Should profits be taken on Canadian bank holdings and Buy back later in the year? Earnings season is coming up and it will be a fairly mediocre. They are struggling a little with the extended Canadian consumer and housing. Retail banks will have some modest growth of around 5%-7%. Capital markets wealth will be quite strong. Thinks banks will be steady earners as we go forward. Doesn’t see anything to upset the apple cart so would continue holding.
Markets. Has been about 25% invested in the US for quite a while and he is sticking with this. This is really where the growth is coming from. Recovery seems very real. Doesn’t see any horrific clouds on the horizon and this is where he wants to be, more so than anywhere else. There are opportunities in Europe, but we have to keep in mind the geopolitics that are going on vis-à-vis Mr. Putin. He is more concerned about the Canadian market. Still likes the Canadian banks and the Canadian oil, but there has been a hollowing out of manufacturing.
Generation of regular income using weekly options? His 1st recommendation would be not to do it. He doesn’t know anyone that is doing weekly options. Institutions do them on a monthly basis and he himself is doing them 4 to 6 months out. The problem you are going to have is that you have to deal with market makers and take a spread off of them. You also have transaction costs, etc.
Dividend harvesters. Usually the stock is in the money and it’s taken by the X date, but other stocks that have dividends don’t get taken. Why do people wait longer to exercise their options? Sometimes, as a trader, you get surprised that the option is not going to be exercised for a couple of months, and all of a sudden, somebody decides to exercise it. That can be because of dividend harvesting. You always have to make sure on these things that when you get to expiry dates, a lot of people, when they see that the option date and expiry date are very close to each other, but not likely to match up; can get surprised and find they have been exercised. He always closes out his position and doesn’t care about the extra transaction costs.
Bonds versus Bond ETFs? Most people are not buying bonds because there is a certain lack of transparency. If you are a bond investor and have $100,000 you want to put in bonds, and that $15,000-$16,000 per bond you are going to be paying 25 to 50 basis points to buy that. You can buy a bond ETF for 15 basis points and it is professionally managed. He would be much more inclined to use ETFs.
Keeps a significant amount of US$ and Cdn$ in cash because he writes naked puts. Have used iShares 1-5 YR Ladder Corp Bond (CBO-T) & iShares S&P/TSX Preferred (CPD-T) in the past but now concerned about rising interest rates. The laddered bond portfolio has premium bonds embedded in it. It only has 5 bonds in each of 5 years giving it 25 bonds in total. To get the kind of yield they are getting off it, it is really showing 3%-4% and the only reason they’re getting these kinds of yields is because they have some bonds that they paid a premium price for and there is a capital loss built in. He got rid of almost all of his and switched into the iShares DEX Short Term Bond (XSB-T).
Favourite REIT ETF that pays increasing dividends for the long-term? There is iShares S&P/TSX Capped REIT (XRE-T), BMO Equal Weight REITs Index (ZRE-T) and the Vanguard FTSE Cdn Capped REIT (VRE-T), which probably has lower fees. Really what you have to look at is how much you like RioCan (REI.UN-T) and how much of it you want.
Markets. Good news on the US on the jobs front, but the 10 year bond says we are spooked. The market has been spooked for a while. The Ukraine, Europe (debt to GDP ratio). And today, for some reason no one is buying. The Euro is an issue but not a major one. 10 year treasuries being flat is more a case the Fed taking money out of the system. Interest rates in the short term will be pretty well contained. The fed wants a controlled, sustained recovery with steady interest rates. Credit quality becomes an issue as you move down the credit quality spectrum. Triple ‘C’ credit spreads have traded from 500 to 3500 and are at 550 so are as tight as they have ever been. You can see how expensive they have been and how expensive they are now. They are not cheap. Thinks we are at risk of an interest rate spike. You should be selling triple ‘C’ for something with a better risk adjusted return such as triple ‘B’. This is the spot where you can earn a reasonable return with a reasonable risk. This should be comfortable for 12 months.
Preferred Shares vs. Bonds in Rising Interest Rates: Both have interest rate exposure. Use inflation protected funds that protect against rising interest rates. Preferreds are equities, but sold to investors like they are bonds. If they go into default you don’t get any money back. Bonds give you most of your money back. Preferreds have call features that are to the advantage of the corporation. If preferred and common have the same yield, then go with the equity. Perpetual fixed for life have the most impact from interest rates.
Economy. Cautiously optimistic on the global economy. Looking for global growth of somewhere in the vicinity of 3.6%-3.8%, largely led from US, UK along with the euro zone doing a little better. Offsetting this he sees China slowing somewhat. Backdrop to this is that the US fiscal situation is better and the fiscal drag in 2013 was somewhere at about $300 billion-$325 billion, between 0.6% and 0.9% of GDP. We can automatically get that lift back in 2014 and if US growth was running at about 2% in 2013, he expects it will be about 2.6%-3% in 2014. Also, corporate America is in a better frame of mind. Corporate America, CapX and hiring are going to be stronger and as well, consumers are in a better frame of mind and government spending, particularly at the state and local level, are going to be a bit of a tailwind.