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Andrew Pink A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Apr 30, 2025

Canada's February GDP contracted.

The Canadian story is that our economy is running a bit slow. That's to be expected with the impact of tariffs and the trade war that's developing. Our economy is fragile, and interest rates have been high. It's all weighed on GDP.

Sets the stage for additional interest rate cuts as the BOC assesses the economy and what's best for it going forward. 

It's the ideal tool to help you make quicker, more informed decisions for managing and tracking your investments.

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COMMENT

It's election day. Investors want a change. The last 10 years have not seen the most investor-friendly government. Given tariffs, people realize we need to invest in our economy, companies spending ahead on capex and sourcing resource development and industry expansion. It's nice to talk about interprovincial trade barriers, but each province is its own jurisdiction (i.e. doctors). However, they could remove the red tape in resource development.

COMMENT
Retiree seeking returns without the risk of stocks.

Invest in money market ETFs or high-interest savings accounts paying yields of 3.5% or higher. ETFs

COMMENT

The Canadian election results were not surprising, given the polls, so the TSX isn't reacting much today. Trump will announce changes to car tariffs today: well, Trump changes everyday and he puts little faith in what Trump says. His bark is bigger than his bite--he will keep backtracking, because business leader, bond traders and former business partners will keep pushing back. No one but his own administration agrees with this trade war. He's done lasting damage to relationships and economies, but mostly to the US itself. He's created animosity towards the US with his hostile words and tariff threats, and other countries have retaliated with tariffs, boycotting US products, cancelling travel plans while big investors are selling US stocks and bonds. It's immeasurable the damage he's caused on the US as a global leader in politics, economics and the social sphere. Former allies are already seeking other trading partners. You can't trust anything Trump says. Canada: A Liberal minority is good, because it will force the Liberals to come much closer to the centre and find unity with all Canada and void polarisation that has hurt America. All Canadian parties and provinces will work together to strengthen Canada, like removing interprovincial barriers and approve projects faster. We have the right man to head the country (Carney) with his experience--the right guy at the right time, and Canada voted for the person, not the party.

COMMENT
Long-term trade war?

He's preparing for an "anything can happen" environment. A medium- to long-term trade war is definitely in the cards as a possibility. A number of nations might agree to the US terms just to protect their economies. There will be some that will hold out.

It's a coin toss here, and there's no doubt that it'll affect the global economy. GDP numbers in the US came in a little bit light. It may be largely because companies and individuals imported a lot more than they produced in Q1, just to get ahead of tariffs. There's been a lot of disruption out there.

His firm has definitely gotten defensive. July 1 will be another big day for Trump to unveil what he's going to do with the counter-tariff measures.

COMMENT
Pivoting due to Canadian election?

No, not due to the Canadian election. The fact that it's done is probably a good thing for Canada, the economy, and international investment in Canada. All the drama that preceded and surrounded the election created great uncertainty, and markets just don't like uncertainty.

This minority government might be a good thing, perhaps some of the Conservative agenda items will get through. So all in, we got a decent result and added some stability to Canada that we desperately needed.

COMMENT
Preferred shares -- when rates go down.

With rates going down, you could consider a fixed-rate preferred. He's been buying POW.PR.D, yielding about 6.1%. Beauty of it is that it doesn't reset, it's perpetual. So if the BOC moves rates lower, these preferred shares won't reset to a lower level. Gets more valuable as the BOC lowers interest rates.

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Preferred shares with largest yield in perpetuity.

You'd be buying a fixed-rate preferred share. Those with the highest yields are definitely not the banks. You could try POW.PR.D, for example. With the non-banks, the credit quality is going to be lower that what a Canadian bank would be. You can search online for a table listing the comparable yields.

You have to be careful with the lower-quality issuers. Don't want to get caught offside, especially if this is your retirement money. The dividend yield you get is tax-advantaged if outside a registered plan. But remember that there's price volatility. If prices come off, prices will shoot up but won't benefit you much because your investment amount is going to go down. These are not like bonds that keep their stable price; instead, they fluctuate in value.

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Technical analysis by Larry Williams

It's time for the USD to rally. Currently, it is very undervalued while gold has been rallying and the economy has been declining. The disparity between USD and gold is historically extreme. Also, look at the chart for commercial hedgers: the last time they went extremely long was in early 2021, which led to a sharp USD rally in 2022. Hedgers are extreme now, which suggests a USD rebound ahead. Thirdly, sentiment by analysts and newsletter writers is very bearish. Also, Williams' cycle forecast indicates a dominant cycle tends to last 32-35 weeks, and it's time for the USD to roar from now into September.

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

Increased withholding taxes

There is a new bill proposed in the U.S. government that would increase withholding taxes on U.S. investments to Canadian investors. If passed, the proposed legislation would add five percentage points to the withholding tax rate each year for four years on certain types of U.S. income to Canadians. The bill appears to be in response to Canada’s digital services tax imposed on large U.S. technology companies last year. While the bill does not have a great chance of being passed (we hope), just the fact that the U.S. is contemplating such moves at a time when capital is already fleeing the country is quite ridiculous. Valuations in other markets remain cheaper than in the U.S., and if taxes to international investors increase there is even more incentive for investors to move money out of the country. Countries are supposed to attract capital for growth, not push it away. This is Economics 101.
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