Stockchase Opinions

Genevieve Roch-Decter A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Jun 19, 2018

Market. The Russell 2000 is breaking out to long-term highs. Canada’s Venture is also breaking out after a 3-year consolidation pattern. This is inconsistent with the idea of selling in May and going away. The underlying basis for growth in Canadian securities is from the cannabis industry. The first wave of growth came for domestic medicinal consumption, but now there is a growing international market and there are strong institutional investors.

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COMMENT
TSX momentum.

For the TSX, recent moves are probably not due to earnings. The tariffs were a bit of a wakeup call. The headlines are pretty scary, but things may not be as bad as they looked at first blush. When you really look into it, MUSCA is still in place and protects about 85-90% of the trade we do with the US. 

Canada also has agency to start looking at better trade relations with Europe and Asia. We started shipping our LNG. He's actually fairly bullish on Canada.

COMMENT
TSX momentum.

Believes momentum will continue. What's holding us back are Donald Trump's tariffs, which are very specific. About 90% of goods are moving across the border tariff-free under USMCA. It's a very complicated setup. 

On the other hand, our economy's been "liberated" by turning on a big gas and a big oil export facility on the West Coast. These have pumped a lot of $$ into the Canadian economy. Gold production with the price rising has also added a lot.

The pessimism around Trump's noise has flattened the housing market. But we are going to get rate cuts, which should hopefully rekindle that market. Bruce's wife is in real estate, and so he's had feedback that housing is starting to pick up a bit.

The TACO part of Trump is coming through, and people are starting to ignore Trump and just get on with their lives. The outlook looks very good.

Canada has lots of technology expertise, so we're well-equipped for the AI revolution and will benefit from that.

COMMENT
Sectors with a 50% tariff.

Steel's been hurt badly because we're not a global leader. But for aluminum, we're a low-cost producer providing a large share of the world's supply. So for that we can export to other markets, though not make as much $$ as we do when products criss-cross the US border.

COMMENT
Price of oil.

For Canadian energy, we're finally turning on exports to countries other than the US (who always paid us at a discount). So now that we'll get a better price, Canadian energy is probably in for a better run than the world is. Canada enabled Putin 20 years ago, because we wouldn't build pipelines and he did.

COMMENT
Canadian job numbers -- loss of 41k for July.

The unemployment rate remains the same. But the job-loss number isn't too surprising given that we are expecting a bit of softness in the Canadian economy in the middle 2 quarters of the year. Jobs market will continue to be a bit choppy, especially with the push and pull between part-time and full-time.

COMMENT
Sectors.

That Canadian manufacturing posted gains is surprising, but is probably just a result of the ebbs and flows of the economy. And there's the tariff issue affecting everything. 

In the US, technology makes sense. Financials also make a lot of sense in this environment. Likes industrials, they've been right at the top of the 11 sectors so far this year in terms of performance. Among the very diverse healthcare industries, you have to be selective; some names have been beaten up, others have held up quite well. 

He's being very selective in the Canadian market and somewhat cautious.

COMMENT
Latest earnings theme.

When you look at the US market, we're seeing about 8.5-9% YOY Q2 growth. That's more than expected. Good news. Technology continues to lead -- great reports from MSFT, NVDA, GOOG over the last month or so. About 81-82% of US companies so far this quarter have beaten earnings expectations. 

The word he'd use right now would be "resilient". 

COMMENT
Tariffs.

It's all very challenging. News that comes out one day on tariffs can change the next. His team goes back to their quantitative methods, using the formulas they have to forecast expected earnings based on the numbers they have.

COMMENT
Mag 7 favourites.

In his portfolio he has AMZN, AAPL, GOOG, and NVDA. Those are the names he favours. META screens well, but he doesn't own it because you can't have 90% of a portfolio in tech/Mag 7 names. MSFT always seems expensive.

TSLA is a different animal entirely, based on expensive valuation. Concerned about management and where management attention is at any given moment.

COMMENT
Price of oil.

Right now WTI is $64 and 200-day MA is slowly moving down. Hard to predict. So much depends on OPEC+. Sentiment around economy still a bit uncertain, and that explains why oil prices have not really pushed higher.