Markets. A big rise in the deficit and subsequent debt from the federal budget today. It has a lot of influence from economic advisors from Ontario. It is worrisome to him. We may be in low growth, but we are not in trouble. Going into debt the way we are is like we are in fact in trouble. There is no plan to ever pay it back. It will be interesting to see what happens to the Canadian dollar.
Where to put new money - Oil?. He identifies companies, not sectors. You should have a diversified portfolio, however. You have to diversify outside of Canada also. Oil stocks had a premature run, maybe short covering. Historically you don’t get ‘V’ shaped bottoms in commodities. Hold off in oils for the moment.
Canadian Banks. He only owns BNS-T because it is the most international with the smallest Canadian footprint. He sees a lot of headwinds such as the oil patch. You are only now getting people defaulting on debt due to the oil price problem. He prefers US banks where there is a more certain economy and loan growth. He sees Latin American and Asia as the future growth area for banks.
Educational Segment. Why Raising Retirement Age is a Good Idea. A Lawyer and an Actuary penned an article about why it was a bad idea to roll back OAS from 67 to 65. We are all living longer. OAS started in the 1950s and life expectancy was 80. Now if you live to 65 you are likely to live to 85. We will be at 16% young people going forward, but the number of old people will be going up dramatically (16-24%). Governments are inept at dealing with people living longer. The kids are going to pay. Each one owes $38k right now. The US will be out of OAS by 2039 if they don’t change policy.
Markets. It has been a tough 3 or 4 months. A neighbour of his was busy pouring cement for home builds until January and then it just stopped. He thinks this is as bad as it gets right now. In ‘08/09 when the Saudis cut production, Western Canada never laid off employees. Right now it seems like they are doing double the amount of layoffs they should have. April and May will be the inflection point with bankruptcies or acquisitions. You should find companies that trade with debt to cash flow of 3 or lower and cheap multiples are candidates. Acquirers will just get saddled with the debt of others. The market usually prices things in 6 months in advance.
Markets. He is taking a very cautious view, especially with the big rise we have had on the February lows. Feels the markets are probably a little overvalued. His call was for the S&P 500 to be right around where it is now at the end of the year, so we have a long way to go. This really relates to looking at the macro economic picture, both in the US and globally. Right now we are still getting very mixed messages. What has been powering the economy over the last few years has been the recovery in the housing sector, and that looks like it is kind of sputtering. Today’s existing home sales numbers were a bit disappointing because they were well below consensus. The market doesn’t seem to be too worried about it, and that is a frustrating part for a lot of people. His current cash position is around 75%. Doesn’t believe in “buy and hold” currently, but believes you need to focus on good quality companies. When they get really stretched valuations, you need to take some money off the table and protect your cash.
Favourite US bank? His favourite is Bank of America (BA-N). It is much, much cheaper. Wells Fargo(WFC-N), J.P. Morgan (JPM-N) and US Bank Corp are kind of the 3 sisters that people love to go to, because they are very high quality banks. Have the fewest hairs in terms of companies, so people gravitate to them and give them richer valuations. (See Top Picks.)
Markets. Belgium, Germany, the budget. How will the news affect markets? Tragedies are unfortunate, but he is such a long term investor that it does not affect him. We have lived with terrorism all our lives. HBC has stores in Belgium and Germany. Companies with assets negatively affected in the long run, you have to take action. Real estate will be affected in Europe in specific areas from these events. Since 1987, he has been saying the volatility comes and goes. The federal budget: Effect on renewables: He has been a long term investor in this sector and not because of a particular platform being elected. The liberals want to spend a lot of money.