Which market should investors focus on, domestic or international oriented? Being focused on domestic is probably a good idea. We don’t know if the border adjusted tax is going through or not. He would lean to the larger cap stocks where you are getting a lot of bang for your buck. A lot of the things are now favouring the bigger guys.
Market. The markets have not pulled off their all-time highs. Some of the Trump sectors, whether industrial or financials, were weak but the S&P was flattish. You are not getting money taken out of the equity market, you are just getting a sort of a churn into other sectors that have been poor performers. Now we are just waiting and seeing when tax regulation reform will come in, will he backdates it to January of this year or 2018. He is starting to look at Japan where he sees some opportunities, especially if the yen weakens. However, the general demographics of Japan makes him nervous. Sees Europe as the opportunity, and expects he will slowly be picking away at European companies, but there is still some nervousness because of the euro breakup. Europe should still do well as an exporter to the world.
Gold? He often finds this goes up ahead of PETA, the largest mining show globally, but thinks it is being pushed right now by Donald Trump, who is creating a tremendous amount of instability. People are looking to gold as a safe haven, but he doesn’t believe it is a safe haven. When gold went from $850 to about $250, you just don’t have anything going down in value that much, and have it as a safe haven. Wishes he had more gold in his portfolio. It’s a trade that he missed. He likes companies that don’t have a high debt load, or no debt at all. To find good companies with good balance sheets in the gold sector is very, very difficult.
Copper? Generally commodities are going to go up in value, at least in the short term. There is a big question mark out there with global trade. If global trade changes a lot because of tearing up of agreements and BREXIT, that will mean the demand for commodities will sink, which could hurt prices. Commodities have come back from a pretty low base and thinks there is further to go.
Market. We are seeing some pretty turbulent times. Donald Trump has rattled the market 3 or 4 different times. A very macro driven type market right now. Initially we saw a rally in equity markets because there was a belief that a lot of Donald Trump’s policies were pro growth, US job growth, tax cutting, etc. which spurs the economy. That initial reaction lasted for about 6 weeks, and then things kind of went sideways when realization set in with investors that a lot of his policies are also very protectionist, which will actually hurt growth and create inflation. After going sideways for a while, we have seen a bit of a brief respite. People are waiting to see exactly what type of policies actually get into place. Sees the market being good for the next 6-12 months, but beyond that, it is very difficult to tell.
Gold? Post the election, his initial reaction was that the market would sell off and safety assets like gold would rally. That happened in the first 4 hours, and then there was a complete reversal. Safety assets like gold got thrown out, and as a result, the company’s leverage to them sold off even more than that. Coming into 2017, as people start to question whether or not these policies get enacted, we are seeing people come back to precious metals. Even as some of these policies do get enacted, they are going to be inflationary in the US. He would stick with gold. There is a lot to be said for it.
Markets. Trump’s immigration policy is not going that well. He says he wants the US$ weaker. Border taxes will almost certainly push the dollar higher. There are conflicting policies. At some point the market wakes up and realizes there will be execution problems. The US will be VERY well supplied with oil for the next 5 years with Keystone coming on. This will put downward pressure on oil prices.
Educational Segment. Measuring Risk and Reward. Within 20 years the vast majority of money in the world will be run by computers. The traditional portfolio manager will be gone. E.g. SU-T, 25% of the sector, a big player. Going back 10 years it has made nobody any money for 10 years. It is up less than the dividend. Buy it when it is cheap relative to the benchmark and the markets. Figure out how much you need in your portfolio. The price of oil is the most important factor in the stock price. Looking at the 5 year chart it is incredibly overvalued.
Markets. The US banks are overcapitalized greatly so expect special dividends, increases, buybacks etc. He is expecting more lending and so on that will make them grow. If the US economy grows overly, people will pile into the US $. Eventually all that reverses, but that would be a long way down the road. If we can get capital investment going again, that is all positive for the US$. It is positive for material stocks.
Market. The month of February tends to be a little soft i.e. choppy. On top of that, there is a unique formation. Last week the market hit a new high on a gap i.e. it opened higher than the previous day it closed at, and then it spent 3 days at a new high level, and then opened down without ticking down, an island. Since 1975, every time a 3 to 7 day island happens, we tend to get a 1% drawdown over the next 30 days. With February normally being a seasonally choppy month anyways, along with the “island reversal” he is going to give the market a good chance of being choppy over the next few weeks. However, we are still in a bull market. If the market dips low enough, it is time to Buy.
Covered Call ETFS?
He likes these. He has 2 platforms. One is an equity platform that has a high turnover and which he trades frequently. He doesn’t pay a lot of attention to dividend stocks on this one.
The other is an income paying platform. It has some bonds, but it is 50% income paying stocks. In this, he has at least one Covered Call ETF, Canadian Banks (ZWB-T). He has also traded the utilities (ZWU-T). Both of these are pretty good products.
Market. Economically things are looking up in the US. Looking back at the underpinning economic strength of the economy of the pre-Trump administration, there is a lot there. Jobless claims haven’t been this low since the 70s. There is wage growth at 2.5%, which has been in an upward trend for 1.5 years. Oil was beaten up a year ago, and is now $50. This all adds up to a more normal environment. Thinks bonds go to 3% before it goes back to 2%. His portfolio is underweight bonds, but overweight equities.