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

COMMENT

Investors should not expect lower interest rates going forward - current rates are historically average. 
Believes market is oversold at current prices - expecting rally before year end.
Investors have exited the choppy period of the year.
Select few tech names inflating the markets (NVIDIA, Alphabet etc.)
US Federal Reserve interest rate policy appears to be successfully avoiding a recession.



COMMENT

US banks positioned favorably going forward.
Increased interest rates will benefit profits.
Capital markets business - starting to show some green shoots.
Owns several US large cap banks (JP Morgran, Bank of America, Morgan Stanley).

COMMENT
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research

Take a long-term view.

In the short term, the market is a voting machine. In the long term, it is a weighing machine. Short-term stock prices are influenced by a multitude of factors: interest rates, inflation, sentiment, politics, analyst upgrades and so on. But in the longer term, it is how a company specifically performs that will determine its true value. Nothing else really matters if one is looking at an investment period of 10 years or more (and you should).

Academic studies have proven that over one day or week, the odds of having a positive investment return are worse than 50/50. Over a one-year period, this rises to 73 per cent. Over three years, 84 per cent. Over five years, 88 per cent. Over 10 years, 94 per cent. Over 20 years, it’s pretty close to 100 per cent.

As they say, it’s not timing the market, it’s time in the market. But most investors do themselves a disservice by not sticking it out long enough. We get customers saying, “I’ve owned this stock for three months and it is not performing. What should I do?” Sometimes, stocks take a while to perform. Patience is certainly required at times in the market.
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COMMENT
Clouds over the economy?

We know the economy's slowing. In Canada, Q2 GDP was down 0.2%. The US came in much better at 2.1%. The consumer's held up relatively well, especially the US consumer. They were drawing on savings that were built up during the pandemic. Most of those savings are gone now. The savings rate is actually back down below, yet credit card debt is higher than, pre-pandemic levels. Also, lines of credit are going back up. Delinquencies have been slowly going up, though not yet at the level that spells trouble.

What all this tells her is that going forward, household spending will rely much more on employment and interest rates. From yesterday, Fed Chair Powell implied that rates will stay higher for longer, and the market's reacting to that.

But the positive side is Powell suggesting that a soft landing is still possible, given that the economy's holding up much better.

COMMENT
Rates higher for longer?

Eventually the economy will slow to the point where central banks have to start cutting. Consensus expectations are that that point will be well into next year. In Canada, the ratio of debt to disposable income is much higher than it is in the States, so our economy is much more sensitive to higher interest rates. 

Canada has variable rate mortgages, but they aren't really sold in the US where fixed rate is the norm. As rates stay higher for longer, and those mortgages need to reset, that's going to impact households. Unfortunately, CPI in Canada is trending the wrong way, so the BOC has a dilemma as to what to do on the next rate decision.

COMMENT
Dividend stocks or bonds?

Higher rates have been a huge headwind for income stocks, and many have underperformed. The choice depends on your risk tolerance and your time horizon. You can get a 3-year GIC for 5-5.5%, 3-year corporate bonds are yielding 5.5%. If your timeframe is below 5 years, and you want to be defensive and conservative and not lose any capital, maybe the fixed income route is the thing to do.

Longer term, say over 5 years, if you can withstand some volatility, there are a lot of income stocks that look quite attractive because of the pullback. It's a good time to build positions, because interest rates aren't always going to be at these levels. You don't need to pick stocks with the absolute highest yield, but pick ones with an attractive yield, plus you'll get some capital appreciation over time. Your total return will be in excess of what you can get in the fixed income market right now.

See her Top Picks.

COMMENT
Lithium.

She's looking at the sector, but hasn't found the right investment vehicle. When an area becomes topical, valuations get ahead of themselves. Has a lot of potential, especially with EVs.

COMMENT
September markets.

Pretty much like August and part of July, sort of range bound. The S&P and the NASDAQ have been either side of the 50-day MA, kept in that band of 1-2% above and below. Hopefully, today we get a breakout, though he can't predict which way it will go.

The recipe and ingredients are there for a breakout, either higher or lower. It will all come down to the press conference after the Fed rate decision. If J. Powell is more hawkish, markets will probably test on the downside. If he's not, we might get a bit of a rally. The market just has to break out of the range it's been in for the last 7-8 weeks.

COMMENT
Has AI enthusiasm died down?

Not at all. A year ago, he was talking about generative AI that could be the next catalyst to come in the technology arena. And that's what happened. 

The sector has matured, because you know who the players are. You have the hyperscalers with the cloud, and you have the processing names like NVDA and AMD and INTC coming in. In 2024, new chips will be coming out from those names and they'll be quite competitive. And then you have the software stack. It's all coming together, but you can see who's in the leadership position.

With interest rates high, and potentially going higher, you really have to stick with the big names that have the deep pockets.

COMMENT
Tech ETF?

Not a big fan of ETFs, because there's a price to go in and a price to go out. Outlook for the remainder of the year and going into 2024, we could be range bound. You could buy the QQQ or the NASDAQ futures. If we're range bound, it's very technically driven, so you have to know where resistance and support are.

COMMENT
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research

Diversification:

A concentrated portfolio is one way to build high wealth, but it is also a way to surely go broke if things don’t work out as expected.

Many dividend investors learned a hard lesson last year when nearly every dividend stock declined at the same time as interest rates soared. Technology investors are used to getting crushed every so often as tech stocks tend to be highly correlated. Investors who loaded up on real estate when interest rates were near zero are now getting a very painful lesson in how lack of diversification can hurt.

It is commonly known that diversification reduces risks, but investors still forget. We’ve seen investors with six bank stocks who think that’s diversification (hint, it’s not.)
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COMMENT
Jay Powell holds interest rates steady today

There are many knuckleheads who expect the U.S. Fed's Jay Powell to give a massive all-clear buy signal to the stock market. Gimme a break. That won't happen until inflation stops for six months--and we are far from that happening. No, the Fed hasn't beaten inflation yet. Mortgage rates are still high, the housing supply and labour market are still tight. Inflation stands at 4%. Pundits like hedge fund managers are out of touch with everyday (rising) prices that impact typical working people. Powell will raise rates until those prices come down, even if there are lots of layoffs (though prefers not to). He's doing this because hot inflation is more painful than layoffs.

COMMENT

United Auto Workers strike will result in higher car prices. 
Rising costs in labor will be passed on to consumers. 
Technology will help car companies cut costs. 
Believes raising interest rates in solution to higher food costs.
Canada major importer of food and is caught in a tough spot.
Federal government intervention not required for food costs.
Expecting a US Federal reserve "hold" on interest rates next week.

COMMENT

Believes energy stocks are fully valued at this time.
Good time to sell energy on strength (economic hard landing coming soon).
Energy will outperform the next 5 years.
Would not recommend chasing strength. 

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