FidelityConnects: Are consumers ready for takeoff? Inside travel and leisure trends
With peak travel about to begin, is travel still a priority for U.S. consumers? Join David Cochrane, Equity Research Analyst, as he dives into the latest trends shaping travel and leisure spending. David will break down what’s driving consumer demand, how behaviours are shifting and what these trends signal for companies—and markets—heading into the second half of the year.
Transcript
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<b>Subtitles are AI Generated</b>
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Hello and welcome to Fidelity Connects.
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I'm Pamela Ritchie. Higher gas prices, sticky inflation, and shifting consumer
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habits have kept markets focused on one question.
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Is the U.S. Consumer finally starting to crack?
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But our next guest says the real story isn't about whether consumers are
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spending less, it's about where they're spending differently in
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many cases. From the surprising battle between pizza and tacos
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to why customer service is back in focus.
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And what travel demand is revealing about household resilience.
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Joining us here today to discuss the trends shaping consumer behaviour is
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David Cochran. He is equity research analyst and associate portfolio
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manager. Warm welcome to you, David. Good to see you again.
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Thank you for having me.
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It's time to check in on what we're all going to do this summer and what it
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means for investments so far.
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So let's begin there. Let's begin ultimately with what we've all been dealing
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with, which is higher oil prices.
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The obvious question is, how is that crimping everything else?
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And first of all, is it crimping everything else?
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Well that's exactly right. That's the big question from a macro perspective
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in consumer right now is you know as I'm sure you've noticed prices
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of the pump are up over 30% in recent months and whether
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that is going to weigh on consumer spending in other areas because
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they've spent all their money on gas.
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So maybe just a little context around it and then we can go into what we've
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seen. Sure. So.
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For reference, consumers in the U.S.
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Spend approximately 3% of their after-tax income on gas.
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It doesn't sound like that much.
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It doesn' sound like much, right? And so you go, OK, it's up 30%, so
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maybe that's a 1% headwind, but that's not exactly the way to look at
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it because the issue is, I guess, lower income consumers
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spend higher percent of their income on gas.
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And that's 3% of your total income, but you still have to pay rent, you
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still to pay for insurance. You have a bunch of non-discretionary expenses.
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So if you looked at the wallet of a lower income consumer and just the
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discretionary piece of that, the impact can actually be multiples bigger.
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And let's just layer in there to what extent, I mean, of course, you're
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looking at sentiment measures. That's part of what you're going to do.
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But it's very interesting because everyone's grumpy, everyone's unhappy,
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everyone has, sentiment is poor if you sort of anecdotally
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look at it. But how do you look at that?
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And do you put it to one side when you're measuring?
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Well, that's right. So we like to, I mean, first, we're
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certainly bottom-up stock pickers, but when I'm looking at the macro picture, I
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like to look at sentiment indicators, but I also like to look the data.
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So people can be grumpy, but are they still spending?
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And so what we've seen so far is really a limited impact.
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US household spending on non-gas and non-autos
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was up four or five percent in March and April, despite the higher oil
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prices. We have access at Fidelity to some more real-time
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credit card data, which shows things have slowed a little bit in May, but
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are still running at close to 4%.
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Canada, we have the data on a leg, but Canadian consumption
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was up 4-ish percent in March as well.
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So we really haven't seen a fall off, particularly in the U.S.
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Now there's a nuance around this, and the nuance is the consumer
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in the US has been benefiting from a tailwind.
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That it was driven by higher tax refunds.
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And that's the month of May, really.
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Sorry, the story of the month and the anticipation of it.
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Well, so certainly in March and April, you saw,
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I've seen an estimate that the US consumer had a $45 billion tailwind
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from higher tax refunds year over year.
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And so you can look at the data and say, well, the consumer hasn't really
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slowed till this point, or maybe slowed only
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marginally in certain pockets, but you were benefiting from this
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tax refund tailwind. So what happens if gas prices stay
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high? And then does that eventually start to show up more in
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consumer spending, particularly for this low-income consumer.
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Okay, so we'll talk about that. We might also talk about what if gas prices
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actually come down quite a lot, which apparently could
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be.
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I think it's all within the spectrum of possibilities, right?
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And so our job at Fidelity is to understand, OK,
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basically deeply understand our companies and their exposures, who are their
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customers, how sensitive are their customer, how sensitive from
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a macro perspective or discretionary are the goods you're actually selling.
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And then what does it mean if your consumer pulls back what's
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priced into the stock, What does that mean for earnings and ultimately the
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stock price? And so we're trying to understand those macro sensitivities.
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That's the first piece of it. But we're also trying to understand which
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companies are winning and losing regardless of the macro,
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right?
And have pricing power. And so.
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And so you need to be able to understand the company-specific drivers, because
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if a company comes out with a weaker set of results and says, hey,
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we're seeing a macro impact, maybe they are, but maybe there's something
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else going on. And maybe there are companies that can just thrive, even if
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the lower income consumer is weak, because they're winning a lot of share with
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that consumer. And so we're trying to separate all that out and find the best
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stocks within it.
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I mean, I wonder if you can just sort of put it into perspective.
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If you look at the United States, Canada as well, I mean most so-called
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developed nations are highly dependent for their economy on
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the consumer, right? I mean the consumer has to spend or the economy doesn't
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work essentially. I mean there are other, lots of other components obviously.
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But this is incredibly important to the functioning of an economy.
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So I'm just sort of wondering if you can.
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Put that in place of where we are, you know, compared to coming out of
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COVID. What is this moment for consumer spending, even though we're grumpy, and
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we're not grumpy.
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I think the analogy people like to make is looking
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at the 1970s oil shock.
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But I think one of the important things to remember is consumers were
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spending a much higher percentage of their income on gasoline at that point.
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And so we're less sensitive today to this, but you're right,
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it is still an important piece of the picture.
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I think what you need to look at again is just the consumer
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spend curve will up in flow.
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You have headwinds and tailwinds. Last year we were talking about government
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shutdowns, slowing wage growth for the
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low income consumer.
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You had ICE, which had impacts in certain populations.
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So, you had all kinds of headwinds last year as well.
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And there's always something going on, so it's really, okay, how does this
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compare to last year? Is this transitory?
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Is this gonna ebb and flow versus a big structural issue?
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So there's probably more to understand on the exposures to various headwinds,
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essentially. And we can ask you about that. I wonder if you can throw out an
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example or two of where you see this.
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So across the consumer story, where are people spending on
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services, on stuff?
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Well, I think it's, it comes back, I'll give you the example of, you
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know, competition within restaurants and restaurants.
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In the restaurant company. Restaurant companies.
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And so restaurant companies, I mean, they have a broad exposure,
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especially quick service restaurants, including low income consumers, right?
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So there's kind of an interesting example of the pizza category
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versus the taco category.
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And I'll give you the example where pizza is really struggling.
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And if you looked at the first quarter results,
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Domino's reported 1% same store sales growth.
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Their delivery business was actually down, their competitors,
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Pizza Hut and Papa John's, their same-store sales were down mid-single digits
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in the US.
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And Domino's will talk on their call about how, yes, we're seeing some macro
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impact in the low-income consumer.
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And so you go, okay, is this just macro?
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But I think when you step back, you realise competition has massively
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increased for the pizza category.
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When I was a kid, and look, I still love pizza.
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If I wanted to have something delivered, the only option was really pizza.
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And with the rise of DoorDash and Uber Eats, you have all kinds of different
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delivery options now.
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Unless Pizza Player's even at that point.
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And so you're starting to see, I guess, just competition within
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the category and the category mature and promotionality increase.
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So you can look at it and the explanation will be partially macro,
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but part of it's just something that's company or subsector specific.
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And you can contrast that with Taco Bell, which is owned by Yum.
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Taco Bell in the first quarter grew their same-star sales in the US
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8%, and that's against 9% compare last year.
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And out.
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What are they doing?
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I mean, they have a tremendous combination of menu innovation,
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value, a growing digital business and the brand is just really resonating
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with consumers. And so I think that's a contrast where we can talk
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about low income consumer, we can talk about macro, but the Taco
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Bell customer and the Domino's customer are not necessarily that different
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and one of them is thriving or one of the companies is
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growing quickly and one is kind of battling amongst smaller competitors.
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And I think that's the important contrast.
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And so we're trying to figure out what's macro, what's company specific,
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what does it mean for what the companies will earn and what does that
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ultimately mean for the stocks.
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That's incredible in terms of get into just sort of the valuation
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story a little bit. I mean, how are these being treated by investors at
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this point?
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So consumer discretionary is a subsector
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where, or is a sector rather, where there's high intra-sector dispersion.
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So you have these big winners and these big losers almost
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regardless of the macro backdrop.
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And I think what you're seeing is companies that have
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any sign of a structural type competitive
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headwind, get punished very quickly, and companies were
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trans-inflect. The valuations re-rate very quickly.
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And so it's important for us to pay attention to these inflexion points
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and, you know, try and own the winners before you see
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this growth show up. And so you can capitalise on the higher earnings growth
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and the re-rating and valuation.
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For some time, they would look at, for instance, the luxury
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segment of that being kind of recession proof.
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I mean, I don't know to what extent any of that stuff holds, but it has shifted
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within what we used to think of as the consumer being OK through
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this economic situation, untouchable here.
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The disruption of technology, delivery, I guess, is a good example within food.
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How has that shifted? What? What is or isn't holding pricing power?
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Is it the higher segment, the lower segment, or is it innovation?
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I think it is that higher segment has pricing power and
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it's innovation. And I'll give you an example of another, this
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is another area within restaurants, but I think it's a broader consumer
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trend, which I believe the era of customer service
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is back. And you're seeing this show up within the beverage
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segment. So in restaurants, one of the fastest growing
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segments is cold beverages, then cold customizable sweet coffee.
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Even in January.
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It's just unbelievable. But really you don't want a hot drink?
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Nope.
No, that's it. And so those are, I guess, that
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that's the fast growing category. And you've seen a couple players in the US,
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the two notable ones are Dutch Brothers and Seven Brew, which is a private
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company, grow very rapidly.
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And part of the magic is, yes, we're operating in this category, which
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is great. But part of that magic is they're bringing back customer service.
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They're friendly with a smile on their face.
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They'll come out, chat you up, and it sounds like a small thing, but relative
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to your average quick service restaurant experience, it's
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differentiated and resonating.
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And these are no longer small players.
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These two companies are up to approximately 2,000 units in
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the US. And so what you've seen is some of the bigger companies take notice and
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try to do the same thing.
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And the best example of that is Starbucks.
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So Starbucks has a new CEO.
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They've been trying a lot of new things lately.
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They've been trying a lot of new things.
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And I think you'll remember Starbucks in the 2010s, it was friendly
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service, write your name on the cup.
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And they kind of lost their way a little bit, have brought back a new, or
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have brought in a new CEO, Brian Nicol, who's the former CEO of Chipotle.
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And his plan is all about this customer service aspect.
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So he's reinvested hundreds of millions of dollars in
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store labour. They have new training programmes and measurement programmes
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to try to increase hospitality.
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They're bringing furniture back to Starbucks.
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And what you've seen is the same store sales growth start to
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turn the corner. And so this hospitality element is working.
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This isn't a comment on Starbucks stock.
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I think you could argue a high degree of continued success is priced in or
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expected at this point. But certainly, it's hard to argue with the idea that
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bringing back hospitality is making a difference.
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And I think that's a broader consumer trend.
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Is that still like hangover from COVID where people had
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to be very sort of dined and dashed type feeling where you had to
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take off with your mask?
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I think it's part of that and the temptation certainly to lean in very
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aggressively to order ahead and the pickup lanes and use the
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app and you come in, as you mentioned, and pop in, grab it, pop
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out. But what do people really want?
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I think they're looking for more than just the beverage itself.
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They're looking for a smile, positive interaction.
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Especially when there were seven or eight dollars.
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Exactly. And that's part of it.
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So if you have that kind of hospitality, you can charge a higher price
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and you hold pricing power to your original question.
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That's so interesting.
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But yeah, that's an element of it.
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They, you know, I didn't think we'd be talking about necessarily, but we're
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seeing it, we're seeing it work.
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Manners matter.
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Matters matter.
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Manor's Manor. That's nice to hear, actually.
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It's a nice new development. Let's take it into sort of the summer travel
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season. So probably restaurants are part of that and drinks along with it.
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But this goes to hotels where people will stay.
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They're expensive, but which ones hold the pricing power?
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The bigger the better? Is that still the case?
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The bigger the better is for sure still the case.
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I'll run you through maybe just to compare to where we were last fall.
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So when I was on the programme last fall, I think we were talking about
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how revenue per available room night, which is what a hotel on
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average gets per room they have per night.
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That was falling and actually running negative last
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year. And what we've seen to start 2026
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is particularly in the US, revenue per available.
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Has accelerated. That growth has accelerated, it's now positive.
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And interestingly, the biggest change was in that low-income consumer.
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That economy segment, that RevPAR acceleration has
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been the most dramatic of any of the chain scales.
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So the chain scales will have their luxury version and then
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they're more economy.
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And that's where they've seen a lot of growth.
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Yeah and so you've seen that really turn around which is interesting and
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you know I was speaking with our industrials analysts who cover the airlines.
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They were talking about Canadian Airlines and what they're seeing because if
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you've tried to book a flight recently certainly they're trying to pass on
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these higher jet fuel prices and they really it sounds like haven't
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seen much of a fall off in demand and we certainly have a great data
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set in the US, which shows passenger traffic.
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And it's the same thing. It's tracking right in line with normal seasonality,
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despite higher prices.
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That is a classic everyone's complaining but still spending, isn't it?
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I mean, that's right there.
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It's one of those examples, right?
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And so you're seeing it in travel. And so what does it mean for the stocks?
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I mean, when we were on or when I was on in the fall,
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we talked a little bit about how the big get bigger in hotels.
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The two examples being Hilton and Marriott, who grow rooms that call
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it two to four times the rate of the market.
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And that has really continued.
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The big keep getting bigger.
16:52.811 --> 16:57.383
And with this turn in revenue per available room night growth,
16:57.383 --> 17:01.520
You know, the earnings outlook has improved and the stocks have
17:01.520 --> 17:05.657
done very well and re-rated and that's been kind of the story
17:05.657 --> 17:07.960
of travel to start 2026.
17:07.960 --> 17:11.530
I mean, that's very positive and really interesting and for investors,
17:11.530 --> 17:15.067
extremely important place to look. What's the why behind it?
17:15.067 --> 17:19.204
I mean you could argue last year and in the last little while
17:19.204 --> 17:22.741
in the US in particular, we keep hearing that foreigners are not spending their
17:22.741 --> 17:24.610
tourism dollars going to certain places.
17:24.610 --> 17:26.879
People are being more domestically focused.
17:26.879 --> 17:30.916
I mean does it matter if that, it clearly doesn't matter if it's true or
17:30.916 --> 17:33.952
not. But what is the why, behind seeing this rise?
17:33.952 --> 17:38.257
I think particularly if you look at the economy segment
17:38.257 --> 17:42.594
within hotels, so that lower income consumer in
17:42.594 --> 17:46.532
the lower chain scale hotels, they had a lot of
17:46.532 --> 17:48.400
headwinds last year as well.
17:48.400 --> 17:52.137
I mean, democratic consumer sentiment was in the tank.
17:52.137 --> 17:56.141
Lowest quartile wage growth had slowed more dramatically
17:56.141 --> 17:58.010
than other quartiles.
17:58.010 --> 18:01.880
You had a government shutdown, which.
18:01.880 --> 18:05.818
You know, there's disruption to government paychecks as part
18:05.818 --> 18:09.555
of that, but also just government themselves for business purposes.
18:09.555 --> 18:11.957
There's a bunch of travel related to that.
18:11.957 --> 18:15.427
So you did have a bunch of headwinds last year.
18:15.427 --> 18:19.064
And as you start to lap those, yes, gas prices are higher, but the summer
18:19.064 --> 18:21.400
travel impulse is kind of back.
18:21.400 --> 18:25.704
And you've seen just as you're lapping a softer period,
18:25.704 --> 18:29.208
yes, we have some headwind now, but we had headwind last year and rep par was
18:29.208 --> 18:33.212
negative last year and. You've seen kind of a mechanical flip
18:33.212 --> 18:34.413
to positive rep part growth.
18:34.413 --> 18:38.016
So it was troughing, for all of those reasons, but it was a bit of a trough
18:38.016 --> 18:39.017
from the client's back.
18:40.018 --> 18:43.255
Let's ask you a little bit about many of the companies that you would take a
18:43.255 --> 18:47.326
look at, how they are reacting or maybe no longer reacting to the
18:47.326 --> 18:50.462
story of tariffs. That was a huge headwind.
18:50.462 --> 18:54.533
Everyone was scrambling, and Fidelia did an incredible job of figuring
18:54.533 --> 18:58.470
out what the exposure was to various tariffs.
18:58.470 --> 19:00.906
They kind of been cancelled. There's new ones being put in.
19:00.906 --> 19:03.075
Where do some of the companies you follow sit?
19:03.075 --> 19:07.146
I mean, it feels like the Iran war dominates the headlines
19:07.146 --> 19:11.750
every day, but there is plenty going on with tariffs still.
19:11.750 --> 19:13.719
Yeah, you don't really hear about it, actually.
19:13.719 --> 19:14.086
It's not.
19:14.086 --> 19:17.689
It's not the first article now versus it was the first article, but that
19:17.689 --> 19:21.360
doesn't mean that there's not change in news.
19:21.360 --> 19:24.062
So a quick update versus last fall.
19:24.062 --> 19:25.931
Actually, I'll take you to last April.
19:25.931 --> 19:30.035
So that was President Trump Liberation Day holding up
19:30.035 --> 19:30.669
his tariff.
19:30.669 --> 19:32.337
The announcements. Right side.
19:32.337 --> 19:37.509
So those tariffs moved around a little bit in a negotiation.
19:37.509 --> 19:41.113
But those tariffs were known as IEPA tariffs.
19:41.113 --> 19:45.450
And in February, the US Supreme Court ruled that
19:45.450 --> 19:49.855
President Trump does not have the authority to impose IEPa tariffs.
19:49.855 --> 19:53.158
And they ended up actually being turned off.
19:53.158 --> 19:55.761
And companies are pursuing refunds for those.
19:55.761 --> 19:58.664
Because they were emergency tariffs that were meant to fight the emergency.
19:58.664 --> 20:01.500
Emergency economic tariffs.
20:01.500 --> 20:05.204
And they were shut off. Companies are pursuing refunds.
20:05.204 --> 20:09.408
What President Trump and his administration ended up doing is
20:09.408 --> 20:13.545
imposing something called Section 122 tariffs, which fall
20:13.545 --> 20:16.114
under the Trade Act of 1974.
20:16.114 --> 20:18.917
These tariffs actually were a step down.
20:18.917 --> 20:22.988
Big round numbers call IEPA tariffs 20%,
20:22.988 --> 20:24.823
122 tariff 10%.
20:24.823 --> 20:29.027
So tariffs actually stepped down and we're currently under this
20:29.027 --> 20:33.265
122 tariff construct and
20:33.265 --> 20:37.202
the nuance with them is 122 tariffs only last for
20:37.202 --> 20:40.539
150 days and so they expire in July.
20:40.539 --> 20:40.872
Wow.
20:40.872 --> 20:44.409
So the big question is, OK, what's going to happen in July?
20:44.443 --> 20:48.580
The expectation is that 122 tariffs will be replaced
20:48.580 --> 20:52.517
with something called section 301 tariffs, also fall under
20:52.517 --> 20:54.353
the Trade Act of 1974.
20:54.353 --> 20:58.323
There are some, I guess, complications with how you need to impose them.
20:58.323 --> 21:01.493
But the question is OK, what rate are those going to come in at?
21:01.493 --> 21:03.328
Is it the 122 rate?
21:03.328 --> 21:06.732
Is it IEPA rate? Is it something lower, higher?
21:06.732 --> 21:08.500
Do they come in right away? Is there a brave?
21:08.500 --> 21:10.936
Can companies swallow them? Do they need to pass them on?
21:10.936 --> 21:14.873
Well, that's it. And so what we're doing here at Fidelity is we'd like
21:14.873 --> 21:17.876
to understand, okay, how exposed are our companies?
21:17.876 --> 21:22.014
Where are their supply? Where do they procure their goods from?
21:22.014 --> 21:24.616
What do their supply chains look like?
21:24.616 --> 21:28.620
What is their pricing power and ability to pass on tariffs?
21:28.620 --> 21:31.290
What have they built into their guidance?
21:31.290 --> 21:35.560
And this is all in an effort to understand, okay, when we
21:35.560 --> 21:40.465
understand what happens when Section 122 tariffs roll off,
21:40.465 --> 21:43.235
What are the earnings going to look like? What does it mean for the stock?
21:43.235 --> 21:45.937
And we want to have done all that work ahead of time.
21:45.937 --> 21:50.208
And it's labour intensive, but the part about Fidelity is we have
21:50.208 --> 21:54.279
a big team of people, we have phenomenal access, and
21:54.279 --> 21:58.317
we're all doing our work, doing our modelling to understand basically where are
21:58.317 --> 22:01.053
the exposures and what does it means in terms of what we should own.
22:01.053 --> 22:03.188
And you can limit the surprises that come along.
22:03.188 --> 22:06.858
Yeah, you want to understand your exposure ahead of time and you want to be in
22:06.858 --> 22:10.128
a position to pounce if it creates any opportunities.
22:10.128 --> 22:13.932
It's really, really interesting how all of this kind of comes together.
22:13.932 --> 22:17.869
And July, of course, is when we think in Canada, KUSMA,
22:17.869 --> 22:22.074
USMCA is going to, I mean, we don't know if it's going to be renegotiated.
22:22.074 --> 22:24.576
Everyone keeps saying July 1st is not going to happen.
22:24.576 --> 22:28.814
But in any case, the timing dovetails with a new era of
22:28.814 --> 22:32.884
tariffs. And now we need to know what you know about
22:32.884 --> 22:36.321
some of these being slipped into an actual trade deal or to what extent that's
22:36.321 --> 22:38.056
going affect the overall story.
22:38.056 --> 22:40.792
July should certainly be exciting.
22:40.792 --> 22:45.197
So the USMCA is currently up for renegotiation.
22:45.197 --> 22:49.234
In theory, the three countries need to settle on an agreement
22:49.234 --> 22:53.271
in July. And they have three options, which are
22:53.271 --> 22:57.709
extend the agreement under its current construct for another 16 years.
22:57.743 --> 22:58.410
Which we'd like.
22:58.410 --> 23:01.613
Which, hey, wouldn't be bad. But apparently isn't going to happen.
23:01.613 --> 23:06.084
They could move to in a basically annual
23:06.084 --> 23:10.122
review for the next 10 years, or they can elect to
23:10.122 --> 23:14.259
walk away with a six month notice period.
23:14.259 --> 23:18.563
Now, Trade Representative Greer has suggested
23:18.563 --> 23:22.801
they don't want to basically blow up this deal in its entirety, but
23:22.801 --> 23:27.038
it'll be a negotiation. And so if you look at the U.S.'s goal...
23:27.038 --> 23:30.208
Is to increase manufacturing in the U.S.
23:30.208 --> 23:31.610
You just start there.
23:31.610 --> 23:35.580
You start there, and then Canada and Mexico's
23:35.580 --> 23:39.718
goal is to keep free trade open,
23:39.718 --> 23:43.922
but also to perhaps lower the sectoral tariffs
23:43.922 --> 23:48.160
that have been imposed on certain areas, steel, aluminium,
23:48.160 --> 23:50.929
copper, forest products.
23:50.929 --> 23:55.233
And so that is basically the starting point for the negotiation.
23:55.233 --> 23:59.304
I think, you know, trade representative Greer
23:59.304 --> 24:04.009
has maybe, or there's been some indications in the news just that
24:04.009 --> 24:08.313
the US would basically like to
24:08.313 --> 24:12.784
increase the restrictions around content
24:12.784 --> 24:16.922
origination rules, which is basically, hey, you can't ship something
24:16.922 --> 24:18.490
from China to Mexico.
24:18.490 --> 24:21.493
Right. And then put it into a better product.
24:21.493 --> 24:25.530
The US and say, hey, this is from Mexico, no tariffs, and keep
24:25.530 --> 24:28.700
those manufacturing jobs in North America.
24:28.700 --> 24:31.369
But this will be an evolving negotiations.
24:31.369 --> 24:35.407
And so how do you approach it? You do the same thing you do with tariffs,
24:35.407 --> 24:39.945
right? Which is understand your exposures, understand the early sensitivities,
24:39.945 --> 24:42.147
know where you are, know how to react.
24:42.147 --> 24:46.151
So to what extent from tariffs and now in anticipation of, we don't know
24:46.151 --> 24:50.922
on the trade front exactly, have supply chains, have companies shifted?
24:50.922 --> 24:54.893
I mean, they're getting kind of used to shifting out of COVID, more robust
24:54.893 --> 24:58.263
in that sense to deal with new shocks coming along.
24:58.263 --> 25:00.365
But you imagine there's some real preparations.
25:00.365 --> 25:04.269
Can you give us a little bit of an example of what that has looked like?
25:04.269 --> 25:06.371
Sure.
25:06.371 --> 25:10.909
So you're right. I think companies have built a muscle around
25:10.909 --> 25:15.146
being able to adapt their supply chains more quickly than,
25:15.146 --> 25:18.917
you know, it's really not something they necessarily faced in the past.
25:18.917 --> 25:23.522
A great example of a company that's done a good job of this is Aritzia.
25:23.522 --> 25:27.392
So Aritzie has figured out this is a women's apparel retailer.
25:27.392 --> 25:29.361
Oh, we know. You're familiar.
25:29.361 --> 25:32.397
I've talked about it on this show before.
25:32.397 --> 25:34.499
Beautiful new store in the Eaton Centre, by the way.
25:34.499 --> 25:36.234
Oh, is it? Okay, I'll try not to visit.
25:36.234 --> 25:39.004
Must check it out.
25:39.004 --> 25:44.242
And they've done a great job at basically figuring out how to procure
25:44.242 --> 25:47.712
goods from a number of different countries, working with a number of different
25:47.712 --> 25:52.284
suppliers and ultimately mitigate some of this tariff impact.
25:52.284 --> 25:56.321
They've also the brand themselves and a more everyday luxury
25:56.321 --> 26:00.158
is a brand with pricing power and so they've did a good job, I guess,
26:00.158 --> 26:02.594
navigating tariffs. That'd be an example.
26:02.594 --> 26:05.430
That's a great example.
26:05.430 --> 26:09.501
Let's talk a little bit about those that are homeowners,
26:09.501 --> 26:11.970
just like gas prices and what you do.
26:11.970 --> 26:13.905
These are costs that stick with you.
26:13.905 --> 26:15.974
Your mortgage in the US.
26:15.974 --> 26:19.878
Talking a little about the consumer for home builders.
26:19.878 --> 26:22.681
You're thinking of where you're going to buy a new faucet if you're gonna be
26:22.681 --> 26:25.550
renovating your house one way or the other. They're all connected within the
26:25.550 --> 26:29.154
housing story and can be quite cyclical.
26:29.154 --> 26:31.556
Do you like those areas of consumer?
26:31.556 --> 26:33.291
Buying or not?
26:33.291 --> 26:35.327
What are the headwinds slash tailwinds?
26:35.327 --> 26:39.331
I mean this story, so some of the larger companies in
26:39.331 --> 26:43.535
the U.S. Are kind of home improvement retailers, at least within
26:43.535 --> 26:46.071
the consumer discretionary space.
26:46.071 --> 26:48.373
We have cheap cleaning products, too, I've noticed.
26:48.373 --> 26:51.409
Cheap cleaning products there. Yeah, it's a good place to go for your bleach
26:51.409 --> 26:54.145
things.
26:54.145 --> 26:58.750
The story really of housing in the US has been a continued depressed
26:58.750 --> 27:00.652
environment for housing turnover.
27:00.652 --> 27:05.557
So in the U.S., housing turnovers are running at about four million homes.
27:05.557 --> 27:08.159
Pre-COVID, for reference, that was 5.5.
27:08.159 --> 27:10.161
In COVID, it went to over six.
27:10.161 --> 27:13.098
And the issue really has been rates, right?
27:13.098 --> 27:17.669
And in the us, you have this contract of the 30-year fixed mortgage.
27:17.669 --> 27:21.640
And in Canada, we can have longer amortisation periods, but you
27:21.640 --> 27:23.908
can't lock in a rate for 30 years.
27:23.908 --> 27:27.412
Which means people can move. Which means, people can't move, but also if rates
27:27.412 --> 27:29.581
go up, you feel the impact sooner.
27:29.581 --> 27:32.083
So mortgage rates have remained high in the U.S.
27:32.083 --> 27:36.121
And part of it is this inflation concern and does
27:36.121 --> 27:40.258
that mean rates need to stay high, which is also a function
27:40.258 --> 27:44.262
of energy prices. But the I
27:44.262 --> 27:48.366
guess higher mortgage rates have prevented housing turnover
27:48.366 --> 27:52.570
from picking up, and what it's meant for the stocks is the stocks were actually
27:52.570 --> 27:56.374
trading at healthy multiples in anticipation of a bit of a recovery.
27:56.374 --> 27:59.444
Right. Because rates were projected to come down.
27:59.444 --> 28:00.879
Exactly. Now this was the time.
28:00.879 --> 28:02.714
Recovery has not showed up.
28:02.714 --> 28:06.384
I mean, activity is low, the recovery has been pushed out, earnings estimates
28:06.384 --> 28:09.354
have been cut, and the stocks have come off.
28:09.354 --> 28:14.092
And, you know, I think where we are now is, hey, when is this going to happen?
28:14.092 --> 28:15.927
So that's basically the story of home improvement.
28:15.927 --> 28:18.496
So what do you do with that? I think we were speaking with one of your
28:18.496 --> 28:23.168
colleagues recently and sort of trying to get a handle that if there is
28:23.168 --> 28:27.372
to be hikes or holds or we're not sure in the US, nobody really knows, in
28:27.372 --> 28:31.309
reaction to inflation, is it a cycle or is it just sort
28:31.309 --> 28:34.212
of a hike or two? Nobody really knows.
28:34.212 --> 28:37.782
But I guess the question is what's the impact about not knowing for these types
28:37.782 --> 28:39.017
of companies?
28:39.017 --> 28:43.054
I think what you're trying to do is assess the risk reward in
28:43.054 --> 28:44.656
any scenario.
28:44.656 --> 28:45.690
Right. Yeah.
28:45.690 --> 28:50.161
Back in the fall, these stocks were trading at elevated multiples
28:50.161 --> 28:53.031
with anticipation of recovery.
28:53.031 --> 28:56.201
And you say, well, if there is a recovery, how much upside is there to the
28:56.201 --> 29:00.872
stocks? And if there's not, what does it mean and what if it takes longer?
29:00.872 --> 29:04.809
And so I guess being careful from a compliance perspective, but you'll see we
29:04.809 --> 29:06.511
haven't owned the stocks.
29:06.511 --> 29:08.379
So that's what you do.
29:08.379 --> 29:10.148
That is the expression of how we feel about that.
29:10.148 --> 29:12.050
Just trying to understand the risk reward.
29:12.050 --> 29:14.486
Yeah. Okay. It's interesting.
29:14.486 --> 29:18.490
Is one of the trends, if people have house turnover, then they renovate
29:18.490 --> 29:20.458
and spend big bucks at places like that?
29:20.458 --> 29:23.762
Exactly. And if they don't, because then there was also the argument, I think,
29:23.762 --> 29:26.598
during COVID or other times where, no, we're going to stay here, but we'll put
29:26.598 --> 29:29.367
a new bathroom in or whatever it was. That's also the case.
29:29.367 --> 29:30.368
You're right.
29:31.035 --> 29:35.140
But rates are still one of the pieces that go into that calculation.
29:35.140 --> 29:37.142
You have a new job, actually.
29:37.142 --> 29:40.311
You're still doing exactly what we're talking about, but you have also,
29:40.311 --> 29:42.380
congrats, been named to a new position.
29:42.380 --> 29:43.214
Want to tell us about that?
29:43.214 --> 29:47.285
Sure. Yes. So I've been named as the associate portfolio manager on
29:47.285 --> 29:49.320
the American Equity Fund.
29:49.320 --> 29:53.491
So I'll be working with Darren, who was recently named the lead portfolio
29:53.491 --> 29:57.629
manager on the fund. And I'm absolutely thrilled for the opportunity and
29:57.629 --> 30:01.933
to work with Darren. I think we have very complimentary
30:01.933 --> 30:05.537
styles. Both look at the world in a similar way.
30:05.537 --> 30:09.607
You know, we're trying to own higher quality businesses with durable growth
30:09.607 --> 30:13.912
runways who win market share, expand margins, earn high returns on capital.
30:13.912 --> 30:17.882
And we're to own those companies in periods where
30:17.882 --> 30:21.853
things are inflecting and there's upside to the earnings
30:21.853 --> 30:25.957
estimates over kind of medium and longer term basis, and the risk rewards are
30:25.957 --> 30:29.961
attractive. And so I think we both look at the world in a very similar way.
30:29.961 --> 30:32.263
You know my role will be to be.
30:32.263 --> 30:36.534
Basically, another funnel for him for ideas and for portfolio
30:36.534 --> 30:40.738
position monitoring, and particularly focus
30:40.738 --> 30:42.473
on the areas of consumer, of course.
30:42.473 --> 30:44.309
Yeah, I was going to ask you which area.
30:44.309 --> 30:47.779
So this is currently where you're at, but you've also done...
30:47.779 --> 30:52.116
Yeah, so I've previously covered tech, communication services,
30:52.116 --> 30:56.421
internet, a bit of media. And so within that area as well,
30:56.421 --> 30:59.991
I just hope to help Darren out and, you know, we've worked together for a long
30:59.991 --> 31:03.962
time in my capacity as an analyst, but excited to work even more closely
31:03.962 --> 31:05.496
with him in this role.
31:05.496 --> 31:07.565
That's great. When did it begin? How long ago?
31:07.565 --> 31:10.034
It was announced two weeks ago.
31:10.034 --> 31:13.371
Oh, so it's brand new. OK, well, thrilled for you, and that's great.
31:13.371 --> 31:17.308
Good luck in your new role. Thank you for talking us through some of the pieces
31:17.308 --> 31:20.545
of what's going into investments across the consumer space.
31:20.545 --> 31:24.082
What would you like to sort of leave investors with on this note, that either
31:24.082 --> 31:27.352
you're watching or the pieces that come together in the next little bit?
31:27.352 --> 31:28.753
What's a final thought from you?
31:28.753 --> 31:33.558
I think the important thing to remember is that the consumer will
31:33.558 --> 31:35.660
ebb and flow in terms of health.
31:35.660 --> 31:40.899
But what we're looking to find is those companies that are underappreciated,
31:40.899 --> 31:45.069
that are winners regardless of the backdrop and trying to
31:45.069 --> 31:49.340
separate what's happening from a macro perspective versus what's
31:49.340 --> 31:53.278
happened from a company specific perspective and own the right
31:53.278 --> 31:55.914
stocks that kind of winners there.
31:55.914 --> 31:59.384
Pizza or tacos, what would you spend your money on?
31:59.384 --> 32:02.620
You know, I love both and I need to spend more money on salad.
32:02.620 --> 32:04.289
Okay, cool.
32:04.289 --> 32:06.658
I'm going to find the investment for that, too. David Cocker, thanks for
32:06.658 --> 32:07.191
joining us.
32:07.191 --> 32:08.493
Thank you for having me.
32:08.493 --> 32:11.129
Thanks for watching or listening to the Fidelity Connects
32:11.129 --> 32:15.433
podcast. Now if you haven't done so already, please subscribe to Fidelity
32:15.433 --> 32:18.803
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32:21.639 --> 32:25.610
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32:36.521 --> 32:40.658
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32:41.960 --> 32:44.829
We'll end today's show with a short disclaimer.
32:44.829 --> 32:48.666
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,
32:48.666 --> 32:52.603
and do not necessarily reflect those of Fidelity Investments Canada ULC or
32:52.603 --> 32:56.607
its affiliates. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not
32:56.607 --> 32:59.143
be construed as investment, tax, or legal advice.
32:59.143 --> 33:01.446
It is not an offer to sell or buy.
33:01.446 --> 33:05.783
Or an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any entity or securities
33:05.783 --> 33:10.588
cited. Read a fund's prospectus before investing, funds are not guaranteed.
33:10.588 --> 33:14.158
Their values change frequently, and past performance may not be repeated.
33:14.158 --> 33:16.494
Fees, expenses, and commissions are all associated
33:16.494 --> 33:18.296
with fund investments.
33:18.296 --> 33:20.898
Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

