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Stockchase Insights A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Jun 26, 2024

Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research

Performance of S&P 500 vs. TSX:

The impressive performance of the US market

Here is the performance in terms of compounded annual growth rate (CAGR) of the S&P 500 within different time horizons with dividends reinvested:

3-year: 10.2%

5-year: 14.9%

10-year: 12.8%

On the other hand, here is the performance of the TSX index in the same time frame:

3-year: 5.7%

5-year: 9.0%

10-year: 7.1%

The outperformance of the S&P 500 relative to the TSX on three, five and ten-year horizons is quite significant. The S&P 500 performance was predominantly driven by a few large technology companies. These companies have performed so well in the last decade and will likely continue in the near term.

This question of whether investors should ignore the Canadian market becomes a totally legitimate question.

We think investors can think about portfolio allocation in terms of defensive and offensive sectors. The US market which is heavily dominated by large technology names tends to do much better in a bull market.

On the other hand, the Canadian market is heavily dominated by well-established companies in traditional industries like financials and energy. These sectors tend to not perform as well in a rising market but would be resilient during a market downturn due to their durable cash flow and predictable dividends. Similar to the cash allocation of the portfolio, which tends to be a drag on performance during a bull market. The defensive portion of the portfolio sometimes feels unnecessary until the next bear market.
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COMMENT
Past 6 weeks in ETFs.

These past 6 weeks remind him of a quote from Lenin: "There are decades when nothing happens, and then weeks when decades happen." Between tariff announcements and then reversals, and sudden intraday shocks and moves in the stock market and in currencies, it's been an extremely volatile time. It's very cloudy and confusing. His ETF research desk has been inundated with questions.

COMMENT
Sector for safety.

On the whole, he's not seeing the market retrench entirely out of equities. Money flows are split almost evenly between fixed income and equities. 2024 was a year of bull markets all the way, a record year for ETF flows both in Canada and in the US, driven mainly by demand for the Mag 7 and the S&P 500. 

There's still a lingering desire and wish for those growth stocks to continue driving as the engine for the economy. But we're starting to see branches of flows moving into low volatility equities and certain aspects of fixed income, as well as buffers and other strategies for capital preservation.

COMMENT
The appeal of ETFs.

They're highly efficient, giving you incredibly diversified exposure to sometimes thousands of stocks all at once. Enormous liquidity. Market makers stand ready throughout the day to execute huge orders. Primary and favoured vehicle for large institutions that want to turn over billions of dollars on a dime. 

Incredibly low fees and very tight spreads benefit investors as a whole. Smaller investors can piggyback onto this world-class institutional liquidity built around the ETF ecosystem. People who've just sold their stocks often move into ETFs so that they can maintain some type of market exposure.

COMMENT
Canada's job numbers.

Definitely could get worse. We're seeing the early effects of a once in a thousand years president of the US and all its repercussions. 

If you look at Q1 numbers for US companies and what they were projecting for the second half of the year, auto companies all pulled guidance. Same thing with the airlines. Other companies, while not pulling guidance, have said it's really murky for the second half. 

COMMENT
Tariffs.

We're slowly seeing the US walk back on all the extreme reciprocal tariffs that they announced on "liberation day". Now we're getting discussions with other countries such as the UK and China. That leaves about 193 countries to go. A long road, but going in the right direction.

From here we should, hopefully, see some stability in the markets.

COMMENT
Outlook for 2025.

Critical thing is going to be what the impact is for the consumer. There's going to be a pass-through of tariffs, and it depends on who bears the brunt -- manufacturer, importer, or consumer. Inflation's going to be coming through. Layoffs may tick up.

Then it's up to the Fed whether to tolerate the inflation as a one-off, or to focus on labour, when it decides whether to guide down or not. Jerome Powell really differentiates between his role and that of the government; he sees it as his job to ensure full employment with inflation around 2%. He's not anticipating, but is waiting for hard data, and it's difficult with tariffs in flux. To lower rates now would be putting fuel on the fire, exactly what you don't want.

COMMENT
Investing strategy in these uncertain times.

People will change their stripes as they get affected by different things. Current US president is blowing everything up from defunding research to challenging universities. 

His firm hasn't changed its approach. They look at everything from a bottom-up perspective. They have target prices on all stocks in a concentrated portfolio of 32-33 names. They also have target position sizes; if a stock drops, the team debates whether to buy it up to a full position. The macro is changing; but their method remains consistent, and that's served them well through current and past crises.

Upcoming mid-term elections plus lawsuits challenging tariffs should work in investors' favour. We have to hope that rules will fall into place and we can all move forward. 

COMMENT

Headlines will have a minimal impact, because it takes YEARS to negotiate a trade deal. Trump will reduce tariffs on China to 80%--still high. And America dealing with 10% tariffs: that's still a big deal because our economy was still slowing. Don't buy false comfort ahead of the trade talks. Near term, we're okay, but he expects a recession ahead.

COMMENT
Trevor Rose’s Insights - Trevor’s most-liked answers from 5i Research

The problem calling recessions: All data are backward-looking

To call a recession, economists need to look at the data they have in hand. Sure, data points such as consumer confidence are more leading indicators, but all the actual data that economists use tend to be in the past. With recessions and with investments, past performance is no guarantee of the future. The impact of backward-looking data tend to drive a “bad news is good news” mentality at times. Essentially, when all the news is bad it can be a very good time for investors to start buying. That’s because, simply, when you are at the bottom there is nowhere to go but up. When the data are so bad and sentiment is so horrible any good news can have an amplified positive impact. This of course is hard to call, but it is important to remember that once a recession is officially called, it is often already over.
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