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TSX Sale! 4 High-Quality Canadian Stocks Going Cheap

STACKED COINS DEPICTING MONEY GROWTH
STACKED COINS DEPICTING MONEY GROWTH

Four sturdy Canadian stocks trading at or below their book value get their stats sifted in today’s round-up of bargain tickers. From auto to tech to financial products, the following selection could be a diversified TSX index mini-portfolio — or one big danger zone. Let’s scour the market fundamentals and find out.

Manulife Financial (TSX:MFC)(NYSE:MFC)

A top TSX index financial services stock with some geographical diversification, Manulife Financial had a good 2018, with an impressive one-year past earnings growth of 138.1%. Undervaluation matched with a tasty dividend yield of 4.4% makes Manulife Financial a good pick for a TFSA, RRSP, or RRIF, while an 11.2% expected annual growth in earnings is good for a Canadian financial stock.

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With near-threshold debt at 41% of net worth, this stock is healthy enough to hold for the long term. It’s potentially undervalued, too, with a P/E of 9.7 and P/B of 1.1 coming in under the market average. More shares have been bought than sold by Manulife Financial insiders in the last few months, making for a confident play.

Martinrea International (TSX:MRE)

An international auto parts stock moderately fit for a TSX index investor looking to pad out a TFSA or RRSP, a small dividend yield of 1.3% is on the table, with a 13.2% expected annual growth in earnings on the way. Undervalued with a 48% discount off the share price, Martinrea International looks like a bargain today.

With a solid track record (from its one-year earnings-growth rate of 16.5% to its half-decade growth of 34.5%), more shares have been snapped up than scrapped by Martinrea International insiders in the last three months — indeed, throughout the whole past 12 months.

Celestica (TSX:CLS)(NYSE:CLS)

A hardware and supply chain stock in one, Celestica is one of the best Canadian tech stocks to buy for a moderate growth portfolio (see a 17.9% expected annual growth in earnings). Unusually for a TSX index tech stock, it’s also potentially undervalued at the moment, with market fundamentals coming in under the averages.

However, there are a few red flags here, from a so-so balance sheet indicated by above-threshold debt to a matching track record characterized by negative one- and five-year past earnings-growth rates. Meanwhile, Celestica insiders have only sold shares in the last three months.

Transcontinental (TSX:TCL.A)

Bringing geographical diversification to the table with the kind of aplomb that only a passive-income TSX index stock with low multiples can, Transcontinental is suitable for a North America-weighted portfolio. A five-year average past earnings growth of 24.7% shows that this packaging and printing stock is generally solid in terms of earnings.

A low P/E of 8.3 is matched with a decent P/B of 0.9, while a dividend yield of 4.89% makes it a buy for value investors. This stock would pair nicely with Martinrea International to form a solid consumer, cyclical tag team.

The bottom line

One of the best cheap stocks on the TSX index, Martinrea International is trading at book price with a P/E ratio of 6.4. Transcontinental would be a strong buy, though its debt level of 89.4% of net worth may be a concern to the strictly risk averse, and passive-income investors may seek more growth than its 5% expected annual rise in earnings.

More reading

Fool contributor Victoria Hetherington has no position in any of the stocks mentioned.

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