REITS are undervalued and under pressure. Acquisitions are being put on hold. Economics is based on who has cash, room on their credit line and debt maturity in the near term.
Lodging REITS are cutting their distribution and having a hard time.
The largest REITS are usually retail oriented. The smaller, high end retail companies are the ones that are going under.
The confidence in the US government and market is low. It is tough for market to go up as people are not investing. Thinks the market will continue to be volatile and recommends picking up opportunities as they arise. Believes the market has hit bottom. Buy on down days. 2009 will be the year for investors.
High Quality Corporate Bonds: Corporate bond spreads have increased so nicely that there is an opportunity to take advantage of quality companies paying attractive yields. Leave equities until the market starts to recover
Global Agriculture: Long-term theme continues to be in place. There is a need for food globally. Expects that commodity prices will increase if the US$ falls off. Agricultural commodities will benefit.
Real Return Bonds: Have been eviscerated over the last several months because “real return” is your return after inflation. Inflation expectations were high 6 to 9 months ago but have fallen off a cliff since deflation became a possibility. High-quality corporate bonds will give you a better return.
Correction by BNN. Dec 8/08 program. Ben Cheng on Dec 8/08 recommended Yellow Pages Preferreds (YPG.PR.A-T) showing a 20% yield. The yield is closer to 6%. His figure includes the company paying $25 a share at the retraction date in 2012. To get that yield, you must hold the security to that maturity.
US$: Oil price is going to be a factor in moving the dollar and he expects oil will be moving up. When this happens, the US$ will start to decouple from oil and will start trading with the US economy. If so, he expects more money will flow in to buy the dollar.
Options: Agreements that give holders the right to Buy or Sell a specified number of shares at a predetermined price. They are bought and sold like shares. The perfect form of a stock portfolio hedge.
US Market: US$ has rallied mostly because everyone globally is having problems. It is not a flight to quality but a flight to confidence. If he were a Canadian, he would be a little nervous investing in the US knowing that when the bottom drops out, the US dollar is probably going to get hurt significantly against the Cdn$. You can hedge the dollar by using currency options. (Philadelphia Stock Exchange.)
Greek Variables: (A group of statistical references that are spit out by the pricing option model.) Very important as they tell you the option sensitivities to time, stock movement and volatility movement that your option has. They identify all the potential risks of your option as well as quantifying them.
Banks: Expects to see banks rebound by 20% to 30% going into the first half of next year when it becomes clear that the financial system has stabilized. Around the middle part of next year, you will probably do better with most of the reflation stocks such as golds and oils. Prefers Bank of Montréal (BMO-T) and Royal (RY-T). CIBC (CM-T) is of the least interest to him.
Economy: US will stabilize its economic environment but will only grow at 1.5X real GDP growth. Inflation will be very low, probably close to 0 or 0.5. Emerging economies will be pushing very hard to accelerate their growth.