Markets. Investors in the last few years have focused on the Federal Reserve and what it was going to do, but things have changed, probably starting last spring when Ben Bernkie announced he intended to taper and the market reacted so violently he decided to take a little bit of that back. Although they did start to taper in December, it is going to be very, very slow. We have now entered a period where the economy is going to start to stand on its own 2 feet. Some inflationary pressures are going to start to enter the market and we will start to see that affect the types of companies that will do well. This is not a roaring economy, it is a soft economy, but the feds action has worked. Some complacency will naturally be built into the market in certain parts and corrections are a solution to complacency. Corrections are normal.
Markets. We are in the midst of a Santa Clause rally. The January effect involves small cap moving. Usually the stocks that are the most beat up at the end of December have rebounded by mid-January as a group. The biggest trend he saw last year was the activist investors bullying companies to buy back their own shares. He is not encouraged by it.
Investment Resolutions:
#1: Trade less and in a more strategic manor. Be focused and disciplines. Think with each trade.
#2. Pay off non-deductible debt as soon as you can, e.g. credit card debt, before investing.
#3. Generate an investment policy statement, 4-10 pages long, your mix, tolerance for risk, goals, etc.
#4. Don’t chase past returns. E.g. stock is up 50% so get into it.
#5. I will not attempt to time the market.
Investment Resolutions (Continued):
#6. Read at least 1 book on investing or planning.
#7. Be sure to understand both risks and returns before investing.
#8. I will review my statements regularly.
#9. Seriously consider replacing more expensive products with cheaper ones. E.g. replace a mutual fund with an ETF.
#10. Carefully consider the tax impact of investment decisions.
Educational Segment. Making your own Market Calls. 2014 will probably have a 5% gain and a lot of ups and downs. When you generate opinions based on weak information, you have difficulty changing that opinion. Thinks S&P will test 2000 and TSX gets up to 14,200 and stays there. The Shiller PE for the S&P is very high right now. We are pricing in a lot of good news.
Canadian Banks in General. Earnings outlooks show very little earnings gains (momentum). There is not a lot driving it. When markets are moving up, people look for what to buy and decide to buy banks. That is what is driving them, rather than strong fundamental momentum. As interest rates start to go up we will start to see some tail winds, just as in insurance stocks.