Markets. He is focused on the continuing divergence between Central Banks. Global economic growth is challenged; otherwise you wouldn’t have divergent monetary policy. In that environment, you want to be careful about how your portfolio is positioned. Certainly for Canadian investors, it warrants having global diversification because you are going to see other parts of the world grow at a different pace, if not a little bit more quickly than the Canadian economy. Thinks US growth is going to accelerate next year, albeit modestly. Also, thinks European growth is going to accelerate. He favours developed markets versus emerging markets. His focus is on equity income, dividend growers where you have some visibility of earnings, cash flow and dividend growth that hopefully should warrant capital appreciation potential and outperformance. Biased towards big cap. The business cycle still has some legs to it, and in that environment you just want to focus on companies that are going to be able to deliver very consistent, predictable earnings growth, and not try to make cyclical bets where you could lose a lot of money.
Hydro One? A new IPO and starts trading tomorrow. Wait at least one month before stepping in. Feels the valuation is reasonable. Has somemedium to longer term concerns which will only be addressed in the course of time. This was a government owned company that is now going to be public, and you always want to pay careful attention as to whether or not management is going to be able to deliver some of the cost savings that they articulated. A good way to get a relatively stable dividend.
Markets. Leading up to the correction, he was quite cautious on the markets, but now with the correction he has bought in, somewhat into September. It was so oversold he figured that it was a bounce. It bounced more than what he would have expected. He is feeling pretty much the way he did in the summer and is now starting to re-establish his Short positions. Has been selling into the strength in the past week or so. This is particularly in the areas that have moved the most. Energy is starting to act a little better, but he is watching it closely to see if it is going to break out to the upside. A lot of the reasons why he was bearish before have not gone away. A tough call at this time of year. You get some good seasonality and it could go higher. It is surprising how quickly the S&P 500 is not that far from the all-time high. The German market recovered half of its losses which was down 24%. A pretty good snap back rally, but for the wrong reasons. It is the belief that the central banks are the ultimate rescue operation out there. People should still be very cautious going forward.
Energy. The oil glut is not completed yet. We are starting to see a pickup in demand which is good. The nice thing about oil, compared to some other commodities, is that it is not so totally Chinese dependent. Iraq production is coming back on stronger and the additional Iranian production is going to be coming back soon. Shale producers in the US have cut back recently, but they are ready to come back on in a hurry. Oil, for a long, long time, is not going anywhere close to where it came down from. A price in the $60-$70 range is probably the best you can expect for a while. Expect you could see this sometime in 2016, later in the year.
Gold? Had it as a short a while ago, but does not own any gold in his portfolios. Believes the US Federal Reserve is going to move on interest rates in December. Unless the economy totally deteriorates, they’ll start that move. The US$ will go higher compared to the euro and everything else, and that will put downward pressure on gold.
Markets. September and October were just a bull market correction. Consumer and tech stocks have gone right back to where they were after the correction. The bounce in energy and emerging markets may just be short covering. The bounce in energy and commodity stocks has waned. The old leadership has re-established. He thinks this year will finish pretty strong over the next two months.
Markets. Europe’s purchasing manager’s data is showing some improvement. The outlook for global manufacturing is trending toward lower. Today’s PMI number does not suggest more QE. Global economies are diverging at present. Europe is cheap in valuations compared to US markets. Two children per family in China does not mean India will be bigger than China by 2025. China will be the biggest economy in the world within the next number of years, but India and some of Africa are building to the largest population. To him everything is centered about the aging demographic.
Rental Properties in Alberta. It does not matter what province you are in. He is a big proponent of diversification. You need to put 50% down today to be cash flow neutral on a rental property. It is not a cheap investment, there are headaches, but otherwise he likes the idea of rental properties. The problem is if you are concentrated too much in one area because of how much you have to invest in one property. Real estate will correct at some point.
Educational Segment. Retirement and an encore career – you leave the corporation, but keep doing lots of work, possibly part-time. One of the challenges for this is the uncertainty of returns from investments going forward. An encore career makes your money last longer in retirement. People are living longer, perhaps 10 years longer than you expected. Millennials are looking at living to 110 years old.
Markets. At the start of the year growth expectations are higher, and at the end of the year they taper off. The exact same pattern that we have seen over the past few years. Not negative growth, just below consensus, and he is a bit more cautious than most. The longer-term is positive for the US$. China has a bit of demand for commodities and that will continue. Even if it drops a half a percent, it is still quite high. Chinese equities are looking attractive and he invests in that through ETF iShares Xinhua China 25 (FXI-N). Thinks China is pretty constructive.
Markets. There is not a lot of reason to have a lot of interest rate sensitivity in your portfolio. If you have some utilities and REITs, offset those with lifecos or rate reset preferreds. That gives you a bit of a barbell that will even its way out over time. If rates go up 25 or 50 basis points, a portfolio will be isolated. He only buys dividend paying stocks, and it is very important that those are companies that will grow their dividends. Looks for businesses that have free cash flow yield, pays some of the yield in dividends, has growth in the business and at the same time do some buyback of their shares. About 80% of his portfolio is rate agnostic, i.e. rates don’t matter; it is all based on earnings growth. He is expecting a nice rally before the end of the year.
Markets. This big snap back is a reaction of the market to the Fed. The market got a little oversold technically. Seasonally we are moving into a good period. Markets are back to normal, which is a volatile nature. We’ve had the down, now we have to snap back up. Suspects there might be a little backing and filling here, but moving into the post US Thanksgiving period is generally quite strong seasonally. Under the earnings we are seeing, which are quite tepid in total, that there are a lot of good things happening. He is looking for organic growth in companies as opposed to a revision of multiples upward.