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

COMMENT
Canadian banks. Banking industry is in very good shape in this country. This is not 2008 or 2020. Great dividend yield, trading at reasonable book value. Trouble is that increases in net interest income are being offset by investment banking and such that are doing poorly. All these segments will come back. Longer term, will do well. Tend to over-reserve going into a difficult period, which is what they're doing now with the slowing economy and housing fears. When things turn out not as bad as they thought, the reserves come back into earnings. Lots of capital to increase dividends or buy back shares. Banks are about 33% of the TSX, so when people sell the index, they have to sell the banks. This creates volatility, especially in this bear market, and the share price can drop. Don't forget, bank shares had a great run already.
COMMENT
Healthcare stocks. The way the market is, owning healthcare is safer than owning other things. Very defensive. He owns JNJ and NVO, but any of these companies will be fine. Big issue is blockbuster drugs can make them look like growth companies. Look at pipeline, drugs coming off patent, and what is area of specialty?
COMMENT
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research. The Importance of Cash in an Investment Portfolio. A diversified portfolio typically includes a cash component to it, and this cash holding provides an investor with liquidity and convenience. Traditional portfolio theory suggests that investors should carry some static percentage of their portfolio in cash to act as a diversifier against volatility in one’s portfolio, for liquidity purposes to add to one’s existing bond or equity positions, or fund new purchases. While cash in a savings account, bonds, GICs, and others, have usually offered lower yields than the returns that can be found in the stock market, the benefit that the liquidity and stability cash offers can sometimes outweigh the benefit from the higher returns that stocks offer.
COMMENT
It's perfectly fine to be in cash. After the bell, Nike will release earnings and maybe that will signal the future of earnings. We'll probably see the cascade in earnings.
COMMENT
Will Canadian banks raise dividends in 2023? 2023 will be challenging. Don't expect big increases in dividends next year. However, on average you get a 4.7x dividend, the PEs are cheap and the banks are always a good investment, perhaps at lower levels.
COMMENT
A top pick 1-year GIC. You can get 5%, perhaps more. Nobody is certain about the economy. If there's a recession in 2023, it'll likely be mild. Don't buy a GIC for all your portfolio, but good to buy for a TFSA or RRSP.
COMMENT
Defensively positioned in this macro environment. For a tech portfolio, it means he's fully invested on the stock portfolio. On the hedge, he's running about 70%, which is overweight. Best part of the hedge is that you can throttle it up or down pretty quickly. This morning, he took it down from 70% to 63%. Market seems to be getting its legs back, but it's a bit of a game of poker out there right now between market players on one hand and the Fed and central banks on the other.
COMMENT
His hedge positioned, explained. It's a short position on equity indices via the futures. But once he gets above 50%, he starts using put options on those equity indices.
COMMENT
Segments of tech to be in. Underweight semis and software. Overweight communications and hardware. Overweight fintech. Semis have had a difficult year, but it takes a long time for that to rotate around. In the portfolio, he has 29 stocks, and his team knows the intrinsic value of them.
COMMENT
How to reconcile the disconnect between what the market's predicting economically, rates from the central banks, what the Fed is messaging, the Fed's amplifying modest rake hikes, and Powell's hawkish rhetoric? Fed can control the short end, but they try to extend it out to the longer end and it worked. But the fixed income players didn't believe it. He's expecting to raise rates, inflation's going to stay higher through 2023, they're gong to maintain their tight approach. Fixed income players are calling his bluff, expecting to see easing in the second half of 2023.
COMMENT
Layoffs at a number of tech players. They have to look to the bottom line and try to understand what earnings are going to look like in 2023. It's all about profitability. Certainly on the software side, they're very leveraged, and so they have to be prudent. We saw hiring freezes going into the middle of this year, and then layoffs with Q3 and Q4
COMMENT
Short-term bonds. The tail that wags the dog. Fixed income guys are acknowledged to be the smartest ones in the barn. They're really trying to call the bluff on the central banks. Trying to extend their short-term impact on interest rates out through the curve. Though it worked for a few days, he doesn't think it will last very long. 10-year treasury was up at 4.2% only 2.5 months ago, and now it's back to 3.6%. Listen to the bond market as to what the economy's going to look like next year, and then extrapolate it and remember that the stock market's supposed to be a barometer of what the economy will look like in 6-9 months. That's why he's chomping at the bit to take that hedge off. When he takes that hedge off, this market is going to absolutely rip.
COMMENT
Believes US Fed will keep interest rates higher for longer. Markets are not pricing for a recession given current stock prices. Paying close attention to US Federal Reserve the next few months. Probably of a recession is higher given markets reaction to US Federal Reserve. Waiting to see upcoming earnings results to determine accurate pricing of stocks.
COMMENT
Educational Segment. Probability of recession next year high if US Fed keeps interest rates higher for longer. When looking at corporate earnings, market is not pricing for recession. Warning that tough times are ahead, and "bottom up analysts" have "no clue" what they are talking about. Not a good time to invest in energy. 10 Trillion dollars in debt refinancing coming due in the next 10 years (higher interest rates will make this very difficult). Dark clouds over the economy.
COMMENT
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research. Bonds vs. Dividend Stocks. Bonds have seen dormant popularity over the past decade and with rising rates, bonds are becoming even less attractive. This is largely due to unattractive coupon rates relative to savings accounts. Rising rates mean plummeting bond prices. While the bond market has different and distinct characteristics compared to the stock market, the level of potential upside is also limited compared to equities. In addition, comparing compounded effects of dividends and equities with bonds pre-emptively ends the debate.
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