below surface
Dividend Stocks

The Canadian Blue-Chip Stock Trading at Bargain Prices Right Now

Telus (TSX:T) stock is starting to move lower again, but it is looking way too cheap as the yield swells…

Read more »

ETFs can contain investments such as stocks
Dividend Stocks

The Top 3 Canadian ETFs I’m Considering for 2026

Here's why these Canadian ETFs are the top picks I'm considering for income in 2026, especially amidst the growing volatility…

Read more »

Child measures his height on wall. He is growing taller.
Dividend Stocks

The $109,000 TFSA Milestone: How Do You Stack Up?

Most investors hit the $109,000 TFSA milestone with consistent contributions, not one big deposit.

Read more »

Dividend Stocks

3 Canadian Stocks to Buy for a “Pay Me First” Portfolio

A “pay me first” portfolio focuses on dividends that are supported by real cash flow, not headline yields.

Read more »

Bank of Canada Governor Tiff Macklem
Dividend Stocks

The Bank of Canada Speaks Up Again: Here’s What to Buy for a TFSA Now

With rates steady, a balanced TFSA can blend dependable income, a discounted yield opportunity, and long-run growth.

Read more »

three friends eat pizza
Dividend Stocks

A 5.9% Dividend Stock Paying Out Monthly Cash

Boston Pizza’s royalty fund turns restaurant sales into monthly cash, offering a simpler income model than owning a full restaurant…

Read more »