Stockchase Opinions

Bob Stodgell A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Feb 07, 2008

Canadian Banks: If he had to pick one right now, Royal (RY-T), Toronto Dominion (TD-T) and Bank of Nova Scotia (BNS-T) are ones he would look at. An interesting way to see what the market thinks of them is to look at the dividend yield. It is very attractive in that you get the dividend tax credit and the equivalent yield of 20-30 year Canada bonds.
It's the ideal tool to help you make quicker, more informed decisions for managing and tracking your investments.

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COMMENT
Market outlook continues rosy.

We've had a fantastic run since the tariff tantrum back in March/April. Conditions still support further upside.

One of those is that we're expecting further rate cuts in the US, and likely one in Canada this month. As well, AI is still leading the group, but you have to be selective because things are getting a bit pricey. 

And then we have very strong seasonality tailwinds behind us at this point. Q4 for the last 10 years has averaged about a 5.3% return, and it's been positive 9 of those 10 years. Finally, look at all the cash on the sidelines in the US -- about $7.3T. With interest rates coming down, some of that cash might move into equities and other risk assets including bonds.

COMMENT
Interest rate moves.

Right now, markets are forecasting at least 2 rate cuts in the US being highly likely. Then we'll have to see what comes through in the data.

COMMENT
$7.3T of dry powder on the sidelines.

A record amount. Not all of that will shift into equities and corporate bonds, but he's suggesting that at least some of it will as interest rates start to fall. Of course, some of that cash is meant to be there as proper allocation in a portfolio.

COMMENT
Favourite sectors.

Financials and technology. Likes healthcare for its combination of defense and growth. Some areas of healthcare have not performed well, such as big pharma. Whereas names in logistics and distribution have done well. So you need to be selective.

Pharma at this point is a bit of a value play. But with rates coming down, growth continues to be more of a favourite area. In a falling interest rate environment, growth tends to outperform.

COMMENT
Markets down on Trump's threat to hike tariffs on China.

As a technician he expected this, but you never know what's going to trigger it. It was sort of pre-ordained with the setup through August and September, and then we usually get a low in early October and one late October. Today, the driver is an announcement from a politician.

Thinks this correction will be well bid. So on any weakness, whatever the source (an announcement, bad economic news, geopolitical event), investors are probably going to step back in. Just as in April, the market will probably absorb this and move on, knowing that we're in a period of expected weakness anyway.

We'll need to wait a few more weeks, but we'll probably go through this quickly.

COMMENT
Is the market getting used to these shock announcements?

Technicals are very binary and clinical. So the setup is always there, but you don't know what the story is behind them. Trump is a bit of a wild card. But the underlying strength in the market (such as shown by the jobs numbers) means that investors are ready to buy on any weakness.

COMMENT
Job numbers vs. interest rates.

We've seen this a lot more with the Fed, where they're between a rock and a hard place. It was the last central bank to cut rates. The reason they dragged their feet, unlike Canada (which was on of the first of the G7 to lower rates), was concern that underlying strength of the US economy could come back to bite them.

In Canada, we may be less apt to lower if we see jobs continue to do well and GDP pick back up. If GDP starts to have some upward momentum, it'll put both central banks in a bit of a fix and we may not get those lower rates.

COMMENT
Gold.

Looks good as a longer-term play, but it can be quite volatile. His team is now looking at positions and, for those that have done really well, deciding which ones to clip a bit to bring the position size back in line. Yesterday's pattern suggests further weakness to come, but it's not guaranteed.

COMMENT
Gold.

Seeing a shorter-term reversal, where all the action of one day is encompassed by the next day's action. Yesterday it moved higher, but closed lower. Gold's up today because of the down market. No connection between safety and gold; biggest connection to gold is the USD.

While he may lighten up on the US dollar, he's not going to the ruble or the yuan. Chart on the USD starting to move up, and that's going to put some pressure on gold. Might see some people selling their gold and going back to the USD.

If you're gold's done well, maybe you clip some profits. But thematically, looks good long term. It's a balance of short term vs. long term.