FidelityConnects: Driving Innovation at Fidelity: Products Built for Today’s Markets
Join Dave Bushnell, Executive Vice President of Client Experience, as he sits down with Andrew Clee and Vivian Hsu for a high-level look at markets, momentum and what’s new at Fidelity. The discussion will highlight recent fund launches, the innovation pipeline ahead and how Fidelity continues to build solutions to support advisors and their clients in a dynamic market environment.
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 Dave Bushnell, Executive Vice President of Client Experience.
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It's an exciting week here at Fidelity Investments Canada.
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I'm pleased to announce the launch of five new products, including Fidelity
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Emerging Market Opportunities Fund, Fidelity Global Concentrated
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Value Fund, and Fidelity All-Canadian ETF Fund.
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At Fidelity, we strive to innovate and bring impactful solutions to the
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life of our clients' evolving investment goals.
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Today, we'll take a closer look at these new offerings and the thinking behind
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their development. Joining me now to share what's new at Fidelity
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and how these solutions can support you and your clients are Andrew Klee,
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Vice President of Products and Managed Accounts, and Vivian
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Su, Vice President for Product Research and Development.
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Before we jump into today's conversation, a quick reminder that today's webcast
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features live French, Cantonese, and Mandarin.
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Audio interpretation.
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Okay, welcome to the two of you. Let's get started.
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We love launch day here at Fidelity, something that really has become a part
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of our culture, I'm gonna say over the last 20 years.
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Andrew, can we start with you? You've been head of product for quite a long
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time now. Can you maybe before we dive into the actual products, can
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you walk us through how do we launch products here at fidelity?
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Do you and Vivian just think them up and away we go?
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How does this process look?
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No, it's an exciting job.
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So the first thing I touch on is our global capability.
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So whenever we have a product idea, we have the benefit of looking
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what's happening in the European or the Asian markets, our counterparts down
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in Boston, or upstairs at Fidelity Canada Investment Management, the
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Canadian team that we have up on the ninth floor here.
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But we started with surveying the market, as well as what's happening in
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industry, what's happening in market.
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Is there a gap in our lineup that could address an investor need, so we always
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put the investor first. So once we have the idea and we say, okay, this is
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where we want to go, we start scanning the globe.
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And just being a private company, we're very fortunate that we have a very
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large number of seated pilots.
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A very large number of mutual funds that are offered globally, maybe not here
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in Canada. And then so it's kind of like being kid in a candy store.
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We say, this is the wish list. Here's maybe five or six candidates that can fit
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that bill. Then we do the analysis on what's best suited for a
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Canadian investor's needs, because Canadians are different than Americans or
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different than Europeans. Then, we bring it through approval process and we
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bring into market. So it's really, really exciting just in the sense that
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there's so much opportunity. And we're not pigeonholed saying there's only one
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or two mandates. There's usually five or six that we can tap into to bring the
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best product for Canadians to the market.
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I like the kid and the candy store analogy.
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So Vivian, let's go to you then to start.
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So we're going to talk about our friend Dan DuPont.
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So I was hoping you could talk about his new mandate, but maybe also talk about
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the fact that this was, I don't want to say 100% Dan's idea, but he's been
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also pitching this idea to us for, I want to stay several years,
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and he's very excited that the mandate is finally here.
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Do you want to talk that and how it came about?
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Yeah, definitely. First of all, thank you for having us here.
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For Dan's strategy, he's a portfolio manager who really needs no
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introduction. And he has a unique style
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and mandate that he has demonstrated in his other
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strategies over the course of decades.
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And so for Dan, he was looking
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for a mandate where he could sort of stretch his opportunity
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set. Go Global, so of course we know that he has Canadian large cap, he's
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been managing that for years, but it is capped to majority Canadian
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domicile content. So being able to give him a mandate where,
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kid in the candy store analogy, where he could go beyond the
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Canadian borders, Go Global find the best opportunity, and he is
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relentlessly focused on price of how much he's
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paying for these companies. So it's really bringing his unique perspective.
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In a different geographical exposure
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and still being able to, especially in today's
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market where investors nowadays are looking more beyond North America.
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Being able to provide that level of access of Dan DuPont
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to our investor, that's been really exciting.
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Let's stand down for just a second. We're always very proud of the fact that
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Canadian Larnage Cap and Dan's tenure has never had a negative year.
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That's made Dan, I would say, very popular right now, despite the fact the
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markets are every day the headline is another new high, another new oil
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is obviously going up.
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But Dan is a defensive manager, but yet for us has been very popular
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in these times. So can you maybe talk to everybody about perhaps the success of
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his line-up being more conserved and why this is offering advisors an
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opportunity? To perhaps give them an off-ramp if they're feeling this market is
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getting a little frothy.
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Yeah, definitely the market for the past like years
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has just been going up and towards the right feels like
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nothing can go wrong. Yes, we got some, you know, little speed bumps here and
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there. But Dan over the 10 year, his 10 year he's never
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wavered from his for investment pillars and people who
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know Dan knows his investment style.
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And he compliments so well with everything else that we have in the
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market. Like he has been able to demonstrate.
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Lower correlation to the market, sometimes even negative correlation to the
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market. So that is a great compliment to
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advisors and investors as they start thinking about, you know, the market is,
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yes, it's still very healthy.
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There's a lot of capex spending overall.
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Everyone's, I think, overall people are just very optimistic in general, but
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we want to make sure that we think about different kind of investor
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profiles, especially with the aging demographic too, right, like we need to be
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able to protect on that downside and Dan is the perfect manager
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for it.
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So maybe to recap for all of our advisor partners, if you're like global, but
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perhaps looking to take the car out of eighth gear, this might be a good
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opportunity. Okay, let's shift gears a little bit.
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Andrew, let us go to you. First off, I'd love you to give maybe a quick
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overview on our alts, just sort of line up.
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This is something we got into many years ago now, so it's by no means a new
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space for us, but we did what, I will say what Fidelity loves to do is we have
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our Fidelity managed portfolios, we have all in one, we have a global equity
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plus, We love to wrap things together to create a solution.
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If you want to just maybe, first off, give us a quick overview on where is
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fidelity in the great world of vaults, and then walk us through this new, I'm
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going to call it, wrapping of our alternative options.
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Yeah, sure Dave. So I guess in 2019-2020 is kind
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of when the liquid alts category was opened up to Canadian investors.
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And it was actually very fortuitous timing because the regulatory
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body allowed traditional mutual funds, they created a new category called
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liquid alternatives, but they allowed traditional neutral funds to own 10%
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in liquid alternatives.
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But that also was right before we went through the inflation tantrum,
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so like 21-22.
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I still have scars from 2022 when inflation kind of roared its big,
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bad teeth. And the 60-40 was down about 11 percent, 13
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percent, depending on the mandate, where stocks and bonds became correlated.
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But at the same time, we started building out a lineup of liquid alternatives.
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And these are diversifying assets to try and reduce correlation and
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improve sharp ratios in traditional portfolios compared to stocks and bonds.
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So we led with the multi-alt equity.
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So that was the first iteration.
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But the feedback that we received from the advisor community was, should I buy
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130.30? So for everyone's identification.
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That's going to be pretty correlated to the market, but it does have a 30%
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short book, so it does allow some diversification benefits.
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Then we have the market neutral.
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We have a number of mandates on the equity side, and advisors kept saying, what
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should I buy? Should I be buying market neutral?
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Should be buying a 130-30?
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So we introduced the multi-alt equity.
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And the key there is that's to be funded out of equities.
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And the second question we always got asked is, where should I fund it from?
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We recently launched it today, we launched the Alternative Bond as well as the
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Multi-Alt Balanced. So the way to think about this is, it's more similar to a
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60-40 traditional portfolio, but it holds a sleeve of diversified equity
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managers. So Dave Way, Brett DeLay and the Mark and Neutral, Nick and
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Max, the Canadian Systematic Long Short.
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There also includes this alternative bond.
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So if you're looking for a diversifying asset to complement something like a
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traditional 60 portfolio, we would say this is the product.
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If you're look into something to replace equity, we would look at the multi-alt
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equity. But this bond fund allowed us to get into the balance
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space for the first time, so I think it's a great diversifying fund for
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anyone that holds the traditional 60-40 portfolio in stocks and bonds, whether
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it's through F&P, a balanced fund at a competitor, or even if you're doing it
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yourself, is really to bring in that diversification benefit.
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Because we're going to touch on it in a second, but the bond market isn't
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really buying into the Fed rate cutting story.
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The 30-year treasury yield in the U.S.
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Hit the highest level since 2007, yesterday.
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So we have equity markets at all-time highs.
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We have U. S. Government bond yields above 5%.
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So we do have some constricting
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views in the fixed income versus the equity markets.
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And before we go to the fixed income, let's just stay there for a second.
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So is it safe to say for all of our partners out there, this is really keeping
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with the theme we just spoke to Vivian about with Dan, this is also a little
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less risk. This is looking to take risk off the table.
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Is that a safe thing to say?
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Yeah, I think it's interesting because when everyone hears alternatives, they
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just assume higher risk.
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When you put certain strategies together, you can actually reduce correlation
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to equity markets. And the reason for that is alternatives do behave
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differently than long-only funds in both stocks and bonds.
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And so sometimes putting two things that are negatively correlated together can
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actually reduce risk in a total portfolio.
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So this is going to run a beta that's much lower than what you'd be
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used to seeing. So somewhere probably in the 0.1 to 0.3 range to
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the equity market. So it is a diversifying asset to that degree.
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Very excited. Let's just stay with you because you gave us sort of a great
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setup. So we're launching more into the fixed income space.
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You and I were chatting before we came online.
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It must be amazing to be in the States right now with the rates hitting that.
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Is this the time you borrow? We were talking about GICs here, didn't hit too
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much over four. They're now over five.
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What do you, perhaps I mean before you get into that, what do you make of all
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this? Just if you could share with us for a minute or two and then we can get
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into the Fixed Income product.
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Well, I think at the highest level what the bond market is telling us is that
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they don't buy the inflation story.
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So oil prices are incredibly elevated.
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When you look at the oil futures curve, so the strip curve, it's
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kind of probably trading around $75 a barrel on the December contract.
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So that is suggesting that we will see some relief in the
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energy market and anyone's guess on when the conflict can end
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is as good as ours, I would say.
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But it's also important to note that that part of the oils, like the December
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contract, is fairly liquid. So I wouldn't read too much into that price.
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But what the bond market is saying is that this inflation may not be
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transitory. And it's actually quite interesting.
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When you look at the implied probability of rate cuts, if we were
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talking two months ago, I think what the market would have been pricing was two
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Federal Reserve rate cuts by the end of the year.
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That's now priced to zero and slightly biased to a hike.
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The Bank of Canada is pricing towards one or two hikes by
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the end of this year.
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So what the market is saying when you look at the yield curve as well as the
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implied probability of hikes or cuts is that the bond market isn't really
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buying that the Fed can cut, whereas three months ago they were saying they
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could.
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In contrast, we have the equity market about a hundred points off an all-time
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high in the U.S. When looking at the S&P 500.
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So there's going to be a right and wrong in the market, but
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historically when inflation does bear its teeth, the correlation between
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stocks and bonds increases.
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Longer duration fixed income funds struggle in rate hiking cycles.
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Like if you look at a core bond fund year-to-date that's long only,
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it's probably flat to down two percent because of interest rate sensitivity
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which actually makes it a really interesting time to have an alternative bond
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fund that can manage duration synthetically as well as through short
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positions. So what we did launch was a short-duration, long-short bond
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fund. And so what we see in the fixed income market right now is
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credit spreads. So the premium that you pay for a corporate bond over
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a government bond is incredibly tight.
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I think the long- short flexibility of our fund does insulate or give it the
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opportunity to behave better should we go through a spread-widening environment
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in the corporate space. But then also the ability to manage that duration
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synthetically or through physical shorts or CDS for
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that matter does remove some of the interest rate sensitivity should we be
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going through another inflation scare if that's your view on the market.
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The liquid all credit category in 2022 was actually the best
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selling category in liquid alternatives.
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Then inflation came down, the market favored equity funds again in
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the alternative space. So it's actually a really interesting time where you see
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what's happening in the equity and bond market to bring a fund with that tool
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set that a long only can't really offer from an interest rate
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sensitivity or protection from spread widening.
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So I do think it's a really an interesting time to be talking about this
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strategy.
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Vivian, before we change gears to you, Andrew, a quick question, is there ever
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a world that we see privates, either real estate, credit, you name it,
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in the multi-alt balance?
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I can't say what the future holds.
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I'd like to do some work with the regulators. So there is a liquid asset
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threshold. We've included it in our private investment pool program through
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the real estate exposure.
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So I won't say never, but there is a consideration just having
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an ETF vehicle and including privates in it from a liquidity standpoint.
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But the US is going that path.
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So they've started to incorporate private assets up to about a 50%
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degree in ETFs. So we'll see what the feature holds.
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So the answer is to be continued.
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To be continued, yeah.
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So Vivian, let's go from one guardrail right to the other one to emerging
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markets. So we have an emerging market, so just so everyone doesn't get
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confused, we have a fantastic emerging market but the downside of something
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being fantastic is sometimes you have to close it.
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So, but we're very excited that we're now opening, I'll say opening again,
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we're very excited about the new manager, we are very excited to be back in
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emerging markets. It's interesting that we've spent lots of time, I've been in
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this program many times with both of you where we've talked about the US and
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the US, it's amazing. Now we're talking about more international, more emerging
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markets, so perhaps talk to about. Why we're excited to, obviously I'll say, be
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re-opening in emerging markets and about the new mandate.
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And I will really sort of go back to the earlier point of
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diversification, right, because there's just so much buzz in the market,
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especially equity markets in the US, and a lot of investors now are looking
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for opportunities to diversify, whether it's through alternative bond,
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multi-all balance, or just other types of long-only markets.
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So we talked a little bit about Dan, and with emerging markets, again,
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it's, you markets are probably 60% of the global
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GDP, but people tend to think of EM investing
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with a little bit more risk to it.
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That is, there is some truth to it, but that's why the fidelity axis
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and the level of research that we could do boots on the ground really
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brings us that unique insight to the
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opportunities that are offered there. And if we want to sort of lean
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into that, you know, technology AI play a little but more.
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That's very much prevalent in the emerging markets as well, because nowadays
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we see that, yes, the U.S., generally the
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selection of stocks are doing really well, but all the other
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markets are supporting this technology and AI buildout
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in South Korea, in Taiwan, in China, in Japan.
16:22.648 --> 16:26.752
The entire market is rallying around this
16:26.752 --> 16:28.921
support. And so.
16:28.921 --> 16:33.158
Being able to diversify geographically a little bit further away
16:33.158 --> 16:37.096
from North America, especially as Canadian investors, there's so much of our
16:37.096 --> 16:39.732
assets already here on the ground.
16:39.732 --> 16:43.902
And being able to have more diversification, more access,
16:43.902 --> 16:48.774
and being able think about when,
16:48.774 --> 16:53.012
if there's a time in the day when that diversification is needed,
16:53.012 --> 16:57.716
when that stock bond correlation really starts hit one,
16:57.716 --> 17:01.820
the opportunity with. Alternative bond, diversifying outside of your
17:01.820 --> 17:03.889
core home bias, home market.
17:03.889 --> 17:07.826
That's what the emerging markets is really bringing to the opportunity
17:07.826 --> 17:08.727
set.
17:08.727 --> 17:12.231
And a question for both of you, and it's so fascinating to hear from John, both
17:12.231 --> 17:15.434
of you say that really our small cap story is almost similar to our emerging
17:15.434 --> 17:18.871
market story in the sense that one of our big advantages is we have more
17:18.871 --> 17:21.874
people, we cover more stocks, we have offices all over the world.
17:21.874 --> 17:26.111
So this allows you really in both, which I'll call them more under covered categories.
17:26.111 --> 17:29.748
Is that an advantage for us in I'll really say both spaces?
17:29.748 --> 17:34.053
I think so. So, I was looking at just the passive ETFs and emerging market
17:34.053 --> 17:37.556
ETF would carry about 5900 stocks.
17:37.556 --> 17:39.024
That's a lot of companies to cover.
17:41.026 --> 17:44.997
And so, when you have less sell side coverage, so I think there's probably 80
17:44.997 --> 17:47.833
plus analysts that cover Apple on the sell side.
17:47.833 --> 17:52.104
So having a differentiated view or a non-consensus view is typically
17:52.104 --> 17:56.275
how you generate alpha. Is uncovering a stone earlier than what the street sees
17:56.275 --> 18:00.212
to get it before they do, or have a differentiating view for that matter.
18:00.212 --> 18:04.583
And so that's more difficult if it's a more covered, more well-known stock.
18:04.583 --> 18:07.052
And then there's just the sheer number of stocks.
18:07.086 --> 18:11.156
And then also with what's happening geopolitically, so we can call
18:11.156 --> 18:14.760
it de-globalization, renationalization.
18:14.760 --> 18:19.098
There's a lot of terms being thrown out there, but with
18:19.098 --> 18:23.669
that many companies under coverage or that many stones to turn
18:23.669 --> 18:27.706
which facing you from a macro standpoint at a country level, and every
18:27.706 --> 18:31.844
country is negotiating its own terms, I think it's a very strong
18:31.844 --> 18:35.180
argument to be active in this space right now.
18:35.180 --> 18:39.251
Just because there's a lot that's changed in the last, since
18:39.251 --> 18:43.222
the pandemic, with regards to supply chains and things like that,
18:43.222 --> 18:47.292
and shipping, that this is an area specifically that,
18:47.292 --> 18:50.162
A, I think we have an informational advantage just because of the size of the
18:50.162 --> 18:53.699
research team. But also something that I'd be very much leaning towards to do
18:53.699 --> 18:54.700
in an active approach.
18:55.734 --> 18:58.504
I'd love for the two of you to comment and you mentioned the supply chain and I
18:58.504 --> 19:01.840
think that's just so key because I mean Vivian to your point, what's led to so
19:01.840 --> 19:05.544
many of these I'm going to say exploding markets really we've seen is you're
19:05.544 --> 19:08.180
making something be it a chip whatever but that has to go somewhere, it has to
19:08.180 --> 19:11.383
get shipped somewhere, has to go into a computer, go into whatever it is.
19:11.383 --> 19:15.020
To either of you, how important do you really feel this is where Fidelity's
19:15.020 --> 19:17.022
ecosystem really steps in?
19:17.055 --> 19:20.092
Yeah, I think especially in these markets, it's incredibly important.
19:21.560 --> 19:25.531
So I always kind of joke when I speak at my old university is that I
19:25.531 --> 19:29.234
could throw my business degree in the garbage because I grew up in the world of
19:29.234 --> 19:32.337
we're going to outsource to the lowest cost manufacturer, which in this case
19:32.337 --> 19:34.206
has always been emerging markets.
19:34.206 --> 19:36.842
And then we can do just in time shipping and we can get something across the
19:36.875 --> 19:40.245
world in 24 hours. And we're gonna build our whole supply chain around
19:40.245 --> 19:44.349
globalization. That is being challenged in today's world.
19:44.349 --> 19:48.520
And so to have a view on the vertical
19:48.520 --> 19:52.191
supply chain, on where something's manufactured, how it's getting there, the
19:52.191 --> 19:55.661
potential frictions that could exist today that didn't exist 10 years ago, I
19:55.661 --> 19:58.263
think is paramount when we're looking at this market.
19:58.263 --> 20:02.334
And unfortunately, the passive investment vehicles that track this market don't
20:02.334 --> 20:05.938
have the ability to kind of spot those landmines where you might see a supply
20:05.938 --> 20:09.875
chain interruption because of a trade negotiation that interrupts
20:09.875 --> 20:13.545
or the cost there and the domino impact to the end product.
20:13.545 --> 20:17.316
That the consumer buys to where it's actually manufactured.
20:17.316 --> 20:19.851
You might see that change over the next five years.
20:19.851 --> 20:23.088
So having the research lens that we can bring to the table I think is
20:23.088 --> 20:24.089
paramount.
20:24.523 --> 20:28.427
So let's again shift gears back sort of across a few oceans, come back.
20:28.427 --> 20:33.232
So Canada, so we're launching our all Canadian,
20:33.232 --> 20:36.435
we have it in the ETF, we're launching it in a mutual fund.
20:36.435 --> 20:40.172
I found this is one of the most interesting launches, this is a 100% advisor
20:40.172 --> 20:43.275
driven. And what I found interesting about this is we're hearing from so many
20:43.275 --> 20:46.511
advisors, I want 100% Canada.
20:46.511 --> 20:49.648
I don't want a dollar in the States, emerging markets, whatever it might be, I
20:49.648 --> 20:52.818
want what I'm going to call a pure play Canadian equity.
20:52.818 --> 20:56.555
I'm curious to get both of your thoughts on why are we seeing, I mean there was
20:56.555 --> 21:00.158
a time many moons ago that Fidelity was very much a Canadian equity shop.
21:00.158 --> 21:01.960
I'm going back about 15 years ago.
21:01.960 --> 21:05.564
This was very what we did because Canada was just so in favor.
21:05.564 --> 21:09.001
It's been at least a decade since we've had, quite frankly more since we had
21:09.001 --> 21:10.002
these conversations.
21:10.802 --> 21:14.273
So why do you think, why do the two of you think this product has gained such
21:14.273 --> 21:18.210
I'll say popularity and why we were at least asked for it to be both an ETF and
21:18.210 --> 21:20.245
a mutual fund. But maybe we'll start with you.
21:20.245 --> 21:24.182
Yeah, sure thing. So to Andrew's earlier point about, you know,
21:24.182 --> 21:28.553
geopolitics and the changing landscape, Canada is a resource-rich
21:28.553 --> 21:32.524
country, and we've seen such great performance from Canada as a
21:32.524 --> 21:36.461
country. We're really punching above our weight class, which is great
21:36.461 --> 21:38.930
to see. It's been a while.
21:38.930 --> 21:43.502
So being able to offer that pure Canadian exposure
21:43.535 --> 21:48.307
to a mutual fun format and
21:48.307 --> 21:52.744
also in a factor perspective
21:52.744 --> 21:56.715
approach and being able to offer that at a slightly lower
21:56.715 --> 22:00.819
price point relative to an actively managed equity
22:00.819 --> 22:05.290
mandate. That's been sort of our winning recipe,
22:05.290 --> 22:08.126
if you will, especially in our factor line up.
22:08.126 --> 22:12.798
And so being able bring this to the advisor audience
22:12.798 --> 22:14.566
with a mutual fund wrapper on it.
22:14.566 --> 22:18.337
We did it on US and we did it international not too long ago.
22:18.337 --> 22:22.474
And we've been getting overwhelming requests for a mutual fund
22:22.474 --> 22:26.511
version of FCCA, so all Canadian ETF, and being
22:26.511 --> 22:28.413
able to offer that.
22:28.413 --> 22:31.717
And especially nowadays, advisors are really thinking about portfolio
22:31.717 --> 22:35.754
construction. And I'm sure a lot of advisors in the audience have
22:35.754 --> 22:37.823
met with our portfolio construction team.
22:37.823 --> 22:41.860
So as they think about where they wanna take that additional
22:41.860 --> 22:46.098
risk or mitigate some risk
22:46.098 --> 22:48.433
and, you know, broaden their opportunities.
22:48.433 --> 22:52.637
Being able to have really clean building blocks, and that's how our
22:52.637 --> 22:55.574
GAA team thinks about building their portfolios as well.
22:55.574 --> 22:59.611
So being able to really clean-building blocks such as this really gives
22:59.611 --> 23:03.782
the advisor the opportunity to make a call and
23:03.782 --> 23:07.953
make their voices heard in terms of where they see the opportunities for
23:07.953 --> 23:09.421
their clients.
23:09.421 --> 23:11.990
Andrew, can I go to you two things? Can you maybe for the benefit of the
23:11.990 --> 23:14.359
audience walk through how do we build these?
23:14.359 --> 23:18.196
I'm gonna say these, we have Canada, we've International, we have the US, how
23:18.196 --> 23:19.898
do build these, like what's under the hood?
23:19.898 --> 23:21.733
So people kind of know exactly what they're buying.
23:21.733 --> 23:24.903
And then any comments you would have, I mean, I think we're all excited to see.
23:24.903 --> 23:27.672
TSX had a wonderful year last year.
23:27.672 --> 23:31.643
Very excited to to see, so any comments on just, I'll say the resurgence of the
23:31.643 --> 23:34.679
TSX and obviously if you could pop the hood for us on the building block.
23:34.679 --> 23:38.717
Yeah, so this is designed to be a core portfolio, so we have our
23:38.717 --> 23:42.954
individual factor products, so momentum, quality, value, and low volatility.
23:44.389 --> 23:47.159
What individual investment styles are factors?
23:47.159 --> 23:49.861
I use them interchangeably in investment style or factor.
23:51.096 --> 23:55.233
Does it bring cyclicality? So what I would say is factors or investment
23:55.233 --> 23:59.271
styles have historically worked over long periods of time and not all the time.
23:59.271 --> 24:02.474
And so, for example, low volatility in and upwards to the right market.
24:02.474 --> 24:06.812
It's been a big laggard. If you don't have those drawdowns, it struggles.
24:08.013 --> 24:12.083
Momentum and value have been incredible winners over the last three, four years
24:12.083 --> 24:16.555
for that matter. But when you look at the all-Canadian equity...
24:16.555 --> 24:21.026
What it is, is it's an equal weight between quality, momentum,
24:21.026 --> 24:24.963
value, and low volatility. And so what you would expect to see is some of the
24:24.963 --> 24:28.600
factors working throughout time in summer will be underperforming, but it
24:28.600 --> 24:32.571
brings you a style diversified basket. So it is designed to be a core holding,
24:32.571 --> 24:33.839
replace a passive product.
24:35.340 --> 24:38.510
And the TSX you mentioned, so it was up 32% last year.
24:38.510 --> 24:41.046
Incredible year, it was one of the best performing developed markets in the
24:41.046 --> 24:42.047
world.
24:42.781 --> 24:44.616
And the All-Canadian Equity managed to best that.
24:44.616 --> 24:47.452
So we had more than one factor working through that.
24:48.887 --> 24:51.423
So it's had a very impressive track record.
24:51.423 --> 24:55.260
I would say it removes the cyclicality because it is giving you exposure to
24:55.260 --> 24:58.930
four factors or investment styles and our expectation is they're not all going
24:58.930 --> 25:02.667
to work at the same time but over long periods of time there's empirical
25:02.667 --> 25:06.705
research, academic studies that these investment styles or factors do add up
25:06.705 --> 25:10.642
over the long run and at the price point it comes in at it's a
25:10.675 --> 25:15.313
great alternative to something like a TSX, passive indices.
25:15.313 --> 25:19.084
And then when you look at the mutual fund categories, to be a Canadian equity
25:19.084 --> 25:23.054
fund you're allowed 10% foreign exposure, and a fundamental PM loves to use
25:23.054 --> 25:27.759
that flexibility. This is constrained to be 100% Canadian equity,
25:27.759 --> 25:32.097
so it really goes after the ETF category rather than the mutual fund category
25:32.097 --> 25:34.733
while also addressing any price sensitivity you have.
25:34.733 --> 25:38.870
And it's posted a really strong track record on the ETF since it's been live,
25:38.870 --> 25:42.474
so I think it's a great core product for anyone looking for something that
25:42.474 --> 25:45.777
gives differentiated exposure in the Canadian equity market.
25:45.777 --> 25:48.113
I know we only have a few minutes left, but I would love to keep you there.
25:48.113 --> 25:51.116
You said something that I wrote down, so I want to come back to it, and that is
25:51.116 --> 25:53.585
the replacing of passive.
25:53.585 --> 25:56.655
And can you really talk about it? Because really our factor lineup was built,
25:56.655 --> 25:59.024
I'm going to say it very simply, both of you are going to make it sound far
25:59.024 --> 26:02.093
more intelligent. We did this to prove that we think factor, we can do it
26:02.093 --> 26:05.764
better than passive. So can you talk about, for instance, our international is
26:05.764 --> 26:09.467
one of our best-selling ETFs. Can either of you just make comments on how do we
26:09.467 --> 26:11.803
think this factor lineup is really going head-to-head?
26:11.803 --> 26:14.539
And I'm going to say the all-in-ones is a good example as well.
26:14.539 --> 26:17.742
Beating. Passive could maybe just both of you quickly comment on that
26:17.742 --> 26:22.013
I think if you look at the performance of our all U.S.,
26:22.013 --> 26:25.450
our all international and our all Canadian, those are our core style
26:25.450 --> 26:28.753
diversified, remove the cyclicality of an individual investment style or
26:28.753 --> 26:32.157
factor. They're all slightly, the U.
26:32.157 --> 26:36.595
S. Is slightly up performing the S&P 500, the all internationals significantly
26:36.595 --> 26:40.532
up performing, the MSCI EFI, all Canadians significantly
26:40.565 --> 26:42.801
outperforming the S&P TSX.
26:42.801 --> 26:44.903
So I think, albeit...
26:44.903 --> 26:47.472
We're not going back decades in performance.
26:47.472 --> 26:51.543
What we've been able to show is that taking a differentiated approach to
26:51.543 --> 26:54.913
cap weighted investing does have the opportunity to provide alpha.
26:54.913 --> 26:57.315
And we hope that's the case going forward.
26:57.315 --> 27:00.752
When you look at the individual factors, the two that have really worked over
27:00.785 --> 27:03.989
the last five years are value and international.
27:03.989 --> 27:07.959
So quality, I would say when we entered our journey from 2019
27:07.959 --> 27:11.396
through 22 was the dominant winner.
27:11.396 --> 27:14.199
FCIQ, which is international quality, significantly outpaced.
27:14.199 --> 27:17.802
It gave some of that outperformance back over the last few years, but when you
27:17.802 --> 27:20.538
blend them together there's empirical evidence.
27:20.538 --> 27:23.408
So Bobby Barnes, I'm sure many of you have seen, did a research paper.
27:23.408 --> 27:25.977
So you may be asking, how did you decide on equal weight?
27:25.977 --> 27:30.181
Well, he did a study saying, if you equal weight, these investment styles
27:30.181 --> 27:34.252
over a very long time period, I think give me back all the way to 85.
27:34.252 --> 27:37.856
You get a 66% batting average or a 660 batting average.
27:37.856 --> 27:41.793
So what does that mean? It outperforms the passive indices 66% of the
27:41.793 --> 27:45.397
time. So we took that research that Bobby did.
27:45.397 --> 27:47.198
We combined it into wrappers.
27:47.198 --> 27:50.235
So we have the regionals, which are the three I just mentioned.
27:50.235 --> 27:53.605
But that's also the philosophy behind the equity sleeve of our entire
27:53.605 --> 27:57.575
all-in-one lineup. Whether you're looking at FQT,
27:57.575 --> 28:01.946
the all-on-one growth, the all in one balance, we're averaging academic
28:01.946 --> 28:05.684
research. And then we're applying that fundamental approach of stock picking
28:05.684 --> 28:09.654
that Bobby's put into an index through a systematic way.
28:09.654 --> 28:12.957
So we're kind of pulling on every single part of Fidelity when he actually
28:12.957 --> 28:16.961
designed those indices. He went and sat down with the PMs and said, if you're
28:16.961 --> 28:19.898
a value portfolio manager, what are the metrics you look at?
28:19.898 --> 28:23.268
And something that interesting came out of it was, you actually need to look at
28:23.268 --> 28:25.270
banks differently than every other sector.
28:25.270 --> 28:28.973
So we would take that fundamental lens and say, we use different metrics to
28:28.973 --> 28:32.544
screen financials than we do something like an energy sector because the PM's
28:32.544 --> 28:36.781
would say, you know what, that metric and energy is very not relevant to banks.
28:36.781 --> 28:40.051
So you should look at that differently. So we're kind of pulling on all sleeves
28:40.051 --> 28:44.322
of fundamental, academic, and systematic to put these together
28:44.322 --> 28:46.057
in wrappers that I think.
28:47.158 --> 28:50.095
Have led to better outcomes for clients from what we've seen so far.
28:50.095 --> 28:54.265
Yeah, really keeping true to that fidelity DNA and being able to
28:54.265 --> 28:58.303
find incremental value in all of these factors in the way that we built it and
28:58.303 --> 29:02.607
then put it together in a very accessible one-ticket wrapper.
29:02.607 --> 29:05.777
Well, as always, we could go on and on forever, but they said we always have to
29:05.777 --> 29:09.147
keep our shows tight, so I want to thank you both for your time today.
29:09.147 --> 29:11.149
It was great to have both of you on the show.
29:11.149 --> 29:13.785
Thanks for watching or listening to the Fidelity Connects
29:13.785 --> 29:18.089
podcast. Now if you haven't done so already, please subscribe to Fidelity
29:18.089 --> 29:21.459
Connects on your podcast platform of choice.
29:21.459 --> 29:24.295
And if you like what you're hearing, please leave a review or a five-star
29:24.295 --> 29:28.266
rating. Fidelity Mutual Funds and ETFs are available by working with
29:28.266 --> 29:31.636
a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account.
29:31.636 --> 29:35.340
Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information.
29:35.340 --> 29:39.177
While on Fidelity.ca, you can also find more information on future live
29:39.177 --> 29:43.314
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and Instagram.
29:44.616 --> 29:47.485
We'll end today's show with a short disclaimer.
29:47.485 --> 29:51.322
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,
29:51.322 --> 29:55.260
and do not necessarily reflect those of Fidelity Investments Canada ULC or
29:55.260 --> 29:59.264
its affiliates. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not
29:59.264 --> 30:01.800
be construed as investment, tax, or legal advice.
30:01.800 --> 30:04.102
It is not an offer to sell or buy.
30:04.102 --> 30:08.439
Or an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any entity or securities
30:08.439 --> 30:13.244
cited. Read a fund's prospectus before investing, funds are not guaranteed.
30:13.244 --> 30:16.815
Their values change frequently, and past performance may not be repeated.
30:16.815 --> 30:19.150
Fees, expenses, and commissions are all associated
30:19.150 --> 30:20.952
with fund investments.
30:20.952 --> 30:23.555
Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

