Summer Sale

50% off Premium Yearly

00days
00hrs
00mins
00secs

A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert (A Commentary)

HOLD
Have been for sale. Feels that a buyer could pay $24, maybe $26 tops and still make some money.
BUY
OPTIONS: In the last 50 years, 63% of the total return on equities has been driven by dividends. Cash flow is a very important component in a total return, but most people buy as they are looking for that great growth story. They tend to do covered option writings and take in "option premiums" which enhances the cash flow and forgoes some of the potential upside. E.G. - Bank of Nova Scotia is about $39 now. Sell an option for $40. In the interim, you get about $1.28 dividends. If the stock reaches $40 in 6 months, you have made $1.28, plus $1 on the stock plus $1.50 option premium.
BUY
Gold-Going through a pause that refreshes, especially at year end now, it'll be useful for the market to consolidate its really nice gains and into 2005 with the foundation needed to get to that very critical $500 area. Expect by the 1st quarter we'll have a good run at it, but really think that by the summer time we'll have tested it and one of the main reasons is that the honeymoon period for George Bush will be over and some of the geo-political things that have been moved to the back burner since the election will be moved to the forefront again and that will assist and go along with the resolution of the US$ decline. The best way to play this is to own the physical bullion by owning shares that are now trading down in the states. They used to say the proxy for owning gold was mining shares, but this seems to have been disproven. If you want to be very speculative, that is where the mining shares come in.
DON'T BUY
Fully valued. Not sure there will be a take-out. Will be hurt badly by a strong Cdn$ as all their costs are based on this currency, but their revenues are in US$'s.
TOP PICK
Selling CALLS against existing security positions. One of two things will happen. You'll either end up selling your stocks at a higher than current level or, if the market goes down, you are partially protected against the downside. A conservative way of investing, particularly for next year, when markets will probably not do that well.
HOLD
Brascan is determined to sell it. Prefers other metals stocks. If you own, wait to see what plays out in the next 3/6 months. Fundamentals are fine.
BUY
The S&P 500 is in an area of major, major resistance going back to the 2002 highs and the 1998 highs. There is a chance it could get to 1,225/1250, but it would be kind of a blow off high. The 1250 area is the technical Fibonacci 61.8% retracement of the entire 2000 and 2002 drop which can sometimes be a flash target technical point for the market to try and get to. Long term US Treasury Bonds which is price inverse to yields. The bond market topped in June/03 followed by a sharp drop. Rallied in Mar/04 followed by another sharp drop. Now on its 3rd rally and appears to be forming a heads/shoulder top. Very dangerous as it shows 4 attempts to make higher prices/lower yields. Could indicate a major market crash.
COMMENT
We were lucky that Kerry did not win the election. He would have had to face a couple of issues. 1st it would require more fiscal responsibility and 2nd it would have been a hung Congress, i.e., himself versus a Republican Congress. This would have made it difficult to get a lot of legislation through. Clinton was in the same situation and it worked out very well because they couldn’t get a lot of spending bills passed and fundamentally, the US kind of cleaned up its act, got into a surplus and the US$ went up and good things happened. The market would not have wanted that this time as it would have meant some kind of fiscal discipline to bear and frankly the US has been living off the fat of rather profligate fiscal spending. To have been pulled up short would have been a problem for the stock market and the US consumer. Problems that go with all the fiscal irresponsibility remain with us in spades. This creates prolonged downward pressure on the US$ for at least the next couple of years which is not good. Makes me a little more bullish on gold, but certainly reinforces my bullishness on oil as OPEC will not put up with continuing erosion in its own US reserves and will counter this with upwards pressure on the price of oil.
BUY
Merger with Coors will probably be delayed until early 2005. Strategically, the merger is a good idea.
BUY
The Canadian $ is going to go to par. Arrived at through following the analysis of debt to GDP. John Manley, 2 years ago, and now Ralph Goodale see Debt to GDP falling to about 20%. If you look back to about 1973, the CDn$ was around par, GDP was around 20%. He also says the Canadian $ should no longer exist. In the next 5 to 8 years we have to get rid of this Canadian dollar, we’ve got to join with a bigger currency block ala the United States, because having one currency with 35 million people and really one hedge fund can blow this thing out of the way, our Canadian businesses are taking so much risk now with this dollar and its volatility, it just can’t happen.
SELL
Have not run their business that well. Losing market share. The deal with Coors is not going to solve a lot of problems. A low to no growth business.
TOP PICK
Sees limited downside. The stock is waiting for the deal to happen. If it happens, feels the transaction will be in the $24.50/25 range. If it doesn't happen, it's an incredibly cheap stock.
BUY ON WEAKNESS
A good company. Buy under $7. Had some problems with wet weather in the 3rd quarter, so production has been a little weak.
Showing 17,836 to 17,850 of 18,631 entries