Emphasizing independence and objectivity, ARC focuses on providing finance and law professionals with in-depth analysis of emerging finance and accounting issues, and the impacts they have on your clientele. ARC has been certified independent by the internationally-recognized Investorside Research Association, and does not possess the many conflicts of larger investment houses and accounting firms.
-
MI Developments Inc. | May. 2012
-
Baytex Energy | May. 2012
-
Crescent Point Energy | May. 2012
-
Enbridge Inc. | May. 2012
-
Canadian Natural Resources | May. 2012
-
Magna International | May. 2012
Model Portfolio
-
Canadian Income Focus Model
The ARC Income Focus Model is designed primarily to provide dividend income and…
-
North American Model
The ARC North American Model is comprised of companies chosen by Accountability Research…
-
North American Income Model
The ARC North American Income Model carries the same mandate as our Canadian…
-
International Model
The ARC International Exposure Model Portfolio is designed primarily to provide long-term capital…
Latest Research
-
MI Developments Inc. | May. 2012
-
Baytex Energy | May. 2012
-
Crescent Point Energy | May. 2012
-
Enbridge Inc. | May. 2012
ARC In the News
-
May 2012
Income Trusts are Back
Al and Mark Rosen, Advisor.ca
In his new book, Thieves of Bay Street, author Bruce Livesey describes income trusts as a clear case of "the Canadian financial industry marketing Ponzi scheme-like investments." He minces few words in describing how banks marketed the trusts to retail clients and investment advisors using a "turbo-charged hype machine."
-
May 2012
Loblaw downgraded to Sell
With Target's arrival just around the corner and Wal-Mart ramping up its grocery offerings, Accountability Research analyst Kevin Chu warns Loblaw Cos. Ltd. is in precarious shape.
-
April 2012
Beware your Auditor
Al and Mark Rosen, Advisor.ca
People are questioning the auditor's role in the wake of engineering firm SNC Lavalin's recent missteps. Its CEO resigned in March and its board is reviewing $35 million of potentially inappropriate payments it made to construction projects.The company has also been accused of ties to former Libyan dictator Moammar Gadhafi.