Market Outlook It seems to have been a "melt up" over the last month and a half. The catalyst has to be the liquidity infusion by the Fed, putting in $60 billion per month since early October. He is expecting a little pullback before the end of November, maybe 3-6%. The liquidity infusion will get more media attention and should lead into continued growth into the first-half of next year. Autonomous driving is expected to grow to over $170 billion by 2030. It includes many different elements including automakers, semiconductors and communications, software and shared mobility services. He predicts it will be within 10 years that totally autonomous vehicles will be all around us.
Tech pullback soon? There does not seem to be a huge opportunity to purchase on pullbacks in the tech space right now as there is just so much money sloshing around -- share buybacks, Fed liquidity infusion, etc.
Disney popped today on strong subscription numbers to its streaming service and markets are at all-time highs. As profits rise, so do stocks. Nothing to fret about. Seasonality favours November and especially December in the US and Canada. He takes a long-term view. 24 of the last 30 Decembers have been positive for the TSX. Overwhelmingly positive, unlike last year. We're in the thick of Q3 reports in Canada; the U.S. is almost done. Valuations here are below the 10-year low. He's seeing a rotation from growth stocks to value/cyclical. The impeachment hearings in the U.S. are much ado about nothing; the Republican-dominated Senate will block an impeachment.
Hopes of a phase one trade deal and tariff rollback are fuelling the S&P's all-time highs today. The market says the growth outlook has improved and the yield has steepened. Growth is slowing and we're late in the cycle, though she doesn't see a recession. The US consumer is the main driver there; job numbers are healthy. And interest rates are declining which also boosts markets. Whatever trade deal is announced won't be all-encompassing and talks will continue. A pullback is possible, though not highly likely, but there's always uncertainty about what Trump will say or do. She looks at Canadian income and foreign growth stocks. Don't chase any stocks now.
It's the 9th inning for the markets with a rotation into stocks. Trump may or may not be impeached, with perhaps a blunted impact. A US-China trade deal appears likely before the end of the year. Brexit has been kicked down the road. The markets have had a great run, but there remains a lot of cash on the sidelines. After tax-loss selling, he expects some buying back in of stocks that have done well. It won't be a flat-out Santa Claus Rally, and investors will be happy if levels remain this high. But volatility is gone. Economic data will be crucial. If Hong Kong became Tiennamen Square, there will be a very negative reaction in markets and trade talks. January may see some selling and volatility.
Will we see a repeat of the sharp December 2018 pullback? Possibly, but unlikely. There'd have to be a combination of forces that spook the market, like the trade deal, Brexit, etc. If there was a pullback, it would be weaker than Dec. 2018. He expects a calm Christmas.
Where to park cash when out of the market. He would want to put his money in a US$ money market strategy. Note that the markets could keep going up for 2 or 3 years.
Educational Segment. He thinks interest rates will continue to go lower. When we get to a recession, the best asset class to own is longer term fixed income – the US treasury market. He thinks the US 10 year will go to yielding close to zero during the next recession so owning it now will be a good investment. There is so much debt in the world that we can't see interest rates going up because we can't afford it.
Market. He is watching the American NAHB Housing Market Index. Global PMI numbers were contracting for 6 months in a row yet the home building numbers are at 20 month highs. You rarely have a recession when the home building industry is doing well. Lumber prices are picking up. Consumer spending south of the boarder is at a 6 year low but optimism is at a 19 year high. This is a conflict. The federal reserve is cutting rates and yet the unemployment rates are at 50 year lows. There are plummeting bond yield. Investors should take a shallow recession into account.
Gold. How to preserve wealth in times of high inflation when you can't buy bullion in your registered account. Stocks in general are a hedge against inflation. The best stocks are companies that have exposure to hard assets. BAM.A-T is an example.
If you want to work with a financial planner, you have to do some work like looking at your finances in greater detail and not missing anything....For six months, he expects markets to do well till the end of the year. But we're in the middle of the longest-running bull market and stocks are expensive. He's worried. He doubts that stocks will rise much from here nor for much longer.
How often are the holdings in active ETFs rebalanced? Are they cheaper than a mutual fund? It depends on the ETF manager and the nature of the fund, like whether it's a covered call one. Read the ETF prospectus to see how often they re-balance. ETFs are cheaper than mutual funds. However, ask whether you need an actively managed ETF or not. Is it worth the extra money? Usually not.
Where to put cash? He's fully invested, but look at mutual funds and ETFs, like Dynamic Funds'. Also look at ZST.L, which he'll talk about later. Even put cash in a high-interest daily interest savings account, but you'll be lucky to get more than 2%.
Is creating a trust better than directly transferring wealth to children? A trust is good if there's a lot of money/assets to be safely and carefully moved to children. Also, a trust will ensure that children are not irresponsible with their inherited money because an adult is watching over that money, and ensures that the wealth is dispersed according to the deceased's wishes.