Markets. Currently he is about 80% invested for clients with about 10%-20% in cash, so if it can outperform the market while this rally is going on, that is great. He does have the cash in the event there is a market correction. This market has been pushed by ultra low interest rates for such a long time that people are either using margin, speculating, or borrowing like crazy. Companies are doctoring their bottom lines by buying back shares and making earnings go a little bit higher, but not really seeing a lot of growth. His focus is that companies must have free cash flow every year with which they could allocate a third to raising dividends, a third to capital expenditures, and a third to capital acquisitions if needed.
Gold. Has had a look at all the gold stocks and doesn’t like the companies. They are very leveraged and the price of gold has to go up to make the leverage pay off. Also, they are high cost mines. If you must own gold, he would suggest a bullion ETF, or just buy gold wafers that you can stick in your safety deposit box.
RESP Investment Recommendation for 6-year old. You have at least 10 years before you use the money. The markets can do a lot of ups and downs. Don’t just buy 4 stocks because you are not diversified enough and the RESP would be about $20k only. He recommends ETFs. Start with a whole world ETF with currency hedging. You definitely want S&P exposure and you need no fixed income. Don’t concentrate in Canada.
Educational Segment. Growth. The ECRI have some great free stuff on their web site. Dips in the GDI below 0 mean we are in a recession. Less than 2% is a period of stagnation and is where it has been for the last couple of years. We can expect this to continue and it depends somewhat on who wins the election and what they do with minimum wage laws. Another great indicator is a 20 country coincident growth diffusion indicator. Below .50 is contractionary and that is where it has been over the last couple of years.
Markets. He does not sell in May and go away. He sells when his opinion of value changes or he finds something better to buy. He is fully invested. In the short run rising interest rates could be lousy for stocks, bonds and preferred shares, but we have been expecting this, so some of it is baked in. It does not change his opinion. He does not see interest rates in Canada going up any time soon. Own companies that will do well in a rising rate environment as well as owning ones that will do well with a lowering rate environment. Don’t sit in cash or bonds. He is comfortable with his US holdings.
Markets. The year started with a lot of volatility in the market with a lot of fear for the 1st Fed hike, last December, and people didn’t know what to do. There was a lot of stabilization by mid-February, and since then we have been slowly marching upwards. Not exciting, but clearly pretty good markets here. Investors should always be vigilant, especially at this time of year. Expansion since the bottom of 2009 has been 6+ years running. Expansions do reach an end at some point, so investors should be keeping a lookout for that. Perhaps it is going to drag out to be a slow, steady, longer expansion than what it was, with inflation and interest being lower. A different type of cycle than what we are used to seeing post the 2nd world War. Central banks in general want to normalize interest rates, however, they don’t want to rock the boat either. An interest rate hike may occur in July, or maybe later. In this kind of climate, investors want to look for undervalued areas in slow growing, top line situations and devalued or organic growth.
Markets. US$ has been the chart to watch for the last year or so, but especially this year as he thinks the trend has reversed. The strong US$ has become the weak US$, which has really put legs to the commodity trade. It started in earnest in Feb/March. There is still plenty of room for this cyclical value trade to play out. A weaker US$ is good for Canadian equities. There is good market breadth, which is a good sign, and yet there is a very bearish market. Any time the indicator on this dips below 20%, you have positive returns 95% of the time, and you get about 12% of positive returns over 6 months.
Markets. 650,000 jobs were created in the US, an increase of about .05%. Historically April typically gains 7/10 of a percent. We were shy from the 50 year May average increase, but are still seeing employment growth. Looking at the year-to-date trend, all it has done is come back to trend. We are not seeing a recession or anything like that. More data is needed to confirm that. Right now we are about 0.3% higher on the year, in terms of employment. What concerns him is the creation of the jobs in low paying areas. The S&P 500 has been in a long-term trading range, between 2,040 and 2,130. It is a massive area of supply, so whenever it gets up there, people are selling and grooming their positions. Now we are testing those highs once again. There are a number of catalysts that could move the market either way. Investors should keep an eye on the S&P 500 to see which way it breaks. For the TSX, the trend is still positive. It broke above 14,000 and is now increasing on. It is staying above its trend line and is being supported by both its 20 and 50 day moving averages. We are right at the seasonality point now where there could be a selloff. Between now and August/September, trading is pretty flat.
Markets. It is difficult to predict the Sell in May and Go Away effect. He would not trade off of it. The market is paying attention to oil and not earnings. It is confusing for earnings. Don’t trade that stuff. Stick to your portfolio allocation. He backed out of Europe even though he was only at 2%. Oil is geopolitical. There are a number of disruptions around the world. You really don’t know where the price of oil is going. Much of the rise is probably temporary. He would just as soon sit back and wait.
Markets. He is constructive on the US economy, and is expecting about a 2% growth this year. Globally the consensus is that it is about 2.5%-3% growth, which is well below potential, but we live in a slow growth, slow inflation world right now. US markets are close to their all-time highs. In the 1st quarter this year, the S&P 500 had the worst quarterly earnings reporting season since the cycle began in 2009, with a -6% earnings growth and -2% revenue growth. If you take out energy, you get a little bit better than that, but the numbers are still pretty weak. Consensus for the 2nd quarter is much the same, but apparently we are going to make it up in the back half of the year to get a slightly positive number. There is going to have to be a resumption in growth for the market to take another leg higher in the US.