The Globe and Mail reports in its Wednesday, Oct. 29, edition that the first correction on the S&P/TSX composite index in almost
three years produced a wave of
reratings from sell-side analysts.
The Globe's Tim Shufelt writes in the Number Cruncher column that former richly valued stocks
became bargains and sells became
buys.
Mr. Shufelt says the subsequent rebound further
shuffled the deck, resulting
in a new order of top-ranked
stocks.
With the correction possibly
over, Mr. Shufelt searched out stocks with the
highest possible analyst recommendations.
Bloomberg calculates
an average rating on a scale
of one to five, where one represents
a "strong sell" and five represents
a "strong buy." Mr. Shufelt set a
minimum score of 4.5.
Next, he filtered out
small companies, as
well as stocks with scores skewed
by the bullish opinions of too few
analysts.
He set a minimum market
capitalization of $500-million. Eligible stocks had to be
covered by at least 10 analysts.
He capped the price-to-earnings
ratio at 20 times. Stocks that analysts are rating highly are Sherritt International, Rio Alto Mining, Manulife Financial, Cardinal Energy, Precision Drilling and Bankers Petroleum.
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