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Today, Ernest Wong, Head of Research, Baskin Wealth Management commented about whether WCN.TO, MSCI, SYK, CCO.TO, MRU.TO, TRI.TO, ARX.TO, CCA.TO, LEN, VRT, META, LYV, DPZ, NFLX, WSP.TO, JPM, TA.TO, FICO, NTR.TO, ABX.TO, EFN.TO, ADBE, CPX.TO are stocks to buy or sell.
Most companies have reported Q1 earnings at this stage. For the most part, earnings have been quite resilient despite the situation in the Middle East.
In US markets, most of the recovery has gone to AI-adjacent companies. A lot of consumer and industrial stocks remain fairly sluggish, especially for the low-end consumer.
It seems as though the market's expecting that big tech will continue to spend on AI, regardless of what returns they're earning on this capital. That's what's powering the strong performance of companies that supply the data centres. All that while the share prices of big tech companies themselves haven't been going up as much.
Canadian stock market is much more commodity-driven. Given what's happening in the Middle East, investors have largely forgotten about the upcoming renegotiations (even though that will be a much more consequential event for Canadian equities and the Canadian economy).
Overall, he expects quite a bit of volatility as parties position themselves. Ultimately there will be a successful renegotiation, as both countries need what each other is offering.
Because of what's going on in the Middle East, the US may want a more secure supply of natural resources of the kind that Canada has (sulpher, rare earths, oil). The focus for Mexico will be more along the lines of auto jobs and onshoring. So the details between Canada and Mexico will differ substantially.