Artificial intelligence is increasingly integral to Canadian industries, providing unique investment opportunities across various sectors. The top five AI stocks highlighted are BlackBerry, Kinaxis, OpenText, Celestica, and Shopify. These companies utilize AI to enhance their existing business models, offering investors stable and profitable growth potential without chasing speculative trends.
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Top 5 Undervalued Canadian Stocks to Buy Right Now (TSX 2026 Guide)
The TSX is witnessing a disconnect between stock prices and fundamentals, revealing opportunities in undervalued Canadian companies. Five stocks, including Magna International and Bank of Nova Scotia, exhibit strong fundamentals and potential for growth heading into 2026. Investors should consider focusing on economic indicators and earnings quality for future gains.
Top 5 TSX Tech Stocks Beginners Should Watch in 2026
The article explores Canadian technology stocks, highlighting the importance of selectivity for investors. It ranks five TSX-listed companies—BlackBerry, Docebo, Kinaxis, Shopify, and Celestica—based on profitability, growth, stability, and risk. For beginners, it emphasizes building a diversified portfolio centered on ETFs, using individual stocks selectively for growth.
Top 5 Blue-Chip Stocks Every Canadian Should Own in 2026
Canadian investors interested in long-term income and growth should consider blue-chip stocks on the Toronto Stock Exchange. Key stocks include Royal Bank of Canada, Enbridge, Canadian National Railway, Fortis, and Canadian Natural Resources—all showing strong dividends, reliable earnings, and potential for stability and capital appreciation in diverse sectors.
Shopify (TSX: SHOP) Stock Analysis: Growth, Risks, and Outlook for 2026
Shopify’s share prices fluctuate between CAD 189–214, with a market cap of CAD 247–282 billion, reflecting its status among Canada’s largest firms. Despite no dividends, Shopify’s elevated P/E ratio above 100 indicates investor confidence in its growth amid volatility, innovation, and competition with giants like Amazon.
High vs Low Beta Stocks: A Canadian Guide
Beta measures a stock’s volatility relative to the market, helping investors gauge risk. A beta of 1.0 indicates alignment with market movements, while values above or below indicate higher or lower volatility, respectively. Canadian investors utilize beta to balance portfolios between high-risk growth stocks and stable low-risk stocks, enhancing decision-making.
Celestica (TSX: CLS): Canada’s Fastest‑Growing AI Stock and Why It’s a Top Buy in 2025
Celestica has transformed from an EMS provider to a leader in AI-driven data center hardware and cloud solutions, reporting significant revenue growth and profit doubling in Q2 2025. With a focus on AI infrastructure, its stock performance stands out among Canadian and U.S. peers, offering a compelling investment opportunity with notable profitability and strategic market positioning.
Short Selling Explained (and Why It’s Rare in Canada)
Short selling is an investment strategy that profits from a decline in stock prices by borrowing and selling shares, then repurchasing them at lower prices. While it’s risky and can lead to unlimited losses, regulators in Canada impose strict rules that make it less common compared to the U.S., where it is more prevalent.
Amazon, Google, Shopify and CIBC share split
Amazon(AMZN), Alphabet(GOOG) Shopify(SHOP) and CIBC(CM) have all announced that they will be splitting their shares. What does that mean exactly? Well each company will be giving you a certain amount of shares depending on how many shares you currently hold. That also means that the share price will be divided by how many shares theyContinue reading “Amazon, Google, Shopify and CIBC share split”
Real Life Monopoly?
Lately it feels like all we hear about is monopolies. It doesn’t matter what industry you look into or what sector you want to invest in. Everyone wants to invest in the next Tesla(TSLA) or Shopify(SHOP). Those companies right now feel like they have nothing holding them back and that they are just going toContinue reading “Real Life Monopoly?”
