A Comment -- General Comments From an Expert (A Commentary)

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Markets. Oil is starting to base here. Going down to $40s is not something that fundamentals can explain. The markets move a lot of oil in futures contracts. There is a lot of shorts in oil and they are having to be covered. Supply has increased about 2 million barrels per day. We had some increased infrastructure completed in northern Iraq. Libya brought on about 2 million barrels per day of off line production. China is still absorbing new barrels of oil. Sanctions put on Russia have really slowed down activities, and slowed demand about 2 million barrels per day. All of this should have put oil into the $60s, but it went lower, so he knows eventually supply will be cut and the price will go back to the $60s. We’ve seen the bottom on many oil weighted stocks. Buy on down days and get back to a 15-20% range of holdings in oil.

BUY

Look for companies with no debt and good management. MPG-T and ELW-X are two examples. RMP-T and Sequence also screen well. Build a portfolio of these names mixed in with CNQ-T.

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Markets. Thinks the “Sell in May and go away” is not that far away. We have been in this bull market for quite a few years. Now is a good time to actually be doing a little bit of a portfolio cleanup. Over the next 4-6 weeks, if you have a $100,000 portfolio, look to take $10,000-$15,000 off the table and build a bit of cash. Thinks there will be opportunities to Buy bargains later on in the year. Look at your portfolio for your most economically sensitive or cyclical stocks and maybe lighten up a little bit there. Or look for your most expensive stocks in terms of valuations. Reduce your exposure and use seasonal strength of the market now, because once we get into it April-May, it will be too late to sell.

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US economy. The US$ has gone up about 25% to the average global currency, which is going to have a huge negative impact at some point on US growth. All US companies that export are going to be struggling to keep that growth going. Thinks there will be a big slowdown in the US economy in the 2nd half of the year. The 2nd issue is the Cdn$ versus the US$. His experience is that the Cdn$ tracks oil more than any other commodity. At $45-$50 oil does not go lower, so at $.80 to the US $1, we are close to a bottom. Feels the next move in the Cdn$ is from $.80 to $.90. For people that are hedging, because it is going to go to $.60, he thinks you are wasting your money.

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Energy. He doesn’t feel that oil will go below $45-$50. Feels the next move in oil is back to $60, $65 or $70.

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Markets. The amount of unnecessary worry is high. People worry about things that are opposite such as inflation and deflation. He narrows it down to corporate earnings and interest rates, both of which are positive factors. He thinks no one will care when interest rates go up. You might get some increase in volatility, however. We have good DGP and good corporate earnings. Companies cut costs during the crisis and improved their balance sheets. Dividend increases are coming at us very quickly. Corporate results are very positive. He likes mid cap companies without a lot of coverage. He trades no Canadian stocks so it conflict free.

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A regular dividend that gets increased on a regular basis is the most powerful dividend, rather than special dividends, which tell you the company just wants to get noticed or in which the management team wants to get paid more that year. You should also watch for smaller companies that initiate a dividend, which indicates confidence in the future.

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Markets. The drop in interest rates and bond yields has forced him to rethink how stocks should be valued. Maybe stocks should be valued more highly, simply because bond yields are so low. When he looks at things like banks, telcos, utilities, REITs and the pipelines, he is seeing yields that are now probably 5 or 6 times as high as the yield on 10 year Canada bonds. Doesn’t think this has ever happened before. Price to earnings ratios are possibly not the magic measuring stick that he had thought they were, and maybe he should be looking at cash flow yield and ROE as better measuring sticks. When he discounts those cash flows into the future, using a lower discount rate because interest rates are lower, he comes up with a higher value for those stocks. He thinks everybody is rethinking interest rates. He is seeing a rush to the bottom on rates globally. Central bankers are dropping rates in order to drop their currencies. In the most extreme case, you have Switzerland that now requires you to pay .3% to deposit money in Switzerland. They are trying to get the value of the Swiss franc down. He doesn’t know how the race to the bottom can be ended. He can see the Canadian 5 year bond rate staying below 1% for a couple of more years.

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Markets. Volatility can be a very good thing. Last year for the first 11 months, the VIX which measures volatility, didn’t move much and then went crazy in December. What he finds fascinating is how investors and media funds, when things are calm, worry because it is too calm, but when things are volatile they worry because things are too volatile. Volatility, especially for short-term traders, is a wonderful thing. It presents opportunities on the dips. He has been finding opportunities in the oil/gas patch. The key is to find companies with good balance sheets and low debt loads. In that industry, often when things are really good, they take on debt, but don’t prepare for the tough days ahead.

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Investing in the US? When he sees people fleeing to the US for safety, it is like going to a danger zone as compared to a very, very dangerous zone. There are major problems with this, but the US$ has gone up nicely, which means a lot of people think this is certainly a good place to be. He has invested a lot in the US in the past 5 years, and 75% of the portfolio he manages is in the US. He would like to have more in Canada, but is comfortable investing in stocks in the US. It can implode to some degree, but the question is, who are the companies.

COMMENT

Uranium. This is a good space to be in, but you have to be wary of some of the small companies that don’t have good revenues and balance sheets. Long-term, if you can find good companies in this sector that have good strong balance sheets and good strong plays, you should do well.

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Markets. There are 3 things driving the current market. 1.) The collapse of oil prices which has gone below what is economically sustainable over a longer period of time. 2.) The QE in the US which has ended which will ultimately lead to higher rates. 3.) Is the US economy strong enough to sustain the growth moving forward? Before this earnings season was announced, a lot of large caps in the US were telling us that it was going to be a great season, but what they ultimately forgot was that a lot of their earnings came from outside of the US, and we started to see the “earnings drag” hit because of the higher currencies. Thinks oil prices will ultimately move higher which will perhaps bring the Cdn$ back to a higher level.

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European ETF, hedged or unhedged? He would rather go unhedged, because currency is part of the diversification by investing internationally. In terms of picking ETF’s versus individual stocks, he favours going directly. Thinks you will find mainly large companies in the ETF’s, and wonders why you just wouldn’t go direct.

COMMENT

Markets. [Larry was late as he was caught in winter weather.]

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Do ETFs buy the actual stocks in them? When you put in a buy and there aren’t enough shares, they create them and have to buy the stocks contained. The reverse happens as well.

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