Historically, September tends to have some weaker seasonality. That said, we've seen some strong momentum going into September with 4 straight months of gains in the market. Earnings have been good. S&P 500 Q2 earnings were up 13% YOY, with 81% of companies beating estimates. Analysts see about 12% growth for 2026.
Add to that approximately $1T in stock buybacks in the US. Liquidity of $7.2T sitting in cash in the US. That's a lot of dry powder and could potentially be a powerful tailwind for equities, especially if we see an interest rate drop (90% chance of Fed cut later this month, 60% chance of BOC cut).
All that lays the groundwork for continued gains for equities. Still might see a bit of volatility in September, given that we've had a very strong 4 months.
Independence of central banks is important. That's why we've seen weakness in the US dollar relative to other currencies. That policy uncertainty has been something to consider in the US. But when you look at markets and the drive from technology and AI-themed stocks, the market continues to be strong.
Prefers it to gold right now. Especially the bullion, as you get away from problems with mines and management. In addition to its being a safe haven, you get the added benefit of industrial demand with EVs and electronics. Gold to silver price is about 85:1 right now, very extended and silver might have a recovery.
You have to look at what's happening in the US. The uncertainty on US policies weakens the US dollar, which helps gold prices move higher. Be cautious, as it's very "shiny" and popular right now. Looking back to 2011-2016, gold prices fell 42% over 52 months, and a similar drawdown in the 1990s. There's a risk with gold, same as with anything else. Don't get too overweight, as it can have volatility as well.
RSI is way off the charts here. To enter, wait for a pullback.
He's always optimistic, so the answer is yes. The economy looks OK. He did look at the jobs report. The forecast for Q3 in the US was 3%, and it'll probably still be close to that. Interesting thing is that with today's jobs report weaker than last time, who's Trump going to fire this time?
Good chance of a rate cut in the US, with or without jobs being weak. Trump's pushing hard for that. That should be positive for the market. Doesn't seem to be a recession in the wind, so we should have a reasonable stock market.
Canada's job reports have been pretty weak for a couple of sessions now. The economy is weaker than we hoped, and it's all tariff-related.
Widespread talk about that market being overpriced at 25x PE. If you pull out the Magnificent 7, the less-magnificent 493 are trading at 16.6x PE and that's not a lot. It's below the average of the last 20 years.
His team buys 25 stocks in the US, so he doesn't really care about the market per se except for the beta part of it. He looks for companies that are quite cheap, and he's found some.
He looks only at companies that are fundamentally sound, with businesses that will substantially increase in value over the next number of years. Looks for catalysts that aren't yet recognized in the stock price, so they're cheap on certain metrics. His team's view would be different than the consensus view.
That strategy works well over time, and it works well in slowdowns.
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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.