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

COMMENT
Gold. Poised to glitter. If we can get a breakout above 1960 (the major resistance level), he suggests there's upside potential to around 2600. Over the last 2 months, he's been recommending exposure to gold equities. One of his top 5 ideas for this year is gold/platinum. 20-year chart shows why he's quite constructive here in setting up for a push higher.
COMMENT
Emerging markets exposure. China has had a big correction, definitely a laggard. There's a change in the world, and there's real potential that China and Asia sit out part of this next cycle in that they'll be underperformers. You'd be better to get exposure to Argentina (ARGT) or Mexico (EWW). FXI is trying to put in a longer term low, China's under pressure. People are hoping for a sharp move up, but he sees more of a choppy, sideways trading range for China and Chinese equities.
COMMENT
NASDAQ prospects. Will likely see at least another 10% downside for the NASDAQ. AAPL is a good example, as it's downside level is roughly another 10% away. Fed talk is that rates are going to be higher for longer. A lot of people are focused on the longer term chart being up and to the right, where you can buy the dip and immediately see another leg higher. Very strong likelihood that a lot of these growth names are going to be locked in a trading range. It had a peak and then a correction. A lot of the growth area remains under pressure.
COMMENT
USD. Had a big move, mainly due to risk off. Then there was a pullback to a support level. In the next couple of months when the Fed is likely to pause, what's likely to happen is a soft, choppy sideways trading range for the bulk of 2023.
COMMENT
Dividend stocks and the new cycle. Doesn't expect returns in the new economic cycle to be out of this world. A big portion of that return will be in dividends. Having a good portion of your portfolio in dividend stocks will give you the bulk of that return, but will also cushion the impact if markets remain under pressure.
COMMENT
Uranium prices. If we're seeing signs of a bigger commodity cycle taking hold, then we're likely in the early stages and could have more upside. He's highlighting gold, platinum, copper miners, and steel. All fit the theme of a breakout that pushes higher.
COMMENT
Consumer discretionary and the new cycle. First phase of a new cycle should be positive for consumer discretionary names like automakers. Markets always look ahead by 6-9 months. So an uptrend shows it's already anticipating that consumers are becoming more positive and are starting to buy the things they held off on through all of 2022.
COMMENT
Interest rates coming down? Maybe late summer or fall of 2023, or the start of 2024. Markets are going to anticipate an end to this hiking cycle well before that, and are going to price in a recovery as well. So if, in the spring, the market prices in the end of Fed hiking, it actually means the Fed's going to stop hiking in the fall. Watch for when the markets start to take off.
COMMENT
When to sell? As we work through the market cycle model, look for 2 things. First, where are we in the cycle? Second, sector performance. If you see industrials start to underperform on a relative basis, that would be the clue that it's time to start easing off that sector. Same as we're seeing in energy right now.
COMMENT
Outlook for 2023. Remember the movie Men in Black, where they wipe the year clean? That's what he hopes will happen with the market as well, where you start the year on a fresh note. There are a lot of positives. For short-term investors, you can now buy a GIC at 5% for 1 year. The last time that happened, he had a full head of hair. Cash is paying 4% in high-interest savings. Short-term bonds have 5% yields. Dividend payers are now offering 4-5-6%. Some of the world's greatest businesses were marked down 30-40-50% in 2022. Let's focus on the opportunities for 2023. If you're a longer-term focused investor, the setup for 2023 looks pretty good.
COMMENT
Inflation. The sad thing was that the fundamentals in 2022 were great. We got punished because of rising interest rates, not because of bad fundamental data from corporate profits or dividend increases. The natural inclination is, that if we're heading into a slowdown or recession for 2023, won't the stock market be lousy? The market was already lousy in 2022 when we had good results, so maybe in 2023 when we have not so good results, the stock market will anticipate the recovery that will eventually happen. Hopefully, future problems have already been priced in to the stock market today.
COMMENT
Interest rates. No one knows whether rates are going to stay high. We've had the fastest rate hikes we've ever seen. If things worsen, and they can worsen pretty quickly, they'll be cutting rates by the end of 2023. Inflation is dead, it's peaked, it's over. You can see this when you look at hard goods and commodities. The last holdouts are rents and healthcare services, but these will start to roll over. He expects a pause very shortly, and then probably rate cuts at the end of 2023. If the message for 2022 was don't fight the Fed, the message for 2023 will be don't fight the Fed on the way down as they start to pivot and start to prop up the economy. That doesn't mean stocks will do badly, in fact just the opposite.
COMMENT
Bloomberg Commodity Index peaked in early June at 136, but is now barely above 100. Tells you that the worldwide economy is slowing down materially. Not slowing down as much as the stock market wants, as jobs are still very sticky. Job openings in the US are still dramatically higher. No matter what country you go to, there are still too many jobs to be filled. It will just take some time for interest rates and some of the weakness to filter in. We need bad news for the stock market to go up, but be careful what you wish for.
COMMENT
EV future in North America. In NA, the EV infrastructure is not ready for prime time. We're decades and decades behind. US and Canada are such huge countries with so many rural areas, it won't happen for a long time.
COMMENT
Canadian banks. Mixed bag on results. TD fabulous. RY pretty good, and then it surprised the market with the HSBC acquisition. CM and BNS horrible. NA so-so, but affected by a 1-time issue. Stick with the ones that continue to knock it out of the park -- TD, RY, and NA. He owns these 3, and is happy to continue buying. He doesn't foresee a really bad recession in Canada in 2023. Immigration will offset a lot of the housing issues, interest rates will start to come down later this year. Ontario is still a wealthy economy. Banks can offset a lot of their mortgages. They do have exposure, but it's not as huge as you think. Live and die with wealth management and investment banking operations, so they need the economy to improve.
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