Aimia logo

Aimia

AIM-PC.TO
19
Financial - Diversified · Financial Services
Price
C$24.17
+0.17 (+0.71%)
Market Cap
C$588.3M
Exchange
Toronto Stock Exchange
Winston Score
19
Winston looking worried
Winston is worried
Weak fundamentals across most pillars.

Winston Score below 40. The stock fails on most of our quality checks.

Aimia is a Canadian holding company that owns stakes in other businesses, mainly in the loyalty and investment sectors. It is best known for previously running the Aeroplan frequent flyer program, which it sold to Air Canada in 2019. Today, Aimia acts more like an investment firm, holding minority and majority positions in companies across different industries.

Aimia makes money through dividends, management fees, and returns from its portfolio of investments. It operates primarily in Canada but holds assets with international exposure. The company's competitive position is not built on a single strong product but rather on its ability to identify and manage undervalued businesses. With a low operating margin of around 3% and a modest return on invested capital, the key challenge for Aimia is proving it can generate consistent returns for shareholders as it reshapes its portfolio and defines a clear long-term strategy.

Winston Score History

Growth Profile

When traditional metrics don't capture the full picture, these are the signals growth stock investors use instead.

Revenue Growth

-75.0% YoY

YoY Growth Rate

Revenue declining

EPS Growth

-95.9% YoY

YoY Growth Rate

Earnings declining

R&D Spend

$0/ year

0.0% of revenue

Below sector average (7%)

Research and development spending

Insider Activity

100.0%ownership

Insiders own a meaningful stake in the company

Cash Position

Cash flow positive

$43M cash & investments

Quarterly Free Cash Flow

↑ Burn rate improving

Company generates more cash than it spends — no dilution risk from fundraising

Winston looking concerned
Revenue declining

Aimia's revenue is actually shrinking. In a growth stock, that removes the core investment thesis. The low Winston Score here may be warranted — unless there's a turnaround story.

The Winston Score above measures business quality today. Growth stocks often score lower because they invest in the future rather than maximising current profits. These metrics show what matters most for evaluating that future.

Score breakdown

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Quality

Gross Margin
24.2%
Thin — 24.2% gross margin
Operating Margin
-3.4%
Losing money on operations — -3.4%
ROCE
-0.2%
Weak — -0.2% return on capital

Negative ROIC means the business is losing money on every dollar invested in it.

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Growth

Sales YoY
-22.2%
Shrinking sales (-22.2% YoY)
EPS YoY
N/A
Data not available
EPS Consistency
0/8 quarters
Earnings rarely grow — volatile business

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Cash Flow

Cash Conversion
N/A
Data not available
FCF Margin
5.1%
Thin free cash flow (5.1%)

FCF margin between 0% and 10%. Some cash from sales, but not a lot.

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Stability

Debt / Equity
0.46
Conservative — low debt load (0.46)
Interest Cover
0.34x
Dangerous — barely covers interest (0.3x)

Interest coverage below 1. Their profits don't cover the interest bill.

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Valuation

P/E Ratio
N/M
Negative earnings — P/E not meaningful
P/E vs Forward
N/A
not available
Data not available

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Dividends

Not applicable for this business.
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