Canadian Banks. Sell now and buy back at a lower price? Canadian banks have really done pretty well. There are going to be higher loan losses. Also, housing prices could be off slightly in the prairies, but the majority of the property market is looking pretty good. Stick with the Canadian banks and don’t try and time it.
Markets. The easy money of the last 4 or 5 years is behind us. There are people waiting for those times to return that are on the sidelines. He built up 25% cash in January and put 10 of that to work since. Risk aversion is coming online so if you get it wrong in a small name you really get it wrong. His favourites are not necessarily the highest paying dividends. He looks at sustainability of the dividend, their company’s ability to raise it. We are close to the bottom with oil prices. Don’t confuse this with the share price of oil companies. Oil may go up and some Canadian names will still not make money. He would rather miss 10-15% of the upside, but have conviction that we have turned the corner. This pull back has given him opportunities in several sectors. Utilities were great.
Emerging market allocation. He has zero direct exposure to them. From a theoretical point of view it sounds exciting. He stays away because those markets use different accounting standards so he can’t use their financial statements the same way and those markets lack regulation. He prefers multi nationals that trade on the US markets.
Energy. Doesn’t think Saudi Arabia is going to give up on their strategy very easily. Also, Russia has an absolutely terrible track record of complying with what they say they are going to do. They’ll come on board and say they are going to freeze production, but will lift production in ensuing months. That’s their pattern. March and April are typically refinery turn around season. Refiners come off line, and get prepared for the heavy usage season in the 3rd quarter, which is the traditional seasonal pattern. He expects the bloated inventories globally are going to crest in the April/May time frame, which will be about as bad as it gets. Hopes to get visibility in terms of balancing supply and demand in the 2nd half of the year. The jump in oil recently has been driven to a large extent by Short covering. Shorts are running scared because they think something more might happen, but he doesn’t think anything will happen. Expects there will be another retest in oil prices, which sets us up for a 2nd half which looks quite constructive. Concerned about the slow pace of LNG on the West Coast. Some of the front running projects that he thought had a high probability of getting constructed, now seem to be stumbling a little. Thinks the Canadian dream of being an LNG exporter are diminished.
Markets. We are moving from zero interest policies into negative interest rate policies. The US is dealing with a strong currency and reduced exports. But they are the reserve currency. Everything in the world is traded in US dollars. They have a more powerful currency. They can print as much currency as they want. You should buy both US and Canadian equities. Revenue in the US is reduced when it is translated to US dollars. Canadians could buy US companies because of this at reduced valuations. But this is a currency trade. There are a lot of companies that have Canadian costs, but US revenues, perhaps because of international revenues. He likes these. The Chinese are supporting their RMB.
Markets. We had a reflexive bounce off in some of the commodities. We had persistence in sectors with stable earnings and good trends. We are at high levels of inventories to sales. The Fed is worried about some things. The Yen is the big trade that tells us a lot about markets. We had a rounding bottom in 2015 and now it broke out. He owns the Yen. The Yen is telling us the market (S&P 500) is tired. We might see a revisit of the December/January lows. You want to go into strength in the S&P.
Markets. He doesn’t see big pain. Doesn’t think we are extended that much. The stock market is different than economics and whether Canadians with mortgages are extended, which there is some of, he doesn’t see cratering. By sector it is difficult. Energy and materials have their own drum. If you have a view that oil is going to $45-$50, which he does, it is pretty back end loaded. Thinks energy/oil stocks are ahead of themselves, and there are some bad inventory numbers coming in the next month or so, where you might get an opportunity to pick away. Has almost no weight in oil, so he will be looking. Likes financials, consumer discretionary and industrial, where there is value stock by stock, but not the whole group.
Energy? Crescent Point Energy (CPG-T) is the only thing he owns. Prefers oil to gas. This one has growth in Saskatchewan and Utah, and nothing in Alberta. You actually have to look at pipelines and where they are going. It looks like we are a while before another one is built. He wants to be safe for now, and would rather give up 10% now, and then chase a little bit after it started moving.
Markets. In January he felt this was the first significant correction of a new, long-term bull market for stocks. S&P 500 broke out to new highs at the end of 2012, exceeding the 2000 highs. 12 years of sideways markets resolved to the upside. Looking at 2 previous secular multiyear bull markets, 1951 to 1966 and 1982 to 2000, there was about a 10% correction in about 2.5 years over 6 or 7 months. Both had been through a tough market and a lot of people said we were back in trouble again, and in both cases, the market turned and rallied between 100% and 150% over the next 2 years. We have passed the 1st significant correction of a new longer-term bull market for developed market equities. He is very bullish. We are in a long down cycle for commodities, and there will be retracement rallies like we are having right now that will make things look a little better. In general, if you can have low inflation and low input costs, especially in energy, that is a great thing for a developed consumer led economy. Of course the biggest one in the world is the US.
Market. If you take the FANG stocks (Facebook, Amazon, Netflix, Google) out of the market, you actually had a bear market in the US. More than half the stocks are down more than 20%. There are certainly some good value opportunities. Now that the Fed has made it plain that they are not going to raise rates as much as people had thought, they are taking their foot off the brake. At the same time the European Central Bank has come back with another billion euros each month to buy things like corporate bonds and with more negative interest rates, liquidity is there. Emerging markets are now as cheap as they have been in 2 decades.