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Stockchase Insights A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Sep 29, 2023

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

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COMMENT
Weakness in metals.

Has to do, probably accurately, with a perceived weakness in the global economy. In addition, we're seeing weakness in the energy complex despite continuing fears about conflict in the Middle East. So people are afraid of an economic slowdown sometime in the future.

COMMENT
Energy.

Here, you're seeing a real-time slowdown. Weak prices for oil and gas, despite conflict in the Middle East, says an awful lot about the state of demand.

COMMENT
July 9 trade deadline.
Yes, could compress prices even more. Tariffs are taxes. In the US and Canada, we are overtaxed. Tariffs also make trade more difficult, but trade makes us richer. Doesn't think Trump actually knows what he's going to do, which makes it difficult to forecast. 

His hope is that this is mostly posturing. Trump makes outrageous demands so that he has a very strong position to retreat from. That's the best we can hope for.

COMMENT
Gold.

He's watching the "big, beautiful bill", which is big, but it's certainly not beautiful. The arithmetic around the USD is very bad for the US, and very good for gold. On-balance sheet liabilities of the US are about $36T, which is dwarfed by the off-balance sheet ones exceeding $100T. And those numbers are growing. The only way to honour these debts is to reduce the purchasing power of the US dollar, much like in the decade of the 1970s.

Note that he thinks the USD will do OK relative to other currencies. But in absolute terms, the spending power of the USD falls. This budget bill is a classic example of Republican and Democratic log-rolling (there isn't a constituency in Washington for reducing spending; there's only a constituency for advancing the interests of one's own district). Things are going to get worse. This is bad for the economy and its citizens, but good for gold.

Tax cuts without any reduction in spending basically amounts to fraud.

COMMENT
Silver -- will it close the gap?

In his experience, silver is a late mover in a precious metals bull market. Happens when the generalist investor is attracted by the momentum in gold and comes into the precious metals market, and leadership generally changes from gold to silver. He'd expect that to occur because we're in a very endurable precious metals bull market.

It might not happen for a year or two, but you won't need him to tell you when it's occurred. Silver is extremely volatile to the upside when its time comes.

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

Two Types of Behavioral Biases: Cognitive and Emotional

To simplify the classifications, a cognitive error can be defined as an information processing error (statistical and/or memory). It is often the result of faulty reasoning. Many times an investor will "think" they are using a rational process in their decision making but fail due to these errors. Conversely, emotional biases are much harder to correct because they stem from impulse and/or intuition. Often an investor needs to first recognize these issues, then find a way to minimize the effects. 
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COMMENT
US employment still strong despite tariffs.

She doesn't find the numbers as strong as posted once you start reading through them. There are conflicting job reports. Yesterday's ADP number showed job losses. Today's report beat expectations, but expectations have come down. Looking on a YTD basis, the number of new jobs created is about half what it was for the same time period in 2023. 

Details of today's report are not very optimistic. Outside of healthcare, not many industries are hiring. A lot of the jobs are government, whether municipal or state. Government jobs are the least productive in terms of economic productivity.

COMMENT
Rest of 2025.

Her firm is being a bit more careful, positioning conservatively. This past quarter has seen exceptional market growth. But when it comes to the underlying economic data, that's been mixed or weak. When it comes to the disconnect between the market and the economy, it seems to have widened. Then you add in more uncertainty with geopolitical tensions and tariffs. 

There are a lot of things to look out for, yet the market keeps making record highs. They see that, and they're a little bit concerned.

COMMENT
Why the market disconnect?

There are a lot of reasons why, and she doesn't have the one answer. Perhaps bad economic news makes investors think there's going to be a rate cut. After today's US job numbers, a rate cut likely won't happen this summer. We haven't really had a real recession since 2008-2009. Investors have gotten used to the idea that whenever there's any economic weakness, either central banks or governments will swoop in to save the day. 

But with debt levels continuing to rise, there's a limit to how much governments can spend to support the economy. There are signs that the economy is slowing, so it's better to be cautious. Given risks in the market and current valuations, unlikely that markets will continue to post record highs in the second half of this year.

COMMENT
TFSA -- better to DRIP, or to take the cash and buy other dividend stocks?

What she does for clients is to take the dividend in cash. The DRIP is not a bad thing for accumulating stocks, but her firm likes to have a bit more control. Dividends come in, and they get to choose where to deploy them. This way gives you more flexibility.

For example, she owns AEM which has done very, very well. Instead of "dripping" in more shares at the elevated level, she'd rather put the dividends to work in something that's underperformed, is at a lower valuation, or has a higher yield.

Since she's a little nervous about the markets, she's taking dividends and putting them into money market funds as she waits for a market pullback.