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

BUY

ETF for monthly income. PDF-T, FIE-T, HPR-T and ZMI-T are pretty solid and secure with monthly distribution.

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Educational Segment. Tomorrow is the anniversary of his sleep at night portfolio and the BMO Tactical Dividend ETF fund. The portfolio, composed of ETFs, is diversified and starts with a low beta core and high yield. You need to get incremental returns for every increase in beta you assume. The Sleep at night portfolio:

Ticker

Yield (%)

Beta

ZHY-T

6.33

0.32

ZPR-T

4.39

0.11

ZDV-T

4.22

0.55

ZUE-T

1.61

0.87

ZDM-T

2.26

1.02

ZEM-T

1.98

0.62

ZWU-T

5.62

0.43

ZRE-T

4.93

0.34

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Markets. Markets have had a pretty good run for 3 or 4 years. When it fell 300 points recently, people were asking “What happened?”. It’s nice to see that sense of caution creeping into the marketplace. Part of it is well-founded because the stronger economic numbers we are seeing along, with the improvement in the labour force in the US is giving investors pause to think as to how low interest rates will stay, and how much longer. At the same time we are continuing to see reasonably good economic numbers and positive earnings announcements. We are in that happy balance, but it is harder to find bargains. There are storm clouds on the horizon. Expect volatility for a little bit. There is a lot of margin debt in the system. There are signs of increasing speculation, not so much in the equity markets, but what equity investors should be keeping an eye on is what happens in the credit markets. Recently there have been more and more finance companies selling sophisticated packaged loan portfolios to unsuspecting sheep. Brokers are making a lot of money doing it. That got us into problems in the 1st place.

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Bonds. This is the biggest market in the world along with the currency market. If you want to look for trouble, it always appears in these 2 markets first. Doesn’t feel the stock market is in a bubble. Central banks are trying to encourage risk taking. We are confiscating money from savers and subsidizing borrowers. We are trying to re-inflate a new era of economic activity, fuelled by more and more debt. We seem to be in one of those situations where we are pushing on a string. Regardless of how low interest rates are, people just don’t want to borrow money.

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Markets. Thinks we are going to get a correction, but he is anticipating it will be more of a sideways consolidation phase. There is so much cash on the sidelines that every time these stocks tried to pull back, there is a wall of buyers that say “I could use a 3.5% or a 4% dividend” and you see cash coming into these big blue-chip stocks. At every opportunity they try to pull back, they meet with a wall of buyers, and the market sort of flips up a little bit, but doesn’t go anywhere. Feels the fundamentals support the pricing that we are seeing in that sideways pattern. Earnings in the last few weeks have been pretty well right on with what people were expecting. The longer trends are still pretty solid. We haven’t broken down through any of the major indices in the market. Oil stocks, because they have had such a big move, might go back a little more than the rest.

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Markets. He is a little concerned with rising interest rates. There is a little bit of concern with corporate debt, which is getting pretty high. In the environment we are in, where the Fed is trying to unwind QE, and maybe start increasing interest rates by next year, they’re getting more defensive because there is a bit of a disconnect. Debt levels really haven’t gone down since 2008. His concern is that 2008 was about debt, and we really haven’t solved the problem. We just transferred the problem from the balance sheet of the Corporation to the taxpayer, so not everybody is going to have to pay the cost. The US dollar is the global monetary currency reserve of the world, and a shift is occurring.

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REITs. Interest rate sensitive, but they’ve been able to roll over their own debt at remarkably low levels. His main investment stance is stagflation and inflation with no growth. From that perspective he does think REITs, on a long-term basis, offer pretty good returns in that they are inflationary hedges. However, we might see a dip first before we see a rise. He wants the income that they are paying, but not necessarily the full hit to the equity first, so he has been reducing his exposure to the REITs. Hasn’t been selling them because he still wants the income.

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Gold. He always looks at this as a currency hedge, as the ultimate insurance for what is actually taking place. Because of this, he feels this has to be part of a core of a portfolio. He is looking at companies that are producing it below the current cost of production.

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Canadian Banks. Will these be affected if there is another major crash by international banks? Thinks that after 2008, the banks will make it. They did what they needed to do to save the banking system. They created a bigger problem, but they saved the system. Because of this, he is not overweight on the banks. Thinks the storm is coming out of the US, and because of that there are a number of uncertainties. If you own a lot of banks, put a lot of stop losses in place.

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Markets. Not really thinking about the trade war with Russia. He is not exposed to companies that will be exposed to the Russian trade war. He is at his lowest net exposure to the market in three years. He is cautious right now. If a correction comes, foreign investors will get out of the more liquid names. He is seeing buying opportunities in the long and short side.

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Shorting Banks. BMO-T or CM-T. He would not hold one bank and short another without a very compelling reason. He doesn’t own any banks except as part of a pairs trade where BMO-T is short and Guardian (GCG.A-T) is long.

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Golds. History has shown that gold stocks are stocks, so as stocks decline, gold stocks will decline as well. Looking into the intermediate longer-term, it will be a function of why a correction occurred in the broad market. If a correction occurs in the broad market as a consequence of market nervousness about the euro or the dollar, that could theoretically be very good for gold. Conversely if there is a global liquidity crunch, it would probably be bad for all asset classes. With the situation in the Ukraine, sabre rattling has generally been good for gold. Gold can tend to act as catastrophe insurance. As an American, he juxtaposes gold against what he calls anti-gold, which is the US 10 year treasury. Thinks the US treasury has had a spectacular run. Believes the underlying premise of the U.S. Treasury, paying 2.7%, in a world where it feels like purchasing power is depreciating at 5% compounded, suggests that the promise behind the U.S. Treasury is that they will take 2.3% of his wealth, guaranteed every year, for 10 years. Looking at this, he feels that gold is very cheap, or conversely that the US 10 year treasury, i.e. the US$, is very expensive.

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Ring of Fire. Are any of the companies in this area in North Western Ontario of interest? They are. He hasn’t played the game yet because the exit of Cliffs as a consequence of their exit strategy, means that the area is going to be under funded for 1-1.5 years. He will be very interested in that area, but it is probably a year too early.

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Prospect Generators. With this, you are investing in process. You are buying a portfolio of them because you are going to participate in discoveries. Statistically it is the best chance to participate in a discovery. Which name is going to work? He doesn’t know. When is it going to work? He doesn’t know. What he does know is that if you have a group of 5 to 7 Prospect Generators, you will participate in a large discovery. The probabilities of that are better than any other probabilities in exploration financing in Canada or any other country.

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Uranium. Expect you will have to be in the uranium business for 1.5 or 2 years to begin to see real dramatic increases in the spot and term market. Uranium equities are beginning to anticipate that so there has been strength in the uranium equities outpacing the strength in the uranium market.

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