A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert (A Commentary)

BUY

Canadian Banks? A good time to start buying. Even though they outperformed the TSX last year, banks were generally down as well. There will be some catch-up. Doesn’t think there will be a collapse in housing, and feels the Canadian economy will slowly improve.

N/A

Markets. Investors tend to have very short memories. Oil in 1998 actually fell to $11 a barrel. No one can make accurate short-term predictions. There is no question that when momentum is moving in a certain direction, global economy is struggling, and usually in those situations, OPEC and other oil producers would be cutting back production. This time all those countries are so desperate for cash, because they are running huge deficits, they are still pumping full out. With Iran coming fully back on stream, that is just going to add to supply in the near term. It is going to take a fair bit of time. Supply is going to be constrained at some time, but it will take a while. When prices are high, you have to hold some cash and wait. Patience is always going to be the winner over time. Also, avoid value traps i.e., buying highly indebted companies.

Doesn’t think the Cdn$ will fall a lot more, and if it does it will be for a very brief period of time.

COMMENT

Canadian or US lifecos? Prefers the Canadian insurance companies Sun Life (SLF-T) and Manulife (MFC-T) because they have great franchises here, and also phenomenal growth globally. They give you a lot for a pretty low valuation. The US lifecos tend to be much more local.

N/A

Markets. The Chinese market has gained an average 6.5% each year since 2002. Their market will continue to be volatile. He feels their markets are fairly valued and are trying to form a base. The US banks’ top line numbers struggled to grow last year. US banks are all about earnings this year. They are not expensive. The markets will have 10% downside and 10% upside this year.

BUY

Europe. EWL-N gives you Switzerland. EWU-N gives you the UK. He recommends non-Euro developed countries. You will have the currency risk between CAD$ and US$ as well as between the US$ and the local currency.

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Educational Segment. The Relative Strength Index (RSI). It looks at the average gain and the average loss over the last 14 days. The average RSI of SPY-N (S&P 500) going back 22 years is about 54. The standard deviation (volatility) is 11. It hit below 2 standard deviations (32) last Friday. Historically following this point the return has been 3.11% vs. 0.82%.

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Markets. It was not the broad market that was headed in the right direction last year. In the later stages, it becomes more important to pick stocks. He has been quite bearish on commodities for about 4 years; however he does not see significant downside in oil prices. It is not the time to step into oil stocks yet. He is comfortable waiting and missing a falling knife as well as missing the first 10-15% of rise in oil stocks. He thinks there is a high probability that Canada will head into recession. He thinks the bank of Canada may cut rates again.

WEAK BUY

Longer Duration Bonds. Benefitted from the Bank of Canada drop in rates. The challenge in long term bonds is that the credit quality can change while you are holding it. You may need to sell it before maturity. He does not advise against long term bonds, but cautions against a change in credit quality.

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Portfolio consisting of a Single Balanced, Global, Diversified fund. You have to dig deep and see if it is good management. He does not currently have exposure to Europe. He prefers to use the multinational companies in the US.

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Canadian Dollar below $0.70 and Oil below $30 a perfect storm? If you are in energy it is a bad thing, but if in US stocks, they benefit.

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Markets. A lot of people are questioning if this is 2008 all over again, but there is no evidence of that. 2008 was a collapse of the US financial system that spread, and was based largely on the US market. What we are faced with is cheap money, cheap commodities and China uncertainty. China had been the stalwart, growing 7%-9% for 2 decades. It is clear that China growth is slowing and it is not clear what it is going to settle at, 5%, 6%, etc. The Shanghai market is a very volatile market, and is not an indicator of the Chinese economy. The volatility is scaring people. The big question is, is there more to the Canadian economy than oil. There are things you can buy in Canada that are not correlated with oil and the Cdn$. Has put a fairly significant weighting into the US in the last couple of years. Doesn’t think China is going to be back as a big supporter of higher prices and commodities, but they still have a growing economy, and still buying 18.5 million vehicles a year. Their demand for oil is not going to drop, it is just going to grow more slowly. Also, the Chinese are very deliberately moving from an export led economy to more of a domestic economy.

COMMENT

Lumber? Had thought this was going to go higher, but it hasn’t. They’ve gone lower, and he is puzzling over this. His thesis was that housing starts go up in the US, Cdn$ is down and lumber is priced in US$s. It is hard to imagine that the fundamentals of the lumber stocks won’t get better as the US creates jobs and builds houses.

COMMENT

Canadian Banks? Historically it is hard to go wrong buying Canadian banks. He has been buying US banks, but continues to own TD (TD-T), which he views as more of a North American bank. Also owns a little Royal (RY-T). If he didn’t own any Canadian banks, he would probably step into them gradually. They are going to do a little better when interest rates go up. If you are buying Canadian banks, you should do it for the long haul and just be patient.

N/A

US Stocks? Wouldn’t buy these just to be in the currency, but with their economy growing 2.5%-3% a year, and Canada struggling to grow, there are some good reasons to have a US weighting, particularly if you spend any time in the States. It’s good to have the US income.

COMMENT

Pipelines? Likes Inter Pipeline (IPL-T), Pembina (PPL-T) and Altagas (ALA-T). This is because the smaller pipelines have been able to continue to get good sized projects approved. The big, big projects have run into political troubles. Some of the pipelines have “take or pay” contracts, meaning they are going to get paid no matter how much oil is shipped. Inter Pipeline with its 7% dividend is a screaming bargain.

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