Today, Alexander MacDonald commented about whether TEL, ZTS, DLTR, SHOP.TO, MRK, LLY, GE, MFC.TO, AAPL, ABT, NFI.TO, ARE.TO, WSP.TO, ACM, CNQ.TO, MEG.TO, FTS.TO, MDLZ, GOOG, RTX, CP.TO, CNR.TO, CAR.UN.TO, REI.UN.TO, BRK.B, CSU.TO, MG.TO, UBER, MTL.TO, NA.TO, CGX.TO, CVS are stocks to buy or sell.
A year or so ago, everybody was debating hard vs. soft landing. As we moved through last year, the Fed really couldn't have asked for much more, keeping rates up and having inflation slowly come down. US unemployment is still incredibly low by historical standards.
Now, employment is still strong, and inflation is still stubbornly hanging in up there. Calls are for fewer than 2 rate cuts through 2024. Whereas in 2023, expectations were for 4 or more cuts.
Interest rates are like a tide that pulls equity valuations down. Fewer rate cuts will impact equity valuations going forward. Some concern in early April, when market valuations pulled back, as the market anticipated fewer rate cuts for this year. Luckily, earnings season is now 80% done in the US. Earnings growth is very strong, hasn't been this good in about 2 years. YOY earnings growth up about 5%, revenue growth up 4%. Investors are starting to look more to the fundamentals, the underlying growth of companies. Economic growth is still hanging in pretty well.
Next week on May 15, US numbers come out for CPI. That's going to be a big indication of whether those 2 rate cuts that are priced in will happen by year's end or not, and that will impact equity valuations.
Has done very well. Benefited more than others from capital markets business, as opposed to traditional lending/deposit business. Capital markets results can be lumpy and tough to forecast. Hard to argue with its growth. International exposure in Cambodia, mostly in Quebec. He prefers a more national footprint.
As for a stock split, not something he focuses on. Whether your pizza is cut into 4 pieces or 8, it's still the same amount of pizza.