Oil. Trading right around the low end of where it should be. The range in the course of the year will be $92-$105. Key for improving prices in oil and all commodities is global growth resuming. In general, resource stocks are challenged, commodity prices are challenged and there are a handful of commodities that look attractive presently, with oil probably being one of them.
Metals. Tin is primarily used as a solder. There has been a very strong uptake in the shipments of electronics, out of Asia in particular, and as well you have the major producing regions rolling over so supply is very tight. Tin is even tighter than copper. There is an ETF on the London exchange, but other than that he can’t think of any pure plays in tin.
Markets. The positive action earlier this week and last week, was really about short covering. On a broad basis, it looks like the indexes are in a Topping phase. Year-over-year the markets have probably had their best run but selectively there are still some great parts to be invested in such as healthcare, biotech, pharma and consumer staples.
Markets. Thinks there will be a lot of headwinds. He was bullish but now he is tempering. He doesn’t know what is going to cause markets to move higher. Bad news with timed deadlines, it never materializes and never causes any grief. The debt ceiling is not worth worrying about.
Stop Losses: Putting it on a white board doesn’t work because you think twice when it is triggered. When setting it you have to look at charts. You can’t just use a percentage. The objective is to keep moving the stop higher as the stock goes up. He is in the dividend camp. It is all about dividend payers and growers.
Markets. He has felt over the last little while that there would be a slight pullback and so increased his cash position to about 7% and also added Government of Canada Bonds. This is a shorter term thing and an opportunity to buy stocks that he likes cheaper (5-7%). He is bullish otherwise. US economy is healing itself and Europe is stabilizing. The ECB has put a line in the sand and that has really helped out. The world is looking slightly better. The world can grow at 2-3% and we can chug along. Companies are in great shape from a balance sheet perspective and can increase dividends. You can own really great companies at reasonable prices and they pay you a nice yield.
Oil. Expects share prices to rise through 2013. In the 1st half of this year there are going to be some very volatile differentials for both WTI to the Brent benchmark, (increasingly being viewed as the global standard for oil prices) and between heavy oils and WTI. A lot of issues to do with congestion and pipelines are going to pick up some of the slack followed by a narrowing of differentials. If nothing else changes, the cash flow profile should get better for companies going into 2014 and feels the shares will rise accordingly. A big piece of the puzzle is going to be the increasing tendency of producers to use rail.
Oil/Gas Services. Feels services companies thematically are going to do quite well. Have been some misses but feels there is reason to be optimistic on activity levels in Western Canada and it will be going up in years to come, particularly with a lot of joint venture dollars and the M&A that has happened in the space.
Markets. It’s a funny market. Seems to rush in one direction and then another. Some days he can’t figure out why it’s doing what it is doing. Canada lags the US because our big areas, commodities, are under pressure. There are still more questions to be asked about the mining stocks. Gold had a little flip but whether it has bottomed or not is a question. People are fed up with their mining stocks. How do we get a reasonable price on our oil? Most of our fixed income stocks such as pipelines, utilities and other yielding stocks were doing okay.
Markets. A lot of commentators say the market is still cheap based on S&P maybe earning $105 and trading around $1500. That’s not outrageous but that is on peak margins. Historically net profit margins are in the 6% range and we are nearly double that now. If margins were to revert back to a historical mean, or what you typically get over a full cycle, then you would be looking at a very expensive stock market.
GOLD. Risk in the near-term is whether or not the US decides to pull the plug on QE 3 or scale it back. Relatively positive on the sector and it is so oversold and sentiment in the gold sector is so negative relative to such positive sentiment on equities in general. Going forward he feels gold will outperform broader equity markets. When underlying stocks tend to outperform the commodity, i.e. gold takes another leg down but underlying equities don’t fall, this will be his signal to get much longer. When this happens, this company will probably be his favourite vehicle to do so because it has such tremendous growth profile.
China. He is bearish on the global recession recovery in China. There has been a nice bounce in the sector but thinks it is going to be pretty short lived. The secular move within China, from an export driven economy to a domestic driven economy, is still the big push there. Demand for commodities out of China has flat lined and will continue to be so.
Markets. Nobody wants these stocks. It is a very tough environment. Budgets are tight. He is seeing some acquisitions but the biggest issue is that investors are just not buying.