The Upside: December’s top five market highlights
Catch up on the key moments and big stories from December, including the trending investing topics that should be on your radar.
Host Kyle Cheropita counts down the top five FidelityConnects moments, and Fidelity’s portfolio managers, subject-matter experts and special guests will share their latest perspectives on the markets and where they are finding investment opportunities to protect and grow your hard-earned savings.
Transcript
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Subtitles are AI-Generated.
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Hello everyone, happy new year and welcome to today's episode of The
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Upside. I'm Kyle Cheropita.
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Like we do every month, on this show we'll be counting down the top Fidelity
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Connects highlights from the prior month.
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Connects is first presented as a live webcast for financial professionals,
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and then released on Replay for All as a video podcast, with new episodes
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dropping daily. So let's take a look at December's big stories.
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Mid-month we welcomed head of Quant Index Solutions Bobby Barnes into our new
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Montreal studio. Bobby sat down with host Mary Lynn Bardagy, and
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in this clip, we'll hear about how Fidelity's impressive quant team in Boston
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works with the portfolio managers.
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Take a look.
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Bobby, it's quite an eventful day today.
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Both the Bank of Canada and the Fed met for the last time this year to decide
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how they go about interest rates and we'll get to it.
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But before we do, I'd like you to talk to us about the quantitative research
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team. So how did the team come about?
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What is it exactly that you do?
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And that data, is it only used for our quant products or is it
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also used by some of our fundamental portfolio managers here at Fidelity?
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Sure, yeah, there's a lot to unpack there.
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So I'll start with my favourite story, which is that, unbeknownst to a lot of
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people, Fidel has been doing quant for a very long time.
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So we hired our first one back in 1965.
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And his job was to help the firm understand how to use the computer,
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because there was only one back in those days.
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But if we fast forward, in particular, I would talk
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about how the quant took shape around the mid 2000s
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because that's more similar to what it is today.
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And so historically quant had been an independent silo separate from our
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fundamental department. And then in the mid-2000s is when they integrated the
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two together to identify stocks that are attractive
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both fundamentally and quantitatively.
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And so that's how I spent most of my career.
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I started full-time in 2009.
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Working alongside with many of the portfolio managers that Fidelity
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Canada knows and has money invested with.
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And I created the models to stock the quant models using
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the best ideas and approaches both quantitatively and fundamentally.
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And that is those insights that led to the factor ETFs
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that we ended up launching both here in Canada and in the U.S.
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Having said that, where we are now is even more integrated.
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And so, you know, depending on which specific quant team you're talking about,
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we've got teams that are like the ones that I started on.
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We call them the embedded equity team, where you're working one on one with
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quant portfolio managers.
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We also have, you know, because quant naturally is very technically in kind,
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we use our quant expertise to build technologies to
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help augment the fundamental job.
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So what that might look like would be, as you can imagine, our fundamental
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analysts who are experts in every area or industry
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across the globe, they publish tremendous amounts of research daily.
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One of the technologies we've built is an AI
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engine that will help portfolio managers summarise all
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the research that's published internally and elevate the most attractive
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ideas that they should add to their portfolio.
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So that's one way of enhancing the portfolio management
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job. We do the same thing with analysts, where if you think about the
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day-to-day job of an analyst, you're on earnings calls,
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and you're summarising the information that is presented by management on those
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calls. There are only so many hours in a day, so you can't sit in on all the
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calls. And so we've built systems that will do
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that for the analyst. And again, summarise all the relevant information to
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help speed up the number of rocks that they can uncover.
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As we like to call it. Right.
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You've also said when we spoke to Prep This Call, that you do work
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alongside portfolio managers like Will Danov, Joel Fillinghouse.
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So how do they use that research?
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You mentioned making it easier to read some of
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the Atlas reports and whatnot, but how do you look at the data that you provide
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for them?
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So the job of a quantitative analyst that are partnered
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with our portfolio managers like a Will and a Joel is twofold.
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One is to provide stock selection ideas and then
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the other is to help them with portfolio construction.
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The former, however, usually what happens, like if I'm working with
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any portfolio manager in my prior role, because now I'm managing
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the ETF business, but we still have other
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quantitative analysts who are working directly with those portfolio managers on
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a day-to-day, they will sit with a will and say,
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okay, Will, talk to me about your investment philosophy.
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How would you articulate that? And then the job of the quant is to take...
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Uh you know what's said and translate that to okay you
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know if he's if will just say it i like um you know
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companies that have you know durable modes and are compounders over
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time what does that mean quantitatively and then develop
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a model that's really custom tailored to will and his process
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And so that's what I did over the course of many years, and many of our
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quantitative analysts are still doing that today.
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And that's why that would look like, is they'll surface those ideas that are
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custom tailored to the portfolio manager based off of their investment
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philosophy, but then also help them create a portfolio based off those
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ideas, with the idea of maximising exposure to the most attractive
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stocks while minimising any unintended risks.
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In early December, Chris Kuiper joined the show.
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Chris is VP Research at Fidelity Digital Assets, and he spoke with host
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Colin Randall about the Digital Asset's rollercoaster of 2025.
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They also spoke about major regulatory developments, the Genius Act in the US
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and the Stablecoin Act here in Canada.
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And here they are with more.
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2025 has been an interesting year of announcements related
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to stablecoins from governments in the U.S.
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And of course, just recently here in Canada, the recent federal budget,
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the Canadian government unveiled a new framework that would regulate
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stablecoins. And this of course follows the passing of the Genius Act
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in the US back in July.
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Maybe we can start with the basics. What is a stablecoin and what is it used
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for?
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Right. So the simple definition of a stablecoin is it's a cryptocurrency.
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So it's like all these other tokens that sit on a blockchain.
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It runs on these crypto rails and networks, but it's,
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well, stable. Its design is to not fluctuate
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in value against a currency like the US dollar
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or the Canadian dollar. So it pegged to another currency
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or sometimes a commodity like there's gold and stuff like that.
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And therefore, it's backed by this other currency.
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It has a reserve behind it.
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Now, that's different than Bitcoin.
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There's nothing redeeming that you can redeem for Bitcoin.
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You can't bring your Bitcoin in and redeem it for something else.
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It's just Bitcoin. It's like a commodity, like something is just gold.
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Or even today, it is just a dollar.
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So the idea of the stablecoin is that it's pegged.
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It doesn't fluctuate.
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And then what is it used for? Three main things, really.
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And stable coins have been on an absolute run in terms
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of their creation. We've gotten hundreds of billions of dollars worth of stable
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coins nowadays because they found this perfect product market fit.
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I think you could argue stable coins are probably the most successful product,
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if you will, that's come out of crypto.
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And the three main uses we see it being used for is number one, trading pairs
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and DeFi. So if you're an exchange, you want to trade out
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of your position in Bitcoin or Ethereum.
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You want to go to something stable and get volatility
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off your books.
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You can go to the US dollar, but then your exchange is going to be set up to
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accept and take US dollars or Canadian dollars with the whole
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banking system, whereas it's a lot easier to just trade into
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a stable coin. These are the most highest traded pairs out
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there. And then all of DeFi uses stable coins.
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So if you're borrowing or lending on chain, that all uses stablecoins.
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And then the other two is just moving money.
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So moving money across borders is a big one.
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Remittances, much, much cheaper to move stablecoins
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anywhere in the world, rather than use a wire, ACH,
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a company like Western Union, something like that.
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Those have average fees around the world of 7%.
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And then just payments. You can use stable coins to pay for things because it
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is a stable currency, just like using the Canadian dollar or the
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U.S. Dollar.
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And there are centralised stablecoins, which are what are being announced by
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the governments. There are also decentralised stablecoins picking up on that
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conversation we were having about Solana.
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What's the difference between the two?
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Right. So what I think you're getting at is the whether or not there's a
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central issuer behind the coin and most stable
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coins today and by far the most popular ones today are all
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centralised, if you will, meaning they are issued by a
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company or an organisation.
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So this company will take in dollars people will send or wire in something like
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US dollars and then they will mint or create the
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stable coin on the block chain.
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And then they're responsible for holding that asset or investing those dollars
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to back the stable coin.
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And then, they can also do the reverse. You can send your stable coins in and
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say, I'd like to redeem this, and then they'll give you back the dollars and
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burn it. Now, that's done at a very high level with big players and
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institutions, but that's the point of a centralised issuer.
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Not as popular yet are these decentralised solutions where they do everything
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on the blockchain. So, there's no central company.
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Party issuer, it's all done with software on the blockchain with these
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smart contracts where you send in some kind of collateral like
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Bitcoin or Ethereum and they'll issue you a stable coin.
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Now because of this, they're often overcollateralized, so you have to send in
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more of something like a Bitcoin because you can't send in dollars
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usually. So they're not as popular, but mostly what we're talking about is
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centralised issuers. Now, that's different than what you noted about the
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government stuff. Whether or not the government is involved is a separate
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issue or question.
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Portfolio manager Salim Hart is no stranger to our webcast audiences.
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Here with host Pamela Ritchie, he unpacks the investment case for Global
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Microcaps and reflects on the year that was.
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Enjoy.
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Sal, when we spoke to you last, it was sort of mid-year through 2025,
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and I think it was the anniversary of this new fund that you launched, the
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one-year anniversary, we were talking a lot about trade at that point and how
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micro caps actually, to an extent, were protected because
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they often were selling to more local markets, their smaller company.
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They weren't necessarily globally trading.
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It was an interesting time then.
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Just tell us a bit about how that's either changed or some of the new parts
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that you're interested in right now.
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Yeah, I think, you know, in the first quarter, a lot
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of global markets fared quite poorly,
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especially U.S. Markets, saw pretty significant breakdowns.
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The global micro cap fund was actually up, I think, in the first quarter.
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So it kind of weathered that storm quite well.
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Partly because of what you said, that a lot of micro camps are very kind of
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niche, very geographically focused on their local markets and aren't really
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that that exposed to trades and also they're quite out of favour.
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So, you know, when you kind of see a liquidity driven sell off and
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a lot unwindings positions, micro camps are typically the first thing that
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people sell. So.
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You know, the micro cap fund actually provided some pretty good downside
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protection during that.
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But I found it, you know, as we discussed in June, I found a lot of
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opportunities, you know, especially in the U.S.
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On that dislocated sell off to deploy capital.
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And I think by the you know I started the year about a thousand basis
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underweight U. S. And kind of by mid April it was underweight by only
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300. So I wrote that back up and since then the U S markets have recovered
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well. I think you know, I've kind of taken
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again a maybe more defensive stance where I was kind of aggressively deploying
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capital in the spring.
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You know, there's there's a lot of there's lot of speculation that has crept
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back up into the markets.
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They've kind of reached all time highs again.
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And I think, you know right now I'm finding kind of more opportunities and
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higher quality names outside the US.
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And Japan's definitely continues to be a favourite, but also more opportunities
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in Europe and the UK as There's It's more fiscal stimulus they are
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and quite attractive valuation.
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It's a fascinating asset class that you've told us about before, and
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I think it has a very large universe.
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Tell us a bit about what attracts you to this area, because this
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is a fund that came from sort of, it's quite organic to the
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way you invest. You've created this fund specifically because you like taking a
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look at these companies. Tell us broadly what it means to invest in Microcaps.
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I mean, micro caps are really, I would say, the last really inefficient
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space in the public markets today.
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They're really uncovered, they're overlooked, they are illiquid and difficult
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to trade, which, which all that creates opportunities.
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And there's about seven to 8000 of them in my universe across the
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world, I kind of invest in the bottom half of the small cap indices all
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the way down into the global MSCI global lot.
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So a huge number of stocks to sort through.
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And I think the one thing I would like to point out and dispel the myth off the
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bat is the micro camps are really not as risky as people think
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they are. Yes, if you were to buy one micro cap stock, it
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can have a very wide dispersion of outcomes.
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They could easily be up 100% or down 100% because
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they have very niche businesses. But when you put them all together in a
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portfolio. Even just looking at the MSCI world
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micro cap benchmark, it's actually consistently had lower volatility
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than the MSC world small cap benchmark.
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So even just the benchmark does, and I feel like the types of stocks
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I buy, the value stocks, the out of favour names, the higher quality names
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with actually good management teams that are taking market share,
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have a lot of positive qualities and some growth opportunities.
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I feel, yeah.
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That also provides some downside protection.
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So I would like to, you know, kind of dispel the myth that you can't
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have the return associated with micro caps without risk without being very
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high risk. And I think we've seen that.
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We started the month with a look at the US political scene as they head into a
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pivotal election year. Greg Lowman, VP Digital Advocacy and Policy
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Communications and Denise Chisholm, Director Quantitative Market Strategy,
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reflected on market movements, shifting political expectations and investor
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sentiment.
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Greg, you spend much of your time discussing things on the Hill with people
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in Washington. What is sort of the discussion of the shutdowns over,
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the data has been released again, the happy days to an
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extent. What's shifted though, just on the data front within
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the shutdown? I mean, things have sort of changed, we've marched on without
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it, do we need it? What's the discussion?
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Yeah, generally speaking, I think folks need it and want it.
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I mean, that was a historic shutdown of almost 43 days.
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Anyone you speak to doesn't want to repeat that, but there's very high
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likelihood that we could find ourselves back in a data-less government world
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at the end of January in 2026, where appropriators
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are running up against fast-moving deadlines towards the holiday season and
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then how quickly January is going to come at folks.
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To get the rest of the appropriation bills completed from the Senate,
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move them to the House of Representatives, conference them, come to some
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agreement and pass a government funding bill for FY26.
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And it's just amazing that the progress is just not there.
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And largely as a result of a lot of hangups around healthcare subsidies
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expiring, the political realities of 2026 and
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some many other partisan factors.
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So we could find ourselves looking for data in the forest again in
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the end of January. I think. The shutdown, I'll leave it to economists
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to determine what was lost.
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Generally speaking, I know listening to Denise enough, you don't wanna make
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investment decisions based on shutdown volatility.
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But one thing we've noticed is, particularly at the regulatory agencies, you
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pause work for 45 days, call it, and things
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line up in the queue. And a lot of things get delayed when it comes to some
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of the more arcane regulatory relief and areas we're seeking
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with a friendlier regulatory climate in Washington.
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And so that's something that's sort of impacted at an institutional level.
17:29.915 --> 17:33.752
Not something I think you'd want to invest on, but something in the business to
17:33.752 --> 17:37.956
business world we're facing as far as regulatory priorities
17:37.956 --> 17:41.894
being held up and in a pretty significant way when you take people
17:41.894 --> 17:44.696
out of work for a month and a half.
17:44.696 --> 17:48.700
So let's go there. Let's talk a little bit about the regulatory framework that
17:48.700 --> 17:52.004
in theory, you know, the one big beautiful bills, new foundations that have
17:52.004 --> 17:56.408
been built. It's part of, I think, Denise, what you argue going into 2026
17:56.408 --> 18:00.412
will make sure that there's wind in the sails for equity markets.
18:00.412 --> 18:03.515
It's not the only piece, but it's one of them.
18:03.515 --> 18:07.719
Just talk a bit about that and what that piece of the policy picture brings
18:07.719 --> 18:10.689
to 2026.
18:10.689 --> 18:15.094
Sure. You know, the one big, beautiful bill beyond extending what
18:15.094 --> 18:19.298
was the Trump Tax Cuts and Jobs Act, his first bite
18:19.298 --> 18:23.535
at reconciliation when he was first president to
18:23.535 --> 18:26.538
lower individual rates, those needed to be extended.
18:26.538 --> 18:30.476
So that was really the engine alongside the fact that the debt ceiling
18:30.476 --> 18:33.045
was going to be reached this past summer.
18:33.045 --> 18:37.015
It really drove Republicans to coalesce in sort of unprecedented speed,
18:37.015 --> 18:40.819
signing that bill the law. Surprising everyone in Washington, really.
18:40.819 --> 18:44.823
By July 4. And you have to remember how quickly
18:44.823 --> 18:49.228
those first several months of power when you run Washington works for
18:49.228 --> 18:53.165
the Trump administration and its Republican allies, his ability to whip
18:53.165 --> 18:57.469
his caucus into line and get that through is something that's sort of eroding
18:57.469 --> 19:01.607
every day here as we get closer to 2026, just how
19:01.607 --> 19:05.777
quickly the political magic dust shifts underneath your
19:05.777 --> 19:09.982
feet. But he was able to do it and pass this significant tax reform bell.
19:09.982 --> 19:14.319
Beyond those individual rates, stuff with a lot of policy in there.
19:14.319 --> 19:18.590
A lot of stuff that eroded EV tax credits and stuff that was in
19:18.590 --> 19:22.761
the Biden administration's Inflation Reduction Act, but also a lot things that
19:22.761 --> 19:26.932
improved capital expensing and depreciation, which we've already
19:26.932 --> 19:30.836
seen play out in the market, particularly around a lot of the CapEx spent on
19:30.836 --> 19:34.907
artificial intelligence and the ability to, you know, earn
19:34.907 --> 19:38.977
cash quickly off those capital investments.
19:38.977 --> 19:43.348
And then beyond that, you've got an interesting policy that's emerged around
19:43.348 --> 19:47.286
things like lifetime savings, or sorry, youth savings accounts, what's referred
19:47.286 --> 19:51.156
to as Trump accounts. There's been a lot of news on that front this week with
19:51.156 --> 19:55.827
respect to Michael Dell contributing or committing
19:55.827 --> 19:59.932
to contribute roughly $6.2 billion into 25 million American
19:59.932 --> 20:04.102
accounts. That's a pilot programme that would start newborn saving in America
20:04.102 --> 20:06.505
from 2026 to 2029.
20:06.505 --> 20:10.609
It's something. The industry is looking at closely because we know a
20:10.609 --> 20:14.580
pilot programme won't remain a pilot programme for long if it's successful.
20:14.580 --> 20:19.218
And if there's a president Newsome or Alexandria Ocasio-Cortez
20:19.218 --> 20:23.522
or Westmore or president Vance, that
20:23.522 --> 20:25.224
programme will likely change.
20:25.224 --> 20:28.594
And in very interesting, uncertain ways.
20:28.594 --> 20:32.698
Alongside that, you know, he obviously provided a lot of his campaign
20:32.698 --> 20:36.768
promises around overtime and seniors and no tax on
20:36.768 --> 20:40.706
tips. And a variety of other credits that I
20:40.739 --> 20:44.977
think will emerge more and more in the markets in 26.
20:44.977 --> 20:49.014
A lot of people are talking about sort of the bump from that law being fully
20:49.014 --> 20:53.018
implemented going into 26, which I'll defer to Denise
20:53.018 --> 20:54.786
on those cycles.
20:54.786 --> 20:58.657
But yeah, the one big beautiful bill as it gets implemented is I think going to
20:58.657 --> 21:02.694
create a lot of tax benefits, certainly on the individual side
21:02.694 --> 21:06.298
and then also from a corporate perspective going into the new year.
21:06.298 --> 21:10.302
It's fascinating, and Denise, I'll ask you to sort of pick up on some of
21:10.302 --> 21:15.007
those pieces. You bring a lot of data and incredible analysis to
21:15.007 --> 21:19.244
everyone joining you here about where we are not necessarily in a cycle,
21:19.244 --> 21:23.448
but what corporate profitability looks like going forward and how
21:23.448 --> 21:27.686
you measure that. You take a look sometimes at the wage story, the underlying
21:27.686 --> 21:29.388
economic story.
21:29.388 --> 21:32.758
Again, just link the one big beautiful bill to some of these pieces, the
21:32.758 --> 21:35.494
corporate profitability, the ability for corporations.
21:35.494 --> 21:39.898
To pay people, to keep wages up, at least, if not growing.
21:39.898 --> 21:45.370
Just bring that policy piece into the corporate profitability story.
21:45.370 --> 21:48.473
Yeah, that was the most important part of the bill from a statistical or
21:48.473 --> 21:51.109
historical perspective is the drop in the corporate tax rate.
21:51.109 --> 21:54.880
So it wasn't a drop in this statutory rate, but it was a drop in the effective
21:54.880 --> 21:57.582
rate almost to the tune of seven percentage points.
21:57.582 --> 22:00.686
So when you look at this historically and you can measure it on the statutory
22:00.686 --> 22:04.089
rate of the effective right extra sessions, and you will come up with the same
22:04.089 --> 22:08.060
results, you do see very clear durability of earnings
22:08.060 --> 22:12.164
growth in year one and year two after those tax cuts.
22:12.164 --> 22:15.734
Again, if you sort of step back and say, okay, let's look at history, what
22:15.734 --> 22:19.738
usually happens in year one, you see a boost in terms of CEO confidence.
22:19.738 --> 22:21.773
Check the box. We just saw that.
22:21.773 --> 22:24.176
We did see a boos from recessionary levels.
22:24.176 --> 22:28.580
And then you see the durability of real GDP growth and earnings growth into
22:28.580 --> 22:32.751
that second year. So if you're thinking about the cycle, I always think of
22:32.751 --> 22:36.788
2022 as the ultimate low of the cycle because as much as it
22:36.788 --> 22:40.759
wasn't a session. It was either a very hard, soft landing or a very soft,
22:40.759 --> 22:44.963
hard landing, but I think we landed because real wages were negative
22:44.963 --> 22:47.933
in some ways, very typical of a recession.
22:47.933 --> 22:51.636
The stock market contracted 30%, which was right in line with median
22:51.636 --> 22:55.640
recessions. And we had a proper profits recession of about seven to 10%,
22:55.640 --> 22:59.644
which on top of inflation, sort of checked the box from a nominal
22:59.644 --> 23:01.380
earnings recession perspective.
23:01.380 --> 23:05.550
We didn't see massive declines in real GDP, and we certainly didn't see any
23:05.550 --> 23:09.654
decline in the unemployment rate. So we almost had a full employment recession.
23:09.654 --> 23:13.625
But ex that weird quirk of the cycle, I do think a lot of
23:13.625 --> 23:17.796
the contraction in 2022 set the stage for the beginning of what
23:17.796 --> 23:22.467
could be a 10 year earnings durability and GDP cycle.
23:22.467 --> 23:26.138
So into going into 2026, do you say, well, are we at the end?
23:26.138 --> 23:29.975
Are we at beginning? Is there anything that can shift the odds to make this
23:29.975 --> 23:33.945
more durable? And I think we have a trifecta of tailwinds, one of
23:33.945 --> 23:38.216
which you mentioned, which is the One Big Beautiful Bill Act to say that it
23:38.216 --> 23:40.919
usually cements durable earnings growth.
23:40.919 --> 23:45.023
We also have a more friendly Fed in terms of cutting rather than on hold
23:45.023 --> 23:49.261
or hiking. And we also have that decline in energy prices, which is
23:49.261 --> 23:53.098
usually related to inflation, which is also usually related to corporate
23:53.098 --> 23:57.469
profits. So I think, we have lot going into 2026 to suggest
23:57.469 --> 24:01.173
this earnings recovery is, in fact, durable.
24:01.173 --> 24:05.377
Which justifies the current valuations we have and makes it very likely
24:05.377 --> 24:09.214
that we remain in the second loopable market.
24:09.214 --> 24:13.218
Our final clip today features institutional portfolio manager Ilan Kolet
24:13.218 --> 24:15.987
from Fidelity's global asset allocation team.
24:15.987 --> 24:19.624
Alain and Pamela Richie touched on a variety of topics, including in this clip
24:19.624 --> 24:24.062
Europe, emerging markets, the overweight and underweights in GA's funds,
24:24.062 --> 24:29.501
and a teaser to their January white paper on if we're in an AI bubble.
24:29.501 --> 24:33.738
Tell us about EFI more broadly, so taking us largely
24:33.738 --> 24:36.208
to Europe, but other places as well.
24:36.208 --> 24:41.179
The international story is something that you were well ahead of, caught it.
24:41.179 --> 24:44.583
The question is sort of where does it go from here, does it continue?
24:44.583 --> 24:47.486
How are you allocated and invested towards that?
24:47.486 --> 24:51.857
Yeah, so right now, EFI, the IFA region,
24:51.857 --> 24:55.527
anyway, if we talk about Europe, is the largest overweight on the equity side
24:55.527 --> 24:59.498
of our funds. And that's been there really since the start of this
24:59.498 --> 25:03.535
year or the early part of this year when we thought, you know
25:03.535 --> 25:07.739
what, valuations are an important input into our
25:07.739 --> 25:11.810
asset allocation investment process. But, valuations alone are
25:11.810 --> 25:16.715
not enough to drive an allocation decision.
25:16.715 --> 25:19.117
It has been forever. For a very long time. It's cheap.
25:19.117 --> 25:20.986
It's been the story forever.
25:20.986 --> 25:22.654
I mean, same as emerging markets, right? Sure.
25:22.654 --> 25:26.258
And I joked that we've been waiting a long time for emerging markets to emerge,
25:26.258 --> 25:30.428
right. But look at them now. But look them now, and the same story
25:30.428 --> 25:33.732
I would say is there in Europe, attractive valuations.
25:33.732 --> 25:38.036
And I heard this when I was a researcher working down in Boston, we do this
25:38.036 --> 25:40.805
Europe research trip, and I'd hear this every single year, attractive
25:40.805 --> 25:43.742
valuations, and we're about to turn the corner with these great structural
25:43.742 --> 25:47.913
reforms. Every single year we'd hear the same thing, and every year
25:47.913 --> 25:52.717
Europe would just get completely steamrolled by US performance.
25:52.717 --> 25:55.820
And as asset allocators, we have to think in these relative terms.
25:55.820 --> 25:59.858
So for us, what an
25:59.858 --> 26:03.762
attractive valuation requires is some sort of catalyst.
26:03.762 --> 26:06.298
Okay. And earlier this year... To diversify, essentially.
26:06.298 --> 26:06.398
Like to...
26:06.398 --> 26:09.601
Right, like to sort of re-rate those stocks, right?
26:09.601 --> 26:13.338
And we believe what we saw earlier this year was that catalyst, right, Europe
26:13.338 --> 26:17.475
removing extreme fiscal restraint, defence
26:17.475 --> 26:19.744
spending kind of hooking higher.
26:19.744 --> 26:22.914
And the performance in Europe this year has not just been defence, right.
26:22.914 --> 26:25.183
It's been the banks as well.
26:25.183 --> 26:27.686
And so we've leaned into that this year, and that's been additive to the
26:27.686 --> 26:33.725
performance as well, but to your question, how long can this be sustained?
26:33.725 --> 26:35.927
Is the gas out of the tank in terms of Europe?
26:35.927 --> 26:39.197
Because for the last couple of months, Europe's moved sideways, right?
26:39.197 --> 26:40.966
There was a lot of return, but it's moved side ways.
26:40.966 --> 26:42.734
It was cheap, got bought.
26:42.734 --> 26:45.937
Yeah, it's sort of flattened out.
26:45.937 --> 26:50.642
This is where working with our researchers is so critical because as
26:50.642 --> 26:54.679
you know, the funds move incrementally and over time,
26:54.679 --> 26:58.683
if we see different signals, if you see that the wind has come out of
26:58.683 --> 27:03.221
the sails of Europe based on our research, that overweight would change.
27:03.221 --> 27:06.491
But as of right now, it is still a pretty significant overweight.
27:06.491 --> 27:10.228
So interesting. So 2026 is a story.
27:10.228 --> 27:11.596
Europe is in it significantly.
27:11.596 --> 27:15.166
And Europe was, to be fair, I mean when people used to ask me about Europe, I'm
27:15.166 --> 27:18.169
not sure if I can say this, but when people use to ask about Europe I would say
27:18.169 --> 27:21.239
Europe's a wonderful place to visit and a terrible place to invest.
27:21.239 --> 27:25.243
So I love going to Europe, but anyone who's allocated to Europe instead
27:25.243 --> 27:28.346
of the US over the last 10 years is poorer for it.
27:28.346 --> 27:32.017
So let's go to AI and discuss...actually, you're going to tell us a little bit
27:32.017 --> 27:35.620
of...give us a sneak preview of a report that you're working on.
27:35.620 --> 27:39.391
I think it's not due out to the new year, but the question for months and most
27:39.391 --> 27:41.926
of this year probably is, is AI a bubble for sure?
27:41.926 --> 27:43.828
I know that's something you'll start with.
27:43.828 --> 27:47.999
So let us go there because it's part of the catalyst question for diversifying
27:47.999 --> 27:50.402
around the world and anywhere else really.
27:50.402 --> 27:54.472
Yeah, I mean, and again, you know, these thought leadership
27:54.472 --> 27:58.510
papers that we publish once a quarter, I know they're very well read, and we
27:58.510 --> 28:02.080
take a lot of time and a lot of effort to pull in research and our latest
28:02.080 --> 28:04.416
thoughts to really address the questions we're getting.
28:04.416 --> 28:07.152
I spent a tremendous amount of time on the road this year.
28:07.152 --> 28:08.653
I mean the most I've ever spent in my life.
28:08.653 --> 28:10.221
So, like how much?
28:10.221 --> 28:13.625
I'm at, at the end of next week, I'll be at 90 flights.
28:13.625 --> 28:15.460
Oh gosh, for 2025.
28:15.460 --> 28:19.798
And I think I'll hit 90 nights in Marriott's this year, so I
28:19.798 --> 28:24.769
don't know if that's a good thing or a bad thing. Probably a bad, but you
28:24.769 --> 28:28.740
know, the conversations that I've had with thousands of advisors coast to coast
28:28.740 --> 28:31.843
inform what we choose to answer in these papers.
28:31.843 --> 28:34.979
Our goal in these papers is...
28:34.979 --> 28:38.683
We want to answer exactly the questions that we're getting in a jargon-free
28:38.683 --> 28:42.987
manner, right? So using the Bloomberg way, so to speak,
28:42.987 --> 28:47.092
you know, jargon free and in the most accessible way possible
28:47.092 --> 28:49.160
so that these are helpful to advisors.
28:49.160 --> 28:53.231
And even in the case that, you now, an advisor may disagree with our view,
28:53.231 --> 28:57.469
at least they fully understand why we have the view.
28:57.469 --> 29:00.605
And so one of the questions we've been getting quite a bit is, is AI a bubble?
29:00.605 --> 29:04.075
And for this, you know, we have to look at...
29:04.075 --> 29:08.012
Again, the researchers that we work with, one of the pillars in our
29:08.012 --> 29:10.815
investment process is a bottom up.
29:10.815 --> 29:13.818
So myself, David Wolf, David Tulk, we all come from the macro world.
29:13.818 --> 29:16.187
You all incidentally come from Canada as well.
29:16.187 --> 29:18.022
That's right. Right. So, you know, tw- That's right.
29:18.022 --> 29:22.627
So 20 years of experience roughly combined at the Bank of Canada and Bloomberg.
29:22.627 --> 29:26.865
But what companies are saying and doing
29:26.865 --> 29:28.700
matters just as much, right?
29:28.700 --> 29:32.871
I mean, as an economist, it's a bit humbling to say what a company is
29:32.871 --> 29:38.009
saying and doing today shows up in the economic data six or eight weeks later.
29:38.009 --> 29:42.113
And earnings revisions, particularly in the US, have been pushing
29:42.113 --> 29:45.683
higher. And, for that reason, we, you know...
29:45.683 --> 29:50.755
We have to really push back on this idea that
29:50.755 --> 29:54.292
the AI expansion is strictly a bubble, right?
29:54.292 --> 29:58.496
It could be this sort of once-in-our-lifetime productivity innovation that
29:58.496 --> 30:00.431
we can't necessarily lean away from.
30:00.431 --> 30:04.369
So in terms of what that means for positioning, we are underway to the
30:04.369 --> 30:06.771
US equities right now, but it's a bit nerdy.
30:06.771 --> 30:10.742
But we can use futures overlays to short out specific
30:10.742 --> 30:14.813
parts of the market. You know, perhaps small cap, right, which are not overly
30:14.813 --> 30:19.217
profitable, and keep great managers like Will Danoff,
30:19.217 --> 30:24.088
Mark Schmale, who are invested in the AI themes, fully invested,
30:24.088 --> 30:27.992
and benefit and still, we can still benefit in our funds from that, from that
30:27.992 --> 30:28.827
theme.
30:28.827 --> 30:33.064
Without having to be all in on that particular discussion.
30:33.064 --> 30:36.968
But you wouldn't be there, for instance, if you thought, which they aren't,
30:36.968 --> 30:38.036
investing in a bubble.
30:38.036 --> 30:42.173
No, exactly. And I mean, again, we work really closely with
30:42.173 --> 30:46.444
our underlying managers and our researchers to examine this very closely, but
30:46.444 --> 30:50.381
it speaks to the importance of having diversified sources of returns,
30:50.381 --> 30:54.252
right? So I mean our concern really in the U.S.
30:54.252 --> 30:58.323
Is I would say more to do with some of the underpinnings of
30:58.323 --> 31:02.260
exceptionalism coming under attack, right, a politicised Fed,
31:02.260 --> 31:06.231
what that might mean. And for us, that's really also
31:06.231 --> 31:10.168
resulted in... A significant change in how we're positioned around the Canadian
31:10.168 --> 31:12.337
and U.S. Dollar.
31:12.337 --> 31:14.973
Thanks for watching, I hope you enjoyed those clips.
31:14.973 --> 31:18.776
Each clip was from a full 30-minute video podcast, which are available on
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Also, here at Fidelity Investments Canada, we're putting out fresh content
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I'm sure there is something there for everyone.
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Thanks for watching today, and I hope you'll join us again on the Upside.
31:51.676 --> 31:52.844
I'm Kyle Sharapada.
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32:43.094 --> 32:46.831
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants
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