Last time we saw this was in March 2020, when everybody thought we were all going to die. Markets came back fairly quickly from that. This has a bit of a different feel to it.
We haven't had a proper bear market in NA since 2009. We've had 16 years of a bull market punctuated by some minimal corrections. So it could be that we're seeing the market turn over here, possibly heading for a bear market.
The Mag 7 have really been the ones leading the market downward. Those were the ones with the highest multiples and that have been lagging the market at least since the inauguration.
Other sectors are doing relatively well. With all the tariffs on retail products that are generally made in developing countries, it's surprising that dollar stores and COST are actually up today.
There are some good and proper times to panic, and he's not sure that today is one of them. Right now, he has a reasonable amount of cash (between 20-40%) in portfolios. If the tariffs had been less robust than feared, the markets would be on a tear the other way.
If you're adding to your portfolio on a regular basis, either by investing cash that's stored up or by regular contributions, these correction days are actually really helpful. These days provide excellent buying opportunities, even if markets go down further tomorrow.
For stocks that you'd always wanted to get in on, today's not a half bad day to start. If you have $10k to invest, invest $2k today. It'll be easier to make the next decision tomorrow if you started with a smaller one today. If the market goes down, at least you have $8k left; if the market goes up, thank goodness you started to buy.
Yes. They didn't stop paying dividends even during the 2008 financial crisis. Except for MFC, all financial services companies also kept their dividends. At the best of times, it's a severe, career-interrupting move to cancel a dividend. For a Canadian bank, it would be catastrophic.
Some are stronger than others. RY is the 800-pound gorilla that all the others are chasing. TD has had its issues in the US; but you'll notice it's up from the time US sanctions were imposed. All are resilient, a fiercely protected species.
The rollout was awful. The US administration talked about fair treatment, so he went and looked at existing tariffs on US goods into other nations, and they're astronomical. So he sort of gets it. Vietnam, for example, was slapped with a 45% tariff; well, they have a 90% tariff on US goods.
When you look at what the end game is, which is some version of free trade, the end goal is kind of noble. But the rollout was terrible. With the exception of food security, everything else is open to negotiation and that's what we'll get to eventually on free trade.
This doesn't feel as though it's going to break quickly, but we're in a time of cascading news such as China's response today. Every country has to start to negotiate.
There are a couple of different gauges out there, with 100 being total exuberance. Today we're at 4, exceptionally washed out. When things speed up like this, investors should slow down. If you're a short-term trader, and you wanted to short, you're too late. At the moment, you're probably better to look at where there's value right now than trying to protect anything.
He looks for things that pop up and grab his attention to say that we're getting close to a bottom. There is some speculation that the current situation is going to look like a "V" on the chart, because the macro picture is still decent.
The first thing he'd look at would be sentiment. You can look at the Fear & Greed Index, made up of 7 components. Right now we're at 4, and you can't go below 0, so we're getting there. You can also look at the put/call ratio. Look for things that are have suffered a bit but, overall, are working quite well on a day like today.
You're not going to time it perfectly, but these indicators tell you when it's time to start hunting.
Acting quite well. He's been picking some up, including a broad-sector one in the US. Rates coming down has certainly helped, as it makes housing more affordable. Lots of predictability in this sector and usually ( though not always) safer. Income you get from it tends to buffer against other issues.
It's also local, so tends not to be impacted as much by the macro. Though what we're seeing in the markets now is because everyone will be impacted, but having a more "domestic" look insulates you a bit.
Corporate bonds. With the ECB announcing that they would be buying bonds from countries such as Italy and Spain and also the US Fed with QE 3, he could say riskier assets have performed very well and obviously high-yield had a very good ride. Short-term, he is taking profit right now. His long-term view is that you want to capture the credit spread that companies are paying vesters (?). Generally, corporations have strong balance sheets, good cash flows and they don’t have short-term maturities.