Sorry, you need to enable JavaScript to visit this website.
Skip to main content
Skip to main content

Equities

After collapsing earlier this year, the US Economic Surprise Index has been recovering and returned to positive territory at the beginning of November. A positive reading indicates that economic data releases have generally surprised to the upside, beating…
Emerging Market equities recently failed to break below their 24-year moving average that previously served as a key technical support level. Instead, they have rallied alongside DM stocks over the past month. Indeed, conditions have become oversold for EM…

The Chinese government will repress social unrest, then relax Covid-19 social restrictions to try to stabilize the economy. Russia will be aggressive in the short term but will pursue a ceasefire before March 2024. European and Italian risk will stay high on energy constraints.

The S&P 500 Industrials sector is among the top performers in the recent equity rally, gaining 17% since October 12. On a year-to-date basis, the sector’s 6.2% decline is more muted than the benchmark’s 16.8% drop. Industrial stocks’ relative…

European asset prices have rebounded sharply since September. Can this trend survive in the face of a weak Chinese economy where deflation prevails?

Crypto broker FTX’s bankruptcy does not pose a systemic threat to markets. It did reveal something deeply unflattering about excess liquidity, however, and suggests that other private investments may come a cropper.

Today, we are sending you the BCA annual outlook for 2023. The report is an edited transcript of our recent conversation with Mr. X and his daughter, Ms. X, who are long-time BCA clients with whom we discuss the economic and financial market outlook for the next twelve months toward the end of each year.

Canadian equities outperformed their US counterparts in local currency terms on a YTD basis. The S&P/TSX decreased by 4%, against a 16% decline for the S&P 500. Sector composition largely explains this outperformance. The TSX’s greater exposure to…

Long-term deflationary forces in Japan are weakening, setting the stage for inflation to make a comeback over the remainder of the decade. Investors should prepare to structurally reduce exposure to Japanese bonds starting early next year. Higher Japanese bond yields will lift an extremely undervalued yen. To the extent that global growth should surprise on the upside over the next 12 months, Japanese equities could see some modest outperformance.

Excess job vacancies in the US and UK reflect a labour market that cannot efficiently match unemployed workers with vacant jobs. This is because excess job vacancies reflect the shortage of labour supply in the 50 plus age cohort, whose skills are difficult to replace. In economic jargon, the post-pandemic ‘Beveridge curve’ has shifted outwards. Absent an unlikely shift in the Beveridge curve to its pre-pandemic version, killing US wage inflation will mean killing jobs. And killing jobs will mean killing profits. We go through the investment implications.