Earnings have beaten expectations and the market has dramatically moved up since December, but the S&P is up only 8% year over year. Now, the shape of the technical pattern on the S&P is the same as last September's, so we will see the same big correction or a rotation out of energy and into gold and precious metals? Gold is a safe haven, though he's not a gold bug. He likes Kirkland Lake Gold for its growth. WTI oil will likely stay high due to geopolitical tensions, but he doesn't see $80/barrel. He doesn't foresee a crash, but merely a slowdown in growth and no recession till the end of 2020.
Market Outlook. Always optimistic on oil, he still thinks the global balance is still tight. He is becoming more bullish this past week as there is concern of growing Iranian constraints. Exports could fall by 700,000 bpd -- this could push OPEC to peak capacity. With no safety cushion, issues in Libya, Venezuela and others could keep markets very tight. He expects Alberta curtailment to last into 2020. Valuations are at their lowest levels in his 16 years in the business. Free cash-flow can be used by companies to buyback large quantities of shares. You could see companies privatize themselves. His base outlook is $60 WTI and $17.50 WTS differentials. The market is simply not operating efficiently right now. A great time to buy.
Alberta curtailment? There are a lot of politics involved. The integrated and non-integrated companies are at odds with the impact of Alberta's curtailment of production. Nobody planned for $50 WCS differntials. Alberta wanted to correct this problem and until the Feds can get more pipeline capacity this was the best solution. He expects the curtailment to extend into 2020 for the greater good of Albertans and Canadians.
Speed of US national debt increasing. It's been said that US growth rate has outpaced others. Economy is growing at 2-3%, but the deficit is increasing at 7%. For any other country, the currency would be down 20%. Decent growth, good corporate earnings, but the debt issue is lingering. The only reason they're growing is because of their debt. Tougher to grow late cycle. Not a massive red flag right now, but eventual result will be a lower US dollar. Bid to the US because Europe has been tough for so long.
European growth. German demographics are terrible. No inflation, no growth. It's a problem globally that we don't see the inflation and growth that we used to. Bond market is reflecting this.
What is the US national debt? True number is 22.5 trillion. Size of economy as of Q4 is 20 trillion. Nominal debt to GDP is around 102-105%. Issue about unfunded pension liabilities can muddy the numbers. Difficult political environment in US, and this issue is a runaway train. Be mindful in the next 5-10 years, and what that can do to markets.
It's been a tough week for earnings (though some companies have done well). He's carrying more cash than usual and has been taking some shares off the table. We're seeing the end of the cycle. The dilemma for central banks is how to normalize rates, but be aware of the markets selling off swiftly when rates are raised, like last December. We'll see some misses in industrial stocks, because--for example 3M, they are dealing with a strong US currency and competition from Europe. He suggests buying European blue-chips at the current CAD exchange rate. Europe is not blowing up. If Brexit happens, it happens; Europe will survive it.
Market Outlook In Canada, debt is running at 170% of income with investors. The US is only about 110%. This high household debt level does not leave much room for a family to absorb interest rate hikes. Unless Canadian start earning a lot more in income, he thinks there could be more defaults ahead. This have been build over the past decade. Unfortunately, there is no single government policy to deal with the risk. He thinks investor complacency at high levels, with volatility plummeting. Now another correction is likely coming.
Fixed Income vs. Equity? You should think of this over a long time period, depending on your needs for income. He is about 25% cash right now. To be defensive, hold cash -- not fixed income. You need to be aware that bonds can create as much risk as equity, depending on which issue you hold.
Market Outlook - The big names very strong after hours today. Earnings are in the growthy part of the market. That is what he needs to see to keep thins thing going higher. He needs to put there warnings: 1- We are at major resistance levels here, it is going to take a lot of energy to through to new highs, 2 - the small caps is still 7-8% off all time highs, 3- it bothers him and others that this has come so quickly. Don't quit yet. We are still in good shape.
Do you like the US Healthcare sector? He still believes in the sector. there is a lot of political rhetoric now so he would hold off for now. But He would look into names that held well in the last couple of months. United Health would probably his top pick in the sector.
It's been a strong Q1 with the S&P making a record high today. Investors were too negative in December 2018 and we've seen a 20% rally driven by new sentiment and lowering/flattening interest rates. But companies actually lowered their estimates heading into this quarter. Locheed, for example, reported strong this morning. Multiples are 16-17x forward earnings on the S&P. A China-US trade deal could drive more upside. The buying opportunities are getting tougher to find; it's a stockpicker's market. It's smart to take some money off the table, hold excess cash and wait for another pullback, possibly driven by another Trump trade war (with the EU).
The big question is: How long can it last? The rebound since December has been staggering. There isn't a balloon ready to burst, but a downturn will come. When? We're late in the cycle. Now are the good-ole-days. We're way below normal interest rate levels, but debt is high. These are the danger signals. He will be quicker to sell; he would love to take more money off the table. U.S. unemployment is at record lows which boosts spending, but also the Fed should raise interest rates. Trump is highly questionable, economically. He's had six companies go bankrupt. His tweets aren't the wisest things, but no one can contain him. How much is he getting done on the trade front? Our own trade deal with the US hasn't been signed yet. He creates more negativity than the positive; he thrives on discord, which is not the best way to do business.
Geopolitical dangers have never been higher, given the horrific Sri Lankan terrorist attacks over the weekend, and Trump continues to restrict the flow of Iranian oil. Geopolitics does impact world markets....MSFT and Intel report this week and have both broken to new highs. They will indicate whether the broader rally will continue. The S&P and TSX hit record highs, but he doesn't see a strong economic backdrop. Half of Canadians are a few bucks away from insolvency. He feels the economy is fundamentally weak. We're in for potentially decades of low interest rates.