Q: Since the market has no appetite for growth companies driven by acquisition, should we sell and invest in something else and wait for it to return.
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Investment Q&A
Not investment advice or solicitation to buy/sell securities. Do your own due diligence and/or consult an advisor.
Q: Bonds are usually a safety haven when markets are in turmoil
In this present market environment bonds have lost value instead of being a stabilizer
What is the reason for this and is there likely to be a turnaround for bonds and if so when could that happen ?
Thanks
In this present market environment bonds have lost value instead of being a stabilizer
What is the reason for this and is there likely to be a turnaround for bonds and if so when could that happen ?
Thanks
Q: With the ongoing markets volatility which markets sectors would be a reasonably safe to invest at this time? Thank you.
Q: I read where the Chinese gov't has approved a digital yuan through Yuan Pay Group. They talk about having a fixed price and have someone immediately call you to put money in. They seem pretty pushy and articles say that once the digital yuan is adopted by others it could take off. Appreciate your thoughts
Q: What do you think of Harry Dent and his 86% market crash prediction for later this year.
Q: there's a big percentage of Canadas population that are between 57 and 64 in the work force that don't have pensions and soon will have to depend on CPP and OAS. Both of which don't amount too much monthly. People will probably have to live in poverty and cash in RRSPs ,if they have any. What affect could all of this have on the stock market in the near future ? Thanks
Q: You have discussed bear markets and crashes often in the past as typically short painful spans of time, duration usually as 6-12 months.
What about "recessions"? Please provide your top 5 coaching advice / tips for investors in terms of understanding and weathering recessions.
thanks
Ernie
What about "recessions"? Please provide your top 5 coaching advice / tips for investors in terms of understanding and weathering recessions.
thanks
Ernie
Q: It's hard to identify the market "bottom" in a timely manner, of course, but what might be the best indicators that a sustained recovery has probably begun or is soon to begin? Are there some good bellwether stocks to watch for this purpose? Are there other indicators, such as particular market indexes, or volume or volatility measures, or "mood" surveys, or economic statistics? Where should the primary focus be?
Q: I would appreciate your comments about the oft used term “momentum”. Once the markets do bottom, all of us, like it or not, will or should be momentum traders.
Q: Do you pay attention to all negative headline fueled by wallstreet strategists who seems to become negative after such a bad start. In december, almost all of them were somewhat positive albout the prospect of 2022.
- Apple Inc. (AAPL)
- Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)
- Costco Wholesale Corporation (COST)
- Meta Platforms Inc. (META)
- Alphabet Inc. (GOOG)
- AbbVie Inc. (ABBV)
- JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
- Visa Inc. (V)
- Shopify Inc. Class A Subordinate Voting Shares (SHOP)
Q: Which stocks -Canada or US -would you recommend for a 5% portfolio weight, with suggested entry price and rationale.
- Apple Inc. (AAPL)
- Amazon.com Inc. (AMZN)
- Costco Wholesale Corporation (COST)
- Meta Platforms Inc. (META)
- Alphabet Inc. (GOOG)
- JPMorgan Chase & Co. (JPM)
- Visa Inc. (V)
- Constellation Software Inc. (CSU)
- TFI International Inc. (TFII)
- Magna International Inc. (MG)
- CarGurus Inc. (CARG)
- Digital Turbine Inc. (APPS)
- Boyd Group Services Inc. (BYD)
Q: I'm more a scavenger than a predator, as much interested in dividends as capital gains. Right now, however, I see opportunity in the growth sector as it collapses after years of ridiculous rises. My intention is to sell off bond funds to pick off the debris of this collapse.
First question: Now or wait?
Second question: What are your choices given this scenario, US or Canadian? Bear in mind, I'm not interested in the 5 or 10 yr wait. I'm looking at a bounce back after half the herd has jumped. I want reasonable growth prospects, a price to earnings ratio that isn't stupid and a margin that also isn't stupid. Say, for example, Apple.
You get it. I also don't expect perfection from you. No one ever got it from me.
First question: Now or wait?
Second question: What are your choices given this scenario, US or Canadian? Bear in mind, I'm not interested in the 5 or 10 yr wait. I'm looking at a bounce back after half the herd has jumped. I want reasonable growth prospects, a price to earnings ratio that isn't stupid and a margin that also isn't stupid. Say, for example, Apple.
You get it. I also don't expect perfection from you. No one ever got it from me.
Q: The only commodity I see that has bust is lumber from 1250 to 650....If inflation lingers (high key component commodity prices) for 6 -12 months while the Fed raises interest rates to damper economic expansion , a V shape recovery seems less likely.The losers I've sold has been creamed by further 25-50% down side(eg. ANRG,PINS,TFII).....How does the DYIer protect/invest his capital within a portfolio given a U shaped recovery? Are there some better performers/sectors that lead the way out of this mess?
Q: Hi Team,
With the assumption that retailers have an inventory problem there seem to me there are 2 outcomes:
1. Retailers take a hit on the products and sell at a lower price
2. Wages rise bringing more disposable income to purchase said inventory
Is there another case I don't see? How do you see this playing out?
Thanks!
With the assumption that retailers have an inventory problem there seem to me there are 2 outcomes:
1. Retailers take a hit on the products and sell at a lower price
2. Wages rise bringing more disposable income to purchase said inventory
Is there another case I don't see? How do you see this playing out?
Thanks!
Q: With the probability of a June interest rate hike and GIC rates following,
would a lot of people be moving into GICs and out of stocks.
Thank You.
would a lot of people be moving into GICs and out of stocks.
Thank You.
Q: Hi, I liked the reference to the CNN Fear&Greed Index in one of your Updates (Nov21). Would you have some comments on it with the awful market behavior since then. Do technical analysts or investors rely on these Indexes for decision making (F&G, VIX, Baltic Index or others) ? Thank you.
Q: https://www.theglobeandmail.com/investing/investment-ideas/article-the-stock-market-is-still-dangerously-bubbly-plus-four-reasons-why-the/?utm_medium=email&utm_source=Globe%20Investor&utm_content=2022-5-13_18&utm_term=&utm_campaign=newsletter&cu_id=nVp9GpU7OpyOBgUaQxyFDw%3D%3D
Link to "The Stock Market is still dangerously bubbly"
I have been a blue chip dividend investor for almost 2 decades and have been more recently challenged to incorporate "growth stocks" and don't have a feel for this sector at all.
Please provide the 5i response or rebuttal to the bubbly status of the market?
Do larger growth stocks example, Googl, apple, Microsoft and amazon. represent a safety over the "average" growth stock?
thanks
Ernie
Link to "The Stock Market is still dangerously bubbly"
I have been a blue chip dividend investor for almost 2 decades and have been more recently challenged to incorporate "growth stocks" and don't have a feel for this sector at all.
Please provide the 5i response or rebuttal to the bubbly status of the market?
Do larger growth stocks example, Googl, apple, Microsoft and amazon. represent a safety over the "average" growth stock?
thanks
Ernie
Q: Market Call - David Driscoll - He said that at the top of the market (S&P 500) people were ready to pay 26 times earnings. $26.00 for every dollar of earnings - it is now 20 times earnings. He said that in the last big market correction, earnings went to 16 times earnings. That is what he is waiting for before he puts his money to work. Your take on this?
Thanks,
Thanks,
Q: So all of a sudden all the stocks which have seen nothing but strong momentum for days, weeks, months, are a big buy. Stocks down 30-40% just this month, down 20% this week, are shooting up. I assume this is not everyone getting together and deciding to buy the stocks which have been pummeled, even though they'll probably all drop again tomorrow. It's programmed trading kicking in on some sort of signal we mere mortals don't get. What would that signal be?
Q: I have lived through the 2000/2001 tech wreck and the 2008 market correction and this market is just as ugly.What reasons do you have for believing we are near a market bottom. Has capitulation has already happened? Is the VIX telling us anything?Are rising rates not going to overwhelm government debts?An extended recession seems inevitable. IMHO