Cannabis Stocks. A lot of them will become commodities and become commoditized. There will not be that much differentiation. The sector is so overvalued that it is indescribable. You can’t justify these valuations based on forward results 10 years out. There will be causalities. Take a good chunk off the table. There may be a little bump when it is legalized or there may be a sell-on-news thing. It is a bubble. It is madness and greed. There will be some winners in the medical marijuana space.
Market. He thinks there will be a third wave of tariffs on China. Ultimately a deal gets done because it has to. It is just matter of timing. It will probably get done in 2019. He hopes the tariffs will get unwound with an agreement. He predicts that US congress will go democratic in November. The markets have not gone down in North America so see little risk in it. Japan has been keeping interest rates artificially low but now they are breaking. Germany has seen interest rates rising now. He thinks we will see yields drift higher. But the US consumers will keep US interest rates from increasing substantially. Bond yields will get pressured in the upcoming months.
Educational Segment. Gold and Gold Stock Valuations. Gold equities are the cheapest they have been in a decade. XGD-T has gone down to where it is approaching its cheapest ever. It is almost uncorrelated with anything. There are things that have to happen for Gold to do well. We need a debt crisis. A lot of junior stocks don’t have production, but he is okay with them.
The bond yield cracked 3% last week, so perhaps we should be concerned over the shape of the yield curve. We worry about an inverted yield curve because it foretells a recession by 12-18 months; the market rolls over 6 months before that. He's holding more cash and buying longer-term bonds. Telecoms are getting hit this year, but they would do well during a recession. He fears that when the recession hits, then households and businesses alike will carry heavy debt that's unseen in history. Japan would be an okay place to invest in a recession; they are especially advanced in developing artificial intelligence.
Market. The growth names are in the US. Canada is seeming good valuations, especially within the lifecos, banks and energy stocks. With interest rates potentially going up and the Canadian government not being pro-business, the lack of growth in the Canadian markets could continue. We have to be cautious in the NAFTA negotiations to not show Canada as being against business development. The cannabis sector seems over valued in Canada and he warns of further potential downside – play it smartly. Some of these new companies will be bankrupt in a year. He is watching the US 10 year bond yield with only a 25 bps spread with short term rates as a potential warning of an upcoming recession.
New US highs reached this week. First time since 2011, he’s been taking money off the table in the US specifically and getting a bit cautious. Has been underweight Canada for a while. Now neutral on the US, and starting to underweight the US. Three things concern him about the S&P 500. 1) The advance is narrow. FANGs have created the bulk of the rise. 2) Earnings in the first quarter were a one-time shot because of tax cuts. Earnings are the fuel for equities. 3) US interest rate being high, and the S&P 500 doing well, and the US dollar going up, all investments flows have been going to the US either bonds, stocks or currency. He thinks we are coming to the end of that road.
Where’s the opportunity? We’re back in the international markets because of process of elimination. We’ve seen terrible underperformance from international markets relative to the US, so now it’s cheap. Unlike the US, that market it’s not tech oriented but more value oriented and thinks downside risk is less. As we take money off the table, he’s keeping it in cash.
What would it take to be interested in Canada again? Thinks the resolution on the pipeline issue is key. The broad TSX index is probably not going to move much it’s 40% financial and although he is not worried about the Canadian banks they’re not going to go up a lot. So it rests on energy and materials. Energy stocks are not responding to the lift of price because we can’t move the product so what’s the point of finding more oil.
Market. There is no way to value these things from a fundamental stand point. Their applications can be pharma, wellness or applications in beverages. There is a significant amount of speculative interest in investment. The flavor is 'cannabis'. A year from now the ETF could grind higher if there are more participants coming to the table. We are in the late stages of the business cycle. We should see strength in industrials but that has not been taking place yet. There are trade wars, for example. There is a very narrow band of what is driving markets. The 9% of S&P increases have been explained by healthcare and techs. Japan is attracting a lot of investor inflows.
Market Outlook. The S&P 500 at an all-time high today but the Canadian Market is disastrous. Since the Financial Crisis the US stock market has done like 200% vs the Canadian Market that returned 30%. The difference being that they have all the Googles, the Facebooks and Apples and Amazon and we have crappy oil stocks and the Banks that are doing a lot. In the marijuana sector is all retail money. There is going to be real demand for these products but for now it is all speculation. He doesn’t think it will have a great effect on the economy in general.
Market. He is not a resource stock fan and avoids them like the plague. The money you have to raise for exploration and permitting is too much. The price of the commodity would have to cooperate over the long term and you can’t control that. You end up with an enormous hole in the ground and return little to shareholders. These are huge disconnects between the US market and the rest of the world. There are the trade wars between the US ad everyone including China. The US market is extremely highly valued and vulnerable. Tariffs are causing products imported to us to be more highly priced and to be a problem for US producers.