Friday, October 2, 2009

Wareham Weekly Insights

The big picture

Canada’s GDP growth stalls

The latest reports on the Canadian economy unexpectedly showed no GDP growth in July, throwing into question the strength of the country’s recovery. Wednesday’s report from Statistics Canada dashed economists’ expectations of a 0.5% increase, blaming shutdowns at mines, lower oil-and-gas extraction, civic strikes and poor weather. On the bright side, employers added 27,000 jobs in August, and new applications for employment insurance fell. Prime Minister Stephen Harper reported that 90% of the economic stimulus funding has been allocated and that the money will create or support 200,000 jobs over two years by funding 7,500 infrastructure projects, training for 44,000 Canadians, $5.8 billion in added EI benefits and $131 billion in business financing.



Bank of Canada Governor Mark Carney said, “A powerful and sustained restructuring of the global economy has begun, but the efforts required of us will be historic,” as he called on consumers and businesses to spend and hire. Consumer confidence in Canada rose for the seventh month in September, but fell unexpectedly in the U.S. on job security worries. U.S. home prices rose for the third month in July, but still are down 32.6% from their 2006 peak. In Germany, stocks surged as Chancellor Angela Merkel was re-elected and pledged to form a centre-right coalition.



Markets

A bumpy road to recovery

Early gains in the week were erased on Thursday as weak U.S. manufacturing and jobless data sent stocks lower. It was one year ago that the Dow Jones Industrial Average suffered its biggest point drop ever – but also its largest gain soon after. In the fourth quarter of 2008, the S&P 500 moved 3% in one day a stunning 29 times. The extreme market volatility seen last year has abated, but stocks are expected to remain in a volatile environment as the recovery picks up.



On Monday, Bombardier shares surged when its joint venture in China won a US$4-billion contract to build 80 high-speed trains. Apple’s iPhone will go on sale in China in October for about US$700. The iPhone App Store hit 2 billion downloads, with users buying 6 million apps per day. Mergers and acquisitions continued with Xerox buying Affiliated Computer Services, while Abbott Laboratories will acquire a division of Solvay. Meanwhile, British regulators gave Kraft a November 9th deadline to make a formal bid for Cadbury. In the lead-up to the holiday season, Wal-Mart unveiled a list of 100 toys for $10 each, and Toys “R” Us is hiring 35,000 seasonal employees.



Our recommendation
Buy the dips, don’t sell the rallies



· Equities. Stephen Uzielli, Portfolio Manager, Portfolio Advisory Group, says the market trend remains upward in the short term despite economic risks on the horizon. Although market valuations are not excessive at current levels, they are already pricing in a significant rebound in earnings in 2010. The market is not overpriced, just overbought in the short term; we would be adding weight in cyclical holdings on any market pullback.

· Fixed income. Chris Kennedy, Associate Director, Portfolio Advisory Group, highlights the following recommendations: Term Call – below benchmark duration. Sector Call – underweight Canadas, overweight Municipals and Provincials, neutral on Corporates. Currency Call – favour the C$, as well as the A$, which is expected to outperform. Alternative Strategies – overweight high yield, overweight Emerging Markets Debt, underweight inflation protected bonds.

· Portfolio strategy. Vincent Delisle, Scotia Capital’s Portfolio Strategist, writes, “we are in a higher-highs/higher-lows environment and recommend buying the dips, not selling the rallies. Our longer term stance remains positive and we expect equities and corporate bonds to outperform Treasuries over the next 12-18 months.”











The month in review
September: One year later, recovery intact but fragile

September 15th marked one year since Lehman Brothers declared bankruptcy, setting off the worst financial crisis since the Great Depression. Canada’s economy is recovering faster than previously thought. Nonetheless, the Bank of Canada kept its lending rate at an all-time low of 0.25%, and renewed its pledge to hold rates until mid-2010. Canada’s banks were ranked the soundest in the world for the second year in a row by the World Economic Forum, while U.S. banks were ranked 108th. Prime Minister Stephen Harper cautioned that while the recession technically may be over, the recovery is extremely fragile. Finance Minister Jim Flaherty insists that it would be a major mistake for developed economies not to continue stimulus.



Federal Reserve Chairman Ben Bernanke said the U.S. recession is technically over, with growth expected to show in the third quarter. The Federal Reserve kept interest rates unchanged at 0.25%, while giving its most upbeat assessment of the U.S. economy in 18 months and voting to end its US$1.45-trillion program for buying mortgage debt three months early.



G20 leads economic cooperation

At London’s G20 meeting, finance ministers agreed the world economy is stabilizing, but recovery is not established enough to start unwinding stimulus programs. Bankers’ pay is at the centre of discussions; Britain’s finance minister says “the party is over” for bankers who were at the heart of “this almighty car crash.” Bank of England Governor Mervyn King revealed that the Royal Bank of Scotland and HBOS had been just hours away from collapsing last October.



Loonie shows strength; gold tops US$1,000

As the Canadian dollar approached 94 cents U.S., the Bank of Canada repeated warnings that economic recovery may be hampered by the strength of the currency, but said it would ignore short-term volatility in its exchange rate. Gold climbed above US$1,000 an ounce as investors sought a hedge against a falling U.S. currency.



Canadian stocks regain October 2008 levels

Markets advanced in September, reaching levels last seen in October 2008. The TSX has gained 50% since its March 2009 low.



Mergers and acquisitions marry superheroes with princesses

Disney will buy Marvel Entertainment for $4 billion in its biggest deal since buying Pixar in 2006, T-Mobile and Orange will merge to create the U.K.’s biggest wireless operator, and Swedish sports car maker Koenigsegg has teamed up with a Chinese company to buy Saab from General Motors. Magna plans to buy a stake in Opel, GM’s European car division, but risks alienating customers VW and BMW. Canada’s biggest IT services player, CGI, surged on takeover speculation after Dell bid US$3.9 billion for Perot Systems, a 68% premium.



Smart phone wars

In technology news, new hardware and an alliance with Facebook could see Nokia catching up with rivals such as Apple and Research In Motion. Apple unveiled an updated line of iPods this month, while RIM’s quarterly profit and outlook fell short of analyst expectations, sending its shares down sharply. Google’s new Internet phone service, Google Voice, is expected to draw scrutiny from regulators.



Alternative energy: changing the tide

Nova Scotia was given the green light to test turbines in the Bay of Fundy. If viable, sea power could meet 10% of the province’s energy needs. First Solar struck a 10-year deal with the Chinese government to build the world’s largest solar field. Solar panels will blanket a desert area larger than Manhattan and generate enough energy to light 3 million homes. A123 Systems, a U.S.-based battery maker for electric cars, jumped 43% in one day after raising US$380 million through an initial public offering.



TM Trademarks used under authorization and control of The Bank of Nova Scotia.
ScotiaMcLeod is a division of Scotia Capital Inc., Member CIPF

This publication is intended only to convey information. It is not to be construed as an investment guide or as an offer or solicitation of an offer to buy or sell any of the securities mentioned in it. The author is an employee of ScotiaMcLeod, a division of Scotia Capital Inc. ("SCI"), but the data selection, analysis and views expressed herein are solely those of the author and not those of SCI. The author has taken all usual and reasonable precautions to determine that the information contained in this publication has been obtained from sources believed to be reliable and that the procedures used to summarize and analyze such information are based on approved practices and principles in the investment industry. However, the market forces underlying investment value are subject to sudden and dramatic changes and data availability varies from one moment to the next. Consequently, neither the author nor SCI can make any warranty as to the accuracy or completeness of information, analysis or views contained in this publication or their usefulness or suitability in any particular circumstance. You should not undertake any investment or portfolio assessment or other transaction on the basis of this publication, but should first consult your investment advisor, who can assess all relevant particulars of any proposed investment or transaction. SCI and the author accept no liability of whatsoever kind for any damages or losses incurred by you as a result of reliance upon or use of this publication in contravention of this notice. All performance data represents past performance and is not indicative of future performance. Scotia Capital Inc. and its affiliates collectively beneficially own in excess of 1% of one or more classes of the issued and outstanding equity securities of Royal Bank. Within the last 12 months, Scotia Capital Inc. and/or its affiliates have undertaken an underwriting liability with respect to equity or debt securities of, or have provided advice for a fee with respect to Royal Bank. TM Trademark used under authorization and control of The Bank of Nova Scotia. ScotiaMcLeod is a division of Scotia Capital Inc., Member CIPF.

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