Summer Sale

50% off Premium Yearly

00days
00hrs
00mins
00secs

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

COMMENT
Long-term portfolio construction.

When considering what to add to your stable of stocks, first questions are what's already in your portfolio and at what weighting? For portfolio stability, it's really important to be diversified so that different parts of your portfolio perform well at different times. What he's looking for is stability in returns and, therefore, stability in the underlying dividend. A lesson from his mentor: "If the assets are good, management is temporary." This reflects longer-term thinking than the market, which tends to focus on the most recent quarter. Either management will run them better, or a new team will come in and run them better. 

COMMENT
Natural gas.

With the warm winter, nat gas prices have been demolished. Nat gas is a commodity that's very sensitive to weather and has very significant short-term cycles. Winter is becoming the bigger variable on demand, with summer demand becoming more consistent due to cooling demand in the US. LNG Canada is bringing a significant export opportunity for all Canadian nat gas companies towards the end of 2025. This will be transformational. He likes all Canadian nat gas producers on a volume basis. His preference is ARX, as it's diversified with undeveloped land. 

COMMENT
Fed rate decision this afternoon.

Not looking for anything crucial. Rate increases are expected to continue in the US, same as they have in Canada. BOC has shown some leadership by moving first with a smaller amount, and we may see that again today from J. Powell.

COMMENT
Portfolio changes.

Increasing quality, looking for higher ROEs and ROCs and less debt. Increased the number of stocks, going from 18 names to 30. They shifted into better value names, by taking profits in names that had run up and deploying profits into names with more reasonable valuations that pay dividends. 2022 was a very different year that what we experienced over the past decade. Inflation has roared back, interest rates have risen, fears of global recession are as high as they've been since 2008. When the facts change, they change their minds.

COMMENT
Price targets.

His firm doesn't try to predict 12-month returns or set price targets. Instead, they evaluate a company's ability to produce earnings for the next 3-4 year period. In other words, what is its normalized earnings power? So, if the company looks attractive based on its share price and normalized earnings power, it's a Buy. If it becomes expensive, then they tend to lighten up. 

COMMENT

Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research.

Max Drawdown: Expressed as a percentage, measures the absolute worst-case scenario of a particular fund. It calculates, for an investor, the maximum fall in the value of the investment if an investor bought at the absolute peak and sold it at the lowest trough. The metric offers a quantitative estimate indicating the capital preservation quality of a fund, a peak-to-trough loss of investment. Ideally, investors would want the maximum drawdown to be as low as possible. A max drawdown of 0% would indicate that the fund has never declined in value, and on the other hand, a max drawdown of 100% would mean that the fund is now worthless as the entire capital has been lost at least once in the time frame selected. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free  

COMMENT

Everything Jerome Powell said today was positive. His remarks triggered a rally and positive momentum. Stocks are moving up, so it's a buying opportunity. Those who sold today are living in the past.

COMMENT

Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research.

Performance Metrics when Evaluating a Fund. Benchmark Holdings indicates the overlap between the portfolio holdings and the benchmark set for the portfolio. The ‘active’ measure in the third column measures the percentage of the portfolio, as position weight, that differs from the benchmark index. It is a metric quantifying the level of active management within a portfolio. While this metric might not give a whole lot to an investor, investors allocating to investments with a higher portion of ‘active’ holdings typically expect a differentiated return profile relative to a passive or a benchmark-driven portfolio. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free

COMMENT

Through 2022, the S&P couldn't break the ceiling of resistance during several peaks. However, last January 23, the S&P did break that ceiling and stayed above that for six straight sessions. It broke that negative pattern. Secondly, the VIX. Last year, whenever the S&P hit a new low, the VIX peaked at a lower level. Meanwhile, every lower high for the S&P saw a lower low for the VIX. Bottom line: last October's bottom may not hold and if the S&P breaks below its 200-day moving average, the market could return to that October bottom or fall lower. And that's when you buy--it's the bottom. The market is reaching a crucial time this week.

COMMENT

The narrative for the office market is negative with announcements of layoffs especially in the tech sector. This comes at a time when new construction continues, creating an increasing supply but demand is decreasing due to less space being needed. Warehouse space however is not overbuilt and in fact the industrial warehouse sector is phenomenal on a fundamental basis with a 98/99% occupancy rate. Asking rents are increasing by a lot: 37% in Montreal to 70% in Toronto. More and more space is needed to meet new trends. The theme of on-shoring is coming to North America and will lead to even more demand for industrial warehouse space.

COMMENT

The question was on new apartment construction. With higher construction costs and development charges you need 4 to 5 dollars per square foot in rent justify new construction. This is not affordable for many so is only for higher end customers. However we need more affordable housing to solve the housing crisis. We have draconian rent controls but on turnover there is vacancy de-control.

COMMENT

The caller from Vancouver was looking for ethical REIT's as he was concerned about sky high rents in that area.. The basic response was that Canadian apartment REIT's are doing a great job by doing their best to provide affordable living space for Canadians. Boardwalk for example self-imposes rent increases in Alberta where there no rent controls. There are many other examples of REIT's that provide safe, affordable places to rent along with transparency. They are good ESG companies. Go to their websites to find out more.

COMMENT

High inflation is coming down as expected, which means central banks will slow interest rate hikes. He remains fully invested. Keep your cool and stay the course. Markets have climbed 15% since the October bottom. Stay defensive. He expects a mild, not dramatic, economic slowdown; consumer spending remains strong. High-yielding utilities and telcos got hammered late last year, but their dividends are very attractive now (though this won't last), so it's a good time to own these.

COMMENT

Very optimistic for energy investors in 2023. Expecting $100 oil in near term future. Two major headwinds gone: 1) China pandemic ending 2) SPR releases have passed. China re-opening will unlock ~1MM bbls oil a day of demand. Supply is still not growing at material rate. Return of capital to shareholders limited further investment.

COMMENT

Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research. Representativeness Bias. The representativeness bias is a misconception that future patterns will resemble past ones. An investor may identify an investment as being good or bad based on its most recent price performance. This is why increases and decreases in share prices can often become overextended. If the price of a stock continues to climb higher, then investors may feel that this pattern will persist into the future, and this drives the price up further. Vice versa when stock prices decrease, as investors may feel that they will only continue to fall further. This cognitive bias helps us to explain our general belief that the sign of a top in price is when investors feel that the stock can only go up and the price decreasing is not a possibility, and the sign of a bottom is when investors feel that the price can only decrease further, and no mentions of a rebound are in sight. These types of behaviours occurred at the bottom of the stock market in 2008 and 2020, as investors sought lower prices and were using the most recent performance as an indicator for the future. Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free

Showing 1,141 to 1,155 of 18,631 entries