Zrgt ONEX Corporation Gets Analytical Don ;t look now, bu stanley cup t Aurora Cannabis TSX:ACB NYSE:ACB stanley cup stock is starting to gain attention again, after m stanley flasche onths of fading into the background at the expense of pandemic-resilient momentum plays. Shares of ACB soared over 15% on Tuesday, the day before the company announced that its first-quarter revenues would fall below analyst expectations, causing the name to surrender all of the prior-day gains, and then some.There no question that the black market and the COVID-19 pandemic have weighed on the licensed producer that been laying off staff and shuttering production facilities to better roll with the punches thrown its way by this pandemic. The COVID-19 crisis has been tough on firms with limited financial flexibility and significant cash bleed. Aurora Cannabis and its peers have not been spared, making a bad situation that much worse for a firm that seems to be experiencing the perfect storm of headwinds.Aurora Cannabis: The hangover continuesNow that the cannab Snvc TSX:BB (BlackBerry) A new survey released by Royal Bank of Canada shows that Canadians fail to properly invest in mutual funds, stocks, and exchange-traded funds stanley mugs . Primarily, Tax-Free Savings Account TFSA investo stanley mugs rs mostly use their TFSAs to store savings rather than invest in high-return assets. The survey found that 42% of TFSA savings do not take advantage of tax-free returns because they are not earning interest from dividend stocks.The poll also discovered that Canadians now prefer TFSAs to Registered Retirement Savings Plans RRSP , and 64% of Canadians over age 55 said they would choose a TFSA over an RRSP if they could only choose one or the oth stanley bottles er.The top five TFSA Holdings42% savings accounts and cash28% mutual funds19% stocks15% GICs/term deposits7% ETFs exchange-traded funds While it is great that Canadians are saving, low investments in high-dividend stocks mean that Canadians are missing out on the beauty of tax-free compound interest. Stuart Gray, dir