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Rising bond yields (10-year) a concern for investors.
Believes investors entering a tougher economic environment.
Rates expected to be higher due to inflation concerns.
Productive assets will be more valuable vs. long dated tech investments.
Even a portion of capital flowing out of big tech will benefit traditional asset-backed companies.
Likes prospects of traditional companies paying dividends.
She doesn't expects the S&P to fall to 4,200. Rather, investors who missed buying tech will nibble at these same names during this downturn. We're seeing stocks settling and investors buying. Earnings were decent, better than feared. Consumers are spending. All in, she expects market buying into 2024. PEs of the biggest markets are coming down.
The current slump is down to normal August seasonality, not a fear of rising rates. In fact, it's a 90% of no hike, and 10% of a 25-point hike, and that isn't a big deal. GDP forecasts point to another quarter of strong growth, so why wouldn't we see more hikes? Maybe 7.25% is too high for 30-year mortgages
Basic Real Estate Terms: House Price to Income Ratio.
While real estate prices are interesting on their own, having more context for them is far more helpful. As a crude example - if a house costs a million dollars but the average income in a country is two million, affordability is not an issue. If the average income is $50,000, the situation is far different. Countries with the lower housing prices should have a longer-term tailwind in terms of an economic driver as home ownership and prices rise, lifting the broader economy.
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We've had a couple of different types of market. Until mid-year, we had a market dominated by very few stocks, mostly in tech and telecom. Since the beginning of Q3 at the start of July, we've seen a rotation and a broadening out. Small cap stocks are doing a bit better. Industries and sectors that didn't participate in the first half of the year, like healthcare and industrials, have come on a little bit, and that's very healthy for the market.
Likes it for the long term. Just look at the demographics to understand why. Most analysts think that growth in healthcare will be double GDP over the next 10 years. So we can take advantage of that by owning some of the best stocks in that sector.
He participates in pharma through MRK, and he owns AMGN in the biotech sector. He has exposure to broad, diversified companies like CVS, which is quite vertically integrated from insurance right through drugstore operations. There's good opportunity there. See his Top Picks.
He also owns ELV, a pure play in health insurance.
It's harder to decide when to sell than when to buy. Before you buy, you have all the time in the world and there are no emotional tugs.
Once you own a company, the emotional side kicks in. If you look just at the profit you've made, you're only looking at one side of the equation of value. I've made x%, so should I sell because I've been rewarded? This is a flaw in investment thinking. Instead look at fundamentals, growth of earnings and cashflow, revenue growth. If it's a better value today than when you bought, keep it. This way you give some stocks in your portfolio the chance to double and more.
Take the price and look at what you're pricing, rather then looking at your own experience.
He's looked at the sector, but doesn't own any stocks. Hard to find an analyst who doesn't say there's going to be a shortage, which will drive price. Could be a good long-term hold, but no catalyst that compels him to buy today. Be careful about the size of your investment. Don't make it a large part of your portfolio, because it could be dormant for some time until there is a catalyst.
So far this year, people are mispositioned for a recession. Sentiment for a recession has been decreasing, and so there's been this accelerated movement to the upside. With inflation, bond yields, and valuations being where they are, you're going to see a bit of a soft patch.
July was wonderful, but he fully expects a healthy pause, especially with seasonality that typically happens around this time.
Very concerning. Some are seeing strong parallels with Japan in the 1990s, and that's bad news. There's stagnating economic growth, an aging population, and a real estate problem. The good news is that the fallout in Japan didn't happen right away. China can learn from Japan's experience and try to be more agile, reverse course, and be more aggressive to stimulate.
Outside of China, emerging markets are doing well. Legislation in North America is bringing reshoring. He's not sure that we need China to grow the way it was 10-20 years ago in order to have the global growth story. But we don't want China to be a drag, so it's important what happens there.