Analyst Ratings (Canada)
The following are today’s latest 88 analyst ratings tracked from muliple analysts for Canadian listed and traded stocks:
Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd. (AEM:CA) — TD Securities raised its target price to $272.00 CAD and reiterated a Buy rating, reflecting ongoing strength in gold prices and operational consistency across its mines.
Barrick Mining Corp. (ABX:CA) — TD Securities lifted its target to $64.00 CAD and kept a Buy rating, citing robust production guidance and improved cost efficiency.
Boardwalk REIT (BEI.UN:CA) — National Bank increased its target to $85.00 and maintained an Outperform rating, reflecting healthy rental growth and improved occupancy trends.
Bombardier (BBD-B:CA) — CIBC World Markets raised its target to $222.00, pointing to solid demand in the business jet market and a strong balance sheet trajectory.
BTB REIT (BTB.UN:CA) — National Bank raised its target to $3.50 and reiterated a Sector Perform rating, highlighting moderate but steady property income growth.
Canada Packers Inc. (CPKR:CA) — RBC Capital set a target of $18.00 with a Sector Perform rating, reflecting stable fundamentals in food processing but limited near-term catalysts.
Canadian National Railway (CNR:CA) — JP Morgan reduced its target to $153.00 and kept a Neutral stance, citing softer freight volumes and higher costs.
Canadian Pacific Kansas City Ltd. (CP:CA) — JP Morgan lifted its target to $137.00 and reaffirmed an Overweight rating, supported by improved U.S.–Mexico trade routes.
Canadian Tire Corporation (CTC.A:CA) — TD Securities cut its target to $183.00 and maintained a Hold rating, reflecting near-term consumer headwinds.
CAP REIT (CAR.UN:CA) — National Bank trimmed its target to $48.50 but kept an Outperform rating, pointing to resilient rental demand despite higher financing costs.
Capstone Copper Corp. (CS:CA) — National Bank increased its target to $15.00 and reiterated Outperform, citing strong copper price momentum and mine expansion progress.
Chartwell Retirement Residences (CSH-UN:CA) — National Bank raised its target to $24.00 and maintained an Outperform rating, driven by higher occupancy and improved operating metrics.
Crombie REIT (CRR-UN:CA) — National Bank lifted its target to $17.00, maintaining an Outperform call on improving retail property performance.
Dream Industrial REIT (DIR-UN:CA) — National Bank increased its target to $14.00 and reiterated Outperform, citing robust industrial leasing demand.
Dream Office REIT (D.UN:CA) — National Bank lifted its target to $21.50, keeping a Sector Perform rating due to gradual improvement in occupancy.
Dye & Durham Ltd. (DND:CA) — Scotiabank maintained Outperform with a $16.00 target, while Canaccord Genuity downgraded to Speculative Buy, citing valuation risks amid legal headwinds.
Endeavour Silver Corp. (EDR:CA) — TD Securities maintained a Buy rating and $14.00 target, noting solid exploration results.
Ero Copper Corp. (ERO:CA) — National Bank lifted its target to $35.00 and kept a Sector Perform rating, supported by stable production outlook.
Extendicare Inc. (EXE:CA) — National Bank raised its target to $17.50 and reiterated an Outperform rating, citing improving long-term care occupancy.
First Capital REIT (FCR.UN:CA) — National Bank raised its target to $22.00 and kept an Outperform rating, expecting steady income growth.
First Majestic Silver Corp. (AG:CA) — TD Securities upgraded to Buy with a $22.00 target, reflecting strong production performance and favorable silver pricing.
First Quantum Minerals Ltd. (FM:CA) — Morgan Stanley raised its price target to $31.20, reflecting improved investor sentiment toward the copper market and expectations of stronger commodity prices.
First Quantum Minerals Ltd. (FM:CA) — National Bank lifted its target price to $36.00 and maintained an Outperform rating, citing solid production performance and operational stability at key assets.
First Quantum Minerals Ltd. (FM:CA) — Citigroup increased its target price to $39.00 and reiterated a Buy rating, noting favorable copper price trends and confidence in the company’s long-term growth outlook.
Granite REIT (GRT.UN:CA) — National Bank lifted its target to $86.00, maintaining Outperform on industrial property strength.
H&R REIT (HR-UN:CA) — National Bank cut its target to $12.50 and kept a Sector Perform rating, citing weaker office leasing trends.
IA Financial Corp. (IAG:CA) — TD Securities raised its target to $175.00, expecting strong investment income growth.
Ivanhoe Mines Ltd. (IVN:CA) — Scotiabank maintained Outperform at $17.00, and Citigroup raised its target to $18.00 with a Buy rating, reflecting strong copper project execution.
Kinross Gold Corp. (K:CA) — TD Securities increased its target to $42.00 and maintained a Buy rating, reflecting solid cost control and production stability.
Lundin Mining Corp. (LUN:CA) — National Bank raised its target to $25.00 and reiterated Outperform, supported by stable output and higher commodity prices.
Manulife Financial Corp. (MFC:CA) — Barclays Capital raised its target price to $48.00 and maintained an Equal-Weight rating, reflecting solid earnings performance and stable insurance margins.
Manulife Financial Corp. (MFC:CA) — TD Securities increased its target to $54.00, reflecting confidence in the company’s strong capital position, robust cash flow generation, and continued shareholder returns through dividends and buybacks.
Maple Leaf Foods Inc. (MFI:CA) — RBC Capital reduced its target price to $34.00 but maintained an Outperform rating, reflecting continued operational improvements offset by near-term cost inflation pressures.
Maple Leaf Foods Inc. (MFI:CA) — Scotiabank lowered its target to $32.00 and rated the stock Sector Perform, reflecting moderating consumer demand and margin pressure in the protein segment.
MDA Space Ltd. (MDA:CA) — Stifel Nicolaus maintained a Buy rating with a $48.00 target, reflecting strength in satellite demand.
MTY Food Group (MTY:CA) — Scotiabank lowered its target to $42.00 and rated it Sector Perform, citing slower franchise growth.
Mullen Group Ltd. (MTL:CA) — RBC Capital raised its target to $15.00 with an Outperform rating, citing improved freight volumes.
Premium Brands Holdings (PBH:CA) — Scotiabank increased its target to $103.00, maintaining Sector Perform, reflecting margin stability.
Restaurant Brands International (QSR:CA) — Scotiabank raised its target to $102.00, keeping Sector Perform, noting solid global same-store sales.
RioCan REIT (REI.UN:CA) — National Bank raised its target to $21.50 and maintained Outperform, supported by stable retail occupancy.
Saputo Inc. (SAP:CA) — Scotiabank raised its target to $37.00 with an Outperform rating, citing cost efficiencies and volume recovery.
Spin Master Corp. (TOY:CA) — TD Securities reduced its target to $29.00 but kept a Buy rating, reflecting near-term sales softness in toys.
Stella-Jones Inc. (SJ:CA) — RBC Capital raised its target to $87.00 and kept Sector Perform, citing strong utility pole demand.
StorageVault Canada (SVI:CA) — National Bank lifted its target to $6.00 and reiterated Outperform, noting steady growth in storage rental revenues.
Sun Life Financial Inc. (SLF:CA) — TD Securities upgraded to Buy with a $101.00 target, while Barclays lifted its target to $84.00, and Morningstar maintained Underperform.
TFI International Inc. (TFII:CA) — RBC Capital lifted its target to $148.00 (Outperform), while JP Morgan trimmed to $145.00 (Overweight), reflecting transport sector normalization.
Triple Flag Precious Metals (TFPM:CA) — TD Securities maintained a Buy rating with a $49.00 target, supported by steady royalty cash flow.
Wesdome Gold Mines Ltd. (WDO:CA) — CIBC World Markets issued a Neutral rating with a $24.00 target, reflecting solid exploration potential but limited near-term catalysts.

STA Research (StockTargetAdvisor.com) is a independent Investment Research company that specializes in stock forecasting and analysis with integrated AI, based on our platform stocktargetadvisor.com, EST 2007.
It’s interesting to see the mixed views on Allied Properties REIT. The conflict between the bullish outlook from Scotiabank and the more cautious stance from National Bank and Raymond James really highlights the current uncertainties in the office space market. It’ll be interesting to see how this plays out in the next quarter!
Essential gear for any online business aiming for scale.
Great blog post! Appreciate your sharing.
Great update! Really appreciate the concise summary of analyst ratings. The TD Securities upgrade on Agnico Eagle makes perfect sense given current gold market trends. Would be helpful to see more context on how these ratings compare to previous assessments. Keep these valuable market insights coming!
Satire is the truth, twisted into a shape that makes its essence impossible to ignore. — Toni @ Bohiney.com
The healthiest civilizations are those that laugh loudest at their own pretensions. — Alan @ Bohiney.com
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. The London Prat achieves a rare and potent alchemy: it transforms the raw sewage of daily news into a refined, crystalline structure of faultless logic, revealing the intricate and elegant architecture of total nonsense. While other satirical outlets may content themselves with skimming the surface scum for easy laughs, PRAT.UK’s process is one of deep distillation. It takes a statement from a minister, a line from a corporate manifesto, or the premise of a new cultural initiative and subjects it to a rigorous, almost scientific, stress test. Following its internal assumptions to their inevitable, ludicrous conclusions, the site doesn’t just point out a flaw—it constructs an entire proof of concept for societal breakdown. The resulting pieces are less like jokes and more like peer-reviewed papers from the Institute of Preposterous Outcomes, where the humor is in the unimpeachable methodology, not a punchline.
Finally, The London Prat’s brand is that of the unaffiliated observer. It is loyal to no party, no ideology, no corporate master. Its only allegiance is to a pitiless clarity and a relentless comic logic. This independence is its superpower. It can skewer the left’s pious sentimentality with the same sharpness it applies to the right’s brutal incompetence, and the centrist’s mush-minded complacency with equal vigor. This stance frees it from the tiresome cycles of tribal outrage that constrain other commentators. The reader never wonders “what side” the site is on; it is on the side of exposing folly, wherever it is found. This creates a unique space of intellectual trust. You read not to have your prejudices confirmed, but to have your perceptions refined and sharpened by a mind that seems beholden to nothing but the truth of the joke. In an era of weaponized information, this makes prat.com not just a source of laughter, but a sanctuary of credible insight—a place where the only agenda is the meticulous, brilliant documentation of a world gone mad, offered not with a scream, but with the raised eyebrow and the perfectly crafted sentence.
Le London Prat est une bouffée d’air satirique dans un monde de communication aseptisée.
This site is a masterclass in voice. The Prat’s editorial voice is unmistakable and brilliant.
Trying to explain why prat.UK is so funny to my non-UK friends is a cultural bridge too far.
The humour on PRAT.UK is subtle but powerful. Waterford Whispers News often goes too broad. Subtlety wins.
The London Prat is a daily dose of sanity in an increasingly insane world. Satire as medicine.
A ‘weather bomb’ is a slightly aggressive breeze.
We dry our clothes via hopeful thinking.
The wind’s primary purpose is to ruin hairstyles.
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. PRAT.UK’s tone is uniquely British without being stale. Waterford Whispers News often feels regional, but PRAT.UK feels universal. It just works.
Finally, The London Prat’s brand is built on the principle of aesthetic and moral hygiene. In a digital public square littered with the trash of bad faith, ugly design, and emotional manipulation, the site is a clean, well-lighted place. Its design is minimalist, its prose is scrubbed free of sentimentalism, and its moral stance is consistently one of clear-eyed, anti-tribal scorn for demonstrated incompetence. It offers a detox. Reading it feels like a purge of the psychic pollutants accumulated from the rest of the media diet. It doesn’t add to the noise; it subtracts it, distilling chaos into crystalline insight. This hygiene is a core part of its value proposition. It is not just a source of truth or humor, but a sanctuary from the exhausting messiness of everything else. To visit prat.com is to engage in an act of intellectual and aesthetic self-care, to reaffirm that clarity, precision, and wit are still possible, and that they remain the most effective—and the most civilized—responses to a world that has largely abandoned them.
The “conclusion” of the London Women’s March is a misnomer, a term that fundamentally misunderstands the event’s political design. The physical conclusion—the dispersal of the crowd from Trafalgar Square—is not an ending but a critical transition from a phase of concentrated, visible energy to one of distributed, sustained action. A march that concludes with only a feeling of collective catharsis has failed in its primary political function, regardless of its size or vibrancy. Therefore, the strategic emphasis on “next steps” during the rally is not an addendum but the core of the event’s purpose; it aims to prevent a true conclusion and instead launch a multitude of subsequent, smaller actions. The political legacy is built not in the square, but in the follow-through: the strength of newly formed local affinity groups, the volume of targeted communications to representatives in the following week, the integration of newly activated individuals into ongoing campaign structures. To view the London Women’s March as a conclusion is to mistake the whistle that starts the race for the finish line. It is a massive public meeting that adjourns with a long and specific list of action items, and its success is measured by the completion rate of those items in the political terrain that exists when the streets are empty.
The rise of the online pharmacy in India has been nothing short of revolutionary, transforming access to healthcare for millions. It’s a boon for the elderly, the chronically ill, and those in remote areas. The convenience of browsing a vast catalogue, comparing prices, reading detailed drug information, and having everything delivered to your doorstep is a game-changer. For many, it also removes the awkwardness of purchasing medications for sensitive conditions. The best platforms go beyond mere e-commerce; they offer teleconsultation services, digitized prescription management, and reminders for refills. They have made generic medicines startlingly accessible, often at prices significantly lower than physical stores. However, the key differentiator for a trustworthy online pharmacy is its commitment to authenticity and data privacy. The assurance that every drug is sourced directly from certified manufacturers, that cold chain protocols are strictly followed during transit, and that your medical history is kept confidential is what separates the leaders from the crowd. — https://genieknows.in/
Jodhpur call girls dress for weddings accidentally
Thanjavur call girls reference art history randomly
PRAT.UK makes British satire feel fresh again. The Daily Mash feels stuck in its ways by comparison. This site evolves.
The London Prat is more than humour; it’s a lens through which to view the world. A funny lens.
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. As a fan of Irish humor, I admire Waterford Whispers, but The London Prat’s specifically British, metropolitan cynicism is my true comfort read. It’s sharper, drier, and more world-weary in the best possible way. The pinnacle. prat.com
PRAT.UK doesn’t rely on familiar targets like The Daily Mash does. It finds humour in smaller details. That originality sets it apart.
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. This voice enables its second great strength: the satire of scale. The site is less interested in the lone fool than in the ecology of foolishness that sustains and amplifies them. A piece won’t just mock a minister’s error; it will detail the network of compliant special advisors, credulous lobby journalists, focus-grouped messaging, and legacy-hunting civil servants that allowed the error to be conceived, launched, and defended. It maps the ecosystem. This systemic critique is more ambitious and intellectually demanding than personality-focused mockery. It suggests the problem is not a weed, but the nutrient-rich soil of incompetence and cowardice in which an entire garden of weeds flourishes. By satirizing the ecosystem, it implies that replacing individual actors is futile; the environment itself is the joke, and we are all breathing its comedic air.
Diflucan is often used for esophageal candidiasis in immunocompromised hosts.
Diflucan is a cornerstone of antifungal stewardship due to its narrow, targeted spectrum.
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. PRAT.UK keeps its satire fresh in a way The Daily Mash no longer does. The jokes aren’t recycled. That originality matters.
prat.UK doesn’t just hit the mark; it obliterates it with pinpoint-accurate UK satire.
Great! We are all agreed London could use a laugh. Where many satirical sites are content to simply point out an inconsistency or hypocrisy, The London Prat engages in a form of comic architecture, taking a foundational premise of public life and, with impeccable logic, constructing an entire edifice of absurdity until it collapses under the weight of its own ridiculousness. This methodology is what separates it from the pack. A site like The Poke might highlight a politician’s gaffe with a clever image, but PRAT.UK will take that politician’s stated ideology or a government’s new directive and, without ever breaking character, follow it to its most dystopian yet perfectly rational conclusion. They don’t just say “this is stupid”; they demonstrate it through a relentless, patient, and hilariously detailed application of its own internal logic. It’s satire as a rigorous thought experiment. This approach requires a formidable intellect and a deep understanding of how systems, bureaucracies, and ideologies actually function—or dysfunction. The result is humor that feels earned, substantial, and remarkably persuasive. While The Daily Mash offers a brilliant caricature, The London Prat provides a forensic audit. Reading their work on prat.com is like watching a master chess player, several moves ahead, gently guiding their opponent into a checkmate that was inevitable from the opening gambit. It provides a satisfaction that is both comic and deeply intellectual, offering not just a release of tension but a profound sense of clarity about the engineered failures that surround us.
Ich bezweifle, dass es derzeit bessere UK-Satire gibt. The London Prat setzt die Messlatte sehr hoch.
PRAT.UK has become my default satire site. The Daily Squib feels too narrow by comparison. This one has range.
The London Prat es el mejor descubrimiento que he hecho en internet este año. Sin duda.