50% off Premium Yearly
Corporate earnings the past two weeks - only 60% of major companies beating "top line" estimates.
Top line revenue downward trend means growth is slowing.
Since inflation is falling - companies unable to charge higher prices.
Believes inflation will be sticky, and present challenges to the economy.
Positive trends for higher energy prices going forward (oil above $80).
Too much optimism in the markets with A.I. euphoria.
Believes interest rates are going to go up, and recession is looming.
Hard landing will hurt the economy.
US Federal Reserve trying to paint the narrative of soft landing.
Probability of recession has gone down according to US Federal Reserve (which is wrong).
Enormous borrowing by US Treasury not sustainable.
Higher interest rates will erode confidence in US banking system.
Odds of a Recession: What Could Change?
The economy is still susceptible to risks if inflation continues at elevated levels, pushing central banks towards a hawkish mode. Nevertheless, the recent CPI reading provides some comfort on that parameter as well.
Another potential outcome is the economic overcooling resulting from consumers experiencing significant financial strain due to two years of high inflation and the impact of elevated interest costs. Although there might be a time delay before these effects fully manifest, the most recent job reports do not currently indicate any immediate signs of an overcooled economy.
The market sentiment is shifting. Bank earnings are coming in strong; companies are beating street expectations and many investors are revising their recession forecasts.
As we always say, time in the market is more important than timing the market.
Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free
Because of big market gains this is not a time to chase growth stocks. Look for opportunities in areas the market is ignoring for various reasons. There are opportunities in the commodity and emerging equity markets especially in Asia. Inflation is slowing and the market is expecting a Chinese stimulus which may or may not happen. China and India have mopped up the Russian demand for oil. The U.S. may have a recession but it is too early to tell.
The question was on the cyber security space. He is very positive on the sector since consumers, corporations and governments need it. He favours more mature companies with profits over new performers but it is a good strategy to start looking for opportunities. If there is a recession tech will go down which will make a good opportunity to buy.
The rally continues because earnings continue to deliver. Consensus expects the topline to see some slowing, but better margins will make up for that. Can we continue to deliver that topline into 2024? Her concern is that the rest of the world (ex-USA) is rapidly contracting. The market expected China's reopening to drive demand for cyclicals like energy and materials, but have lagged this year--Chinese demand wasn't there.
It's been a bull market this year, but he fears a pullback in August-October. It's won't derail the overall rally; we can finish the year at record highs. Given yesterday's GDP data, we're not talking soft landing anymore, but maybe no landing. The Fed could hike once or twice more and that could throw off the market. He has been trimming big tech like Apple, Microsoft and Amazon because of overweighting in his portfolio. He hit a home run with tech this year, so he wants to be ready (to buy dips) in the second half of this year. He's seeking outperformance in healthcare, niche industrials and small caps. He remains bullish tech. He hols 8-9% cash. He can go shopping if there's a pullback.
Believes inflation numbers moving in the right direction in Canada & USA.
Central interest rate policy very influential the past 24 months in financial markets.
Corporate earnings are trending nicely the past few weeks.
Tension between inflation & interest rate policy will have major impact the next 9-12 months.
Summer seasonality (less trading volumes) will create volatility in the markets.
Best opportunities for investors exist in small cap stocks - not widely covered.