Stockchase Opinions

Jeff Parent B. Eng. FCSI CIM A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Jun 20, 2025

Investor sentiment.

Lots of pessimism. Beyond the markets, people are pessimistic because of what's going on in the US. People are thinking about how they don't want to go south of the border for travel. Investors are surprised to learn that their portfolios are more or less where they were at the beginning of the year. They're aware of the decline, but not of the rally.

It's interesting to see how market's have recovered. He's a bit surprised to see that last month was a very strong month, driven mainly by a lot of the tech names we see at the top of the S&P 500. 

Markets have done well, but a big decision point coming. We're now at a big resistance point. If we can break above that, we should continue on for the rest of the year.

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

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COMMENT
Q2 earnings.

They're fascinating. You look at some of the reports that have come out, and from an analysts' perspective they're good. But the stocks aren't necessarily behaving that way. Are earnings going to continue the upward momentum? We've already seen Q2 numbers almost halved in terms of growth from what they were at the beginning of the quarter. Now the question is what will 2025 look like and, more importantly, 2026?

We have a little more clarity on tariffs, but the clouds haven't cleared yet. We don't know what those numbers are going to be, and neither do the companies. So he's watching for indications that companies are giving on how they're dealing with the tariffs they think are coming down the road. Those are the numbers that are going to be the most important.

COMMENT
Will Q2 guidance be more solid than the shaky guidance from Q1?

He and his team spend a lot of time talking to companies. What he's hearing is that there's a better sense that the painful, original, "liberation day" tariffs won't be there. They've had a better chance to respond in terms of diversifying supply chains as well as adjusting prices. The market wants to have it all done in the snap of your fingers, but it all takes time. 

COMMENT
Weakening USD and fading appeal of US stocks.

It's really a general discomfort with the US. It has been king, with the king dollar, and the US market has been 75% of global markets. Everyone talks about NVDA. Well, NVDA is bigger than most markets around the world with the exception of Japan.

If the bloom comes off the rose, the money will rotate. It's not that the US will be abandoned in total, but money will continue to flow to Europe on one side of the pond and Japan on the other. The notion of the US being the only place to be is falling off.

COMMENT
Investing in Canadian energy.

Size makes a difference. It's tough as you go down in market cap because different well experiences can have different implications. The most important thing to him is what do you like in terms of oil vs. gas vs. drillers. He likes gas. He owns VET, PEY, and TOU. He also looks for value, getting these names at a reasonable price.

Long term, he thinks gas prices are going up, particularly in Canada. The opening up of the pipeline to the West Coast brings next year's forecast for the differential down quite a bit. Canadian producers now have a second market in addition to the US. That's a catalyst to the Canadian gas names that you aren't going to find in other NA or global names.

COMMENT
Getting more natural gas to foreign markets.

Hallelujah! It's taken way too long. It's our best asset in addition to water. Best part about getting gas to market is that these pipelines will open up Asia, and maybe even Europe. The last prime minister rejected us selling our gas, but this is what we do well. We have to support this. The revenues that come from it support it. Great time to be in the gas patch, and it's good for Canada.

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

Five Signs Of A Good Financing:

Investors should generally dislike companies that issue stock because it's better if they are self-financing and don't need to dilute their shareholder base.

However, companies do need to grow, and financing is one of the prime reasons the stock market exists in the first place. Rather than dismiss all financings, here are five points to consider in determining whether one is good or bad.

A new share issue should be priced higher than the prior one

This seems so basic, but stocks are supposed to go up. When a company issues stock at a lower price than its previous issues, it just makes us mad.

No increase in the deal size

Companies should take what they need in a financing and nothing more. Enterprise thought it wanted to raise $12-million. What suddenly changed to dictate that it now needed $24-million?

Insider participation

We like to see insiders buy new shares alongside other investors. If we are going to recommend a stock, we want management committing their personal funds as well.

No sweeteners

We just cringe whenever we see warrants or other sweeteners attached to a financing. Issuing such attachments is, to us, akin to a bribe to potential shareholders. “You don’t want just common shares of our company? How about we throw in half a warrant as well?”

Warrants bring out a different type of buyer, typically hedge funds that short the stock against the warrant, or shorter-term players looking for a leveraged pop from the warrant.

We also don’t like most convertible debentures, because they include the obligation to pay interest. We prefer that a company issue regular, plain old vanilla common shares. Nothing fancy: straight equity with no commitments.

A clearly defined use of cash

It always makes us wonder when a company raises money for ‘general corporate purposes,’ and not in a good way. We know that the line is often just thrown out as a tag in a press release, but a company should know exactly what it wants to do with its new cash.

Many companies raise cash as a cushion, which is fine, but too much cash can be a drag on the returns a company makes.

It's preferable if a company issues stock for something specific, say, bridging an acquisition with debt. Shareholders then know where the proceeds of the issue are going, and do not have to hope that the company does something smart with their money.
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COMMENT
Monthly Bear-o-meter.

It's really a risk/reward assessment, not a market-timing tool to buy "now" or sell "now". It tells you your relative tradeoff. He looks at 11 factors, some are trend and some are value, such as sentiment and breadth. Each factor gets a score and the Bear-o-meter registers from 0-8. 

0 means run for the hills, very risky on a relative basis. And 8 means back up the truck. We're at about 3 right now, which is OK but not wonderful. It's been pretty much there all year so far.

Note that this tool looks at the S&P 500, not at the TSX. All 11 factors are based on US markets.

COMMENT
Markets.

S&P is up ~7% so far this year, rather a mediocre year. Really good for the TSX.

The Bear-o-meter hasn't been saying run for the hills, but it has been choppy. There's certainly the potential for continued volatility. We'll have to keep an eye on it.

August, September, and October typically show higher VIX levels (higher volatility) than at any other time of the year. So you want stocks with lower beta.

COMMENT
Most telling indicator.

There's something call smart money/dumb money, which is data on stuff like insider or institutional buys/sells and commercial hedging. Big institutions hedge if they feel there's more risk. He gets data on all that.

If smart money (the more sophisticated investor) is less bullish and retail money is more bullish, that's generally a bad sign. If the Warren Buffetts of the world are selling, and Joe Schmoe is buying, that usually indicates not as good a risk/reward.

COMMENT
Natural gas.

His big theory in the market is that hard assets are coming into a big cycle. Likes natural gas more than oil. Government in Canada is very encouraging on nat gas. European markets are very strong for nat gas. 

Nat gas is making a nice bottom; higher highs and higher lows, has broken out from the base. Quite bullish on nat gas as a longer-term theme, and it should translate to the producers over time (with some lag). If you hold gas over the next year or so, it should play into that longer-term cycle.

Typically the commodity will lead the producer, because the market wants to see if the commodity move will add to profitability for the producers.