Two months ago, who would've thought we'd be at record highs for the TSX, with the S&P up ~20%, NASDAQ up ~28%? The S&P has rebounded nicely, a little more in fact than the TSX since those April lows. The S&P has had a really great run, and trying to reach those all-time highs again (we're 2% away) is a bit tougher. Compare that to the TSX, which has lagged the last couple of years.
He is moving a little out of the US and TSX, simply because he sees valuation discounts outside NA. So he's looking at European and international markets. An uncertain US dollar helps those markets in terms of investment. Falling interest rates outside NA also helps.
He doesn't look for particular countries or regions, he's more company-specific.
Geopolitical risk is always there under the surface. The thing is, Iran doesn't have many friends. Both Assad and Hussein are gone, Hezbollah has been smashed, and Hamas is under ongoing attack. So geopolitically, doesn't think there's a huge risk here. The US is pretty dominant in this area.
Trying to predict Trump is like trying to use a Ouija board. You just don't know, and he sometimes wonders if Trump really knows. In markets like this, it's very important that investors know what they're going to do. He often says that he doesn't know what markets are going to do, but he knows what he's going to do in different types of markets. You need to have a strategy if the market drops 5%, for example. For him, he ignores it. At 10%, he starts paying attention. At 15%, he starts adding back in. At 20%, he adds another 5%.
Look at your asset allocation risk tolerance (and understand what it means), and make sure you have good-quality assets. If markets decline, you can be reasonably confident they'll come back and it gives you a great opportunity to buy more.
The last thing you want to be doing is buying into a market that's at its highs for fear of missing out. The other bad thing is panicking and selling when markets are down. It's the old buy high, sell low; exactly the opposite of what you want.
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Certainly that's part of it. That's part of a secular trend that's going to continue for technology.
But what really happens is that there's only so much money to go around. So when large-cap stocks, and tech stocks in general, are taking a lot of capital in, that takes money from other areas of the market. We're seeing that with valuation depression in a lot of the small-cap names.
So if that rotation happens a bit (think big pension funds and institutional managers), capital is going to start shifting away from the larger-cap stocks into some of these more depressed areas of the market. When you get these dramatic moves in the market, it usually marks a shift change. Compared to the S&P 500 and the NASDAQ, the Russell 2000 is seeing the greatest outperformance since the 1980s.
Even more encouragingly, we're clearly in an environment of loosening financial conditions. We saw this with the Bank of Canada yesterday, and we're seeing it with central banks around the world. If you look at when small caps started to underperform, it was when interest rates started to go up. So interest rate certainty is very important to this subset of the market, because they have more variable debt and more debt on their balance sheets.