Today, The Weekly Buzzing Stocks by Billy Kawasaki and Martin Cobb, ASIP commented about whether DIS, ATD.TO, AXP, CNR.TO, CP.TO, DOL.TO, LULU, EQB.TO, GIB.A.TO, CSU.TO, BB.TO, V, DEO, ADBE, HONA, HON, MU, RY.TO, GLW, MCD, STT, KVUE, KMB, MSFT, TSM, SNDK, ASTS are stocks to buy or sell.
If you look at the World Cup since 1930, stock markets tend to do a little less well than average in years with a World Cup. If you look at the down markets we've had in the last decade (2018 and 2022), both were World Cup years. Based on the data, we might have a bad second half of the year ;)
You have to be aware of them, but certainly don't try to predict them. It's incredible to think that if we went back a year ago and he told you that we'd see the Canadian economy flatline, CUSMA not be renewed, lingering conflict in the Middle East, affordability pressures, high unemployment, and yet the TSX would be up 30%.
The stock market's much better at telling you where the economy is heading, than the other way around. Strength in corporate profits is a much bigger driver of stock markets than the economy is.
Every day it seems as though it's semiconductors and the AI buildout, while the narrative on software has moved things in the other direction. Underneath that, financials have done very well around the world. Other parts of the market are starting to perk up.
Finding good stocks with good valuations is becoming much more idiosyncratic. It's harder work, as it's not obvious where the pockets of pessimism are. But with 10k stocks around the world, there's always something to uncover.
Stocks showing up on his radar are those whose price is depressed in the short term for whatever reason, but the long-term business is attractive.
Buy it, put it away for 10 years, do very well. Suffering from software outflows from large ETFs. Revenue still growing in teens, even better on EPS. Investing a lot in capacity (but they can afford it), which customers have signed onto for the next several years. Trades at 20x PE, yet nothing's really changed.
Mainly custodial services, long-term compounder. Makes $$ by growing assets under management, which have grown over time, but growth not great. SPDR ETF business, decent size and growing nicely. His issue is that its worth is based on market values, less on market activity, and market valuations are up there.
He's been trimming banks in US and Canada.
A year ago, he struggled to find value. Ended up buying SVNLY, which had an attractive valuation. Everything else was expensive, and even more so today. Don't forget that banks are cyclical. The good times are here, and it doesn't get much better than this. Be mindful, risk/reward isn't attractive.
Similar argument for US banks on valuation, though he's slightly less concerned about them.
Be mindful of your overall bank exposure.