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Canadian Tire (Canadian Tire) 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % : 9.59 (As of Apr. 26, 2024)


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What is Canadian Tire 5-Year Yield-on-Cost %?

Canadian Tire's yield on cost for the quarter that ended in Dec. 2023 was 9.59.


The historical rank and industry rank for Canadian Tire's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % or its related term are showing as below:

CDNAF' s 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % Range Over the Past 10 Years
Min: 2.48   Med: 4.09   Max: 9.99
Current: 9.59


During the past 13 years, Canadian Tire's highest Yield on Cost was 9.99. The lowest was 2.48. And the median was 4.09.


CDNAF's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % is ranked better than
86.96% of 560 companies
in the Retail - Cyclical industry
Industry Median: 3.115 vs CDNAF: 9.59

Competitive Comparison of Canadian Tire's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost %

For the Specialty Retail subindustry, Canadian Tire's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost %, along with its competitors' market caps and 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % data, can be viewed below:

* Competitive companies are chosen from companies within the same industry, with headquarter located in same country, with closest market capitalization; x-axis shows the market cap, and y-axis shows the term value; the bigger the dot, the larger the market cap. Note that "N/A" values will not show up in the chart.


Canadian Tire's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % Distribution in the Retail - Cyclical Industry

For the Retail - Cyclical industry and Consumer Cyclical sector, Canadian Tire's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % distribution charts can be found below:

* The bar in red indicates where Canadian Tire's 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % falls into.



Canadian Tire 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % Calculation

Dividend Yield % and dividend growth of a stock is an important factor for income investors. But if company A raises its dividend constantly faster than company B, company A's future dividend yield might be much higher than Company B's even if their yields are the same now and their stock prices do not change.

Yield on Cost assumes that you buy and the stock today, and hold it for 5 years. If the company raises it dividends at the same rate as it did over the past 5 years, the dividends investors receive annually in 5 years relative to the stock price today.

Therefore, Yield-on-Cost of Canadian Tire is calculated as

Yield-on-Cost=Dividend Yield %*(1+Dividend Growth Rate)^5

Canadian Tire  (OTCPK:CDNAF) 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % Explanation

Of course the risk here is that the company may not raise its dividends as it did before. The key is to select the companies that can consistently raise its dividends. Usually companies with long history of raising dividends tend to do so.


Canadian Tire 5-Year Yield-on-Cost % Related Terms

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Canadian Tire (Canadian Tire) Business Description

Traded in Other Exchanges
Address
2180 Yonge Street, P.O. Box 770, Toronto, ON, CAN, M4P 2V8
Canadian Tire sells home goods, sporting equipment, apparel, footwear, automotive parts and accessories, and vehicle fuel through a roughly 1,700-store network of company, dealer, and franchisee-operated locations across Canada. Aside from the namesake banner, stores operate primarily under the Mark's, SportChek, Party City, Atmosphere, and PartSource monikers. Additionally, the company owns Helly Hansen, a Norwegian sportswear and workwear brand, and also operates and holds majority ownership of a financing arm (Canadian Tire Financial Services; 20% owned by Scotiabank) and a REIT (CT REIT; Canadian Tire owns about 70%).