Stockchase Opinions

Ian R. Campbell A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert A Commentary COMMENT Sep 17, 2008

Are you thinking 'between the lines' about the current U.S. Financial Industry Turmoil? I made the following points (among others) in posts I made to StockResearchPortalBlog.com last Saturday morning (before the Lehman Brothers demise) and yesterday morning. I am repeating them in this e-mail for your consideration. 1. Each day (and virtually each hour) new negative U.S. based financial events are reported. 2. These events are occurring immediately before the U.S. Presidential election, in circumstances where one would think the current U.S. Government would exercise a 'postponement strategy' until after November 4 if they had any option to do that. 3. Critically important decisions are being taken in very short time spans, which is contrary to the way things should work. 4. "Until U.S. housing prices stabilize and U.S. Consumer confidence grows, I worry 'Canada's favourite neighbour' will simply go from (major financial) problem to problem". I made this comment on Saturday before Alan Greenspan stated this same thing in a Sunday television interview. 5. The U.S. Government, frankly to my surprise, did not support Lehman Brothers.ie 6. Bank of America announced Monday it is buying Merrill Lynch, with various prices being publicly stated - one of which suggests a price that is a 70% premium to last Friday's stock price close. This is being done in circumstances where rumor has it Merrill Lynch might otherwise have gone the way of Lehman Brothers. In the 'valuation world' I am familiar with, premium prices are not paid for distressed assets unless there is competitive bidding for them. So why the premium? Transactions often close following detailed due diligence at prices less than first offered. Could this be one of them? 7. The U.S. Federal Reserve apparently announced Monday it will expand access to credit for struggling financial companies - which to me seems indirectly to circumvent Henry Paulson's strong position made last Friday that the U.S. Government would not provide aid to Lehman. 8. 10 'Global Banks' apparently agreed Monday to buttress the U.S. Government's efforts by providing $70 billion in a new 'lending program'. Where does this money come from? Could it be as simple as a pass-through from the U.S. Government in circumstances where aid is given to a specific financial firm without the U.S. Government having to appear to be the benefactor? 9. Early Monday morning the Wall Street Journal reported that American International Group Inc., a major U.S. insurer whose shares dropped 31% last Friday, is seeking a $40 billion bridge loan from the Federal Reserve. The AIG circumstance has deteriorated since then with numerous reports and commentaries being made this morning. 10. It was reported on Monday that China's central bank, 'acting against a background of extreme stress in global financial markets', on Monday cut benchmark lending rates by 0.27% lowering the cost of one-year bank loans to 7.2% (effective September 17), and the 'reserve requirement' for all but China's 5 biggest banks by 1% (effective September 25). This to me is interesting evidence of the immediate 'ripple effect' U.S. financial system issues have, and will continue to have, on the global economy. All of these things, individually and particularly in combination, suggest to me the U.S. Financial System clearly is uncharted waters, and may well be on a collision course with an iceberg that is close at hand. Under any circumstance we are living in interesting times.
It's the ideal tool to help you make quicker, more informed decisions for managing and tracking your investments.

You might be interested:

COMMENT
September.

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.

COMMENT
Concerns about the Fed remaining independent.

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.

COMMENT
Technology, financials, healthcare.

He does like those areas, as well as industrials and communications. Other sectors are a bit too defensive at this juncture.

COMMENT
Silver.

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.

COMMENT
Gold prospects.

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. 

COMMENT
Optimistic on markets with potential rate cuts coming?

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.

COMMENT
Valuations in the US.

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.

COMMENT
Fundamental resilience.

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.

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

Why Investors Like Dividends: Dividends Get You Back to the Basics

In today’s high-speed investment environment, and with trading platforms that have used gamification features such as Robinhood Financial, it is surprising how many investors do not really know what they are buying. Many don’t even care, as long as it goes up, as evidenced by the meme-stock trades that pop up — and crash — every now and then. Dividends can help remind investors what they actually own: a portion, however small, of an actual operating company. Owning shares means you are an owner of a company. As an owner, you should be entitled to some of the profits, and this is exactly what dividends are. Knowing this, you might be inclined to keep your shares longer, if the company is doing well. It can help an investor ascertain the difference between company performance and stock performance, as we are sure you are aware that these two factors often diverge.
Unlock Premium - Try 5i Free