FidelityConnects: Global Asset Allocation: Positioning for 2026

David Tulk, Portfolio Manager, shares the latest insights from the Global Asset Allocation team. David will comment on Fidelity Managed Portfolios fund positioning, including recent underweights and overweights, and address how key macroeconomic themes may be shaping their outlook in the first quarter of 2026.

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Hello and welcome to Fidelity Connects, I'm Pamela Richie.

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It is only the sixth day of 2026 and markets

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are already giving us plenty to unpack.

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Fidelity's global asset allocation team is watching closely

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to see how headlines unfold and ultimately the market

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reaction to them.

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So which themes are top of mind with our next guest and

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what's driving his optimism around Canada?

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Joining us here today to share some of the latest insights

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from the GAA team is portfolio manager David

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Tull. Well, welcome to you, David.

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Happy New Year to you.

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Happy New Year to you. It's great to be here.

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Delighted to have you join us and we'll invite everyone to

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join us in either official language live French audio

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interpretation is available for you as well

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Let's begin with the state of

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affairs. There are lots of words to describe it But one

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of them is sort of regime change new world order

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In a word, is it changing how you

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invest?

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No, it doesn't. Fundamentally, we're still doing our

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process. We're still really focusing on diversification.

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We're finding lots of opportunities around the world,

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trying to play a lot of these macro themes.

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And I think as we start the year, I mean, I think the setup

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is pretty good. So we had a good year last year.

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It's been a couple of years, especially for the 60-40

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portfolio construct, a really strong returns.

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And that is given largely through equities, but bonds

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have also done reasonably well in the last year or so.

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So. I think it's just one of those years that it starts

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good, but I know there's lots of little roadblocks and lots

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of little speed bumps that we're going to have to overcome,

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which I know we'll be able to unpack.

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But as it starts right now, I think our primary view on

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the world is fairly optimistic, and we'll do

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our best to try to stick handle around some of the things

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that will inevitably crop up this year.

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Last year, ahead of the move,

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really, you were making sure that you were allocated

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internationally.

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At the very beginning of last year, that was a

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head-scratcher for many, or not what you were doing, but

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just it wasn't something on people's playlists at that

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point. It worked out incredibly well.

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Is that an area that you'll look at as strongly this year?

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Yeah, I think it's a trend that will start to become better

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appreciated, especially among U.S.

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Investors. So that was really one of the big surprises last

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year and was one of really large portfolio shifts that we've

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talked about before, is that we started last year with a

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pretty hefty overweight to the U.

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S. And to the US dollar, and as the early part of last year

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unfolded, it became very obvious to us that that wasn't the

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right positioning. So we made some pretty significant

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strides to move to being underweight the U S dollar and

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also underweight U S equities.

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Than I think. As we start this year, I mean, that was

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clearly the right move to make last year.

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But as we start this year I think that that again, that

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trend could certainly continue because I think a lot of the

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things that are happening under the surface continue to be

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U.S. Dollar negative.

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And I think as that theme starts to become better understood

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in the market, you might also see other

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investors try to position for that.

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And that could be an extension of.

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The type of move that we have seen in the currency because,

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you know, the US dollar is a longer term sort of cyclically

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driven currency and these long trends, they can

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last five, 10 years.

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So I think we're still in the early stages of that.

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And again, a lot of that's catalysed by what we're seeing

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out of the US administration and a lot of the stuff that

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we're seen outside of the U.S. As well.

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When we think of the word broadening and a broadening trade,

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do you think that should be extended to an

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international trade? Because often we'll talk about sort of

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the other 493 and so on, but a broadning trade

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means what?

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Yeah, I mean, there's definitely the narrow definition of

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broadening, which is self-evident of a contradiction.

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But you think of it as in terms of just within the United

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States, where it's obviously been led very much by

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AI-focused companies and growth more generally.

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That broadens into value and small cap, and we

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can unpack that certainly. But I think the way that we've

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thought primarily about broadening is largely outside

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from the US to the rest of the world.

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So again, the positioning tilts that we have

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is still to be. You know, modestly underweight the United

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States, seeing more opportunity in Europe and Asia and

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emerging markets, and as you mentioned in the intro, looking

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more favourably towards Canada as well.

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So let's sort of insert the discussion of interest rates

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into a dollar story, lots of other

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things as well, because it appears, and I think you have

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commented, or others have certainly have commented on the

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fact that if we go back to which country or

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region is in which part of the cycle, the US is in quite

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a different point, and Canada, for instance, really

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got going quickly on cutting rates, and now

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here we are, it appears to be at the end of the rate cutting

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cycle.

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How does that bode for investing?

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No, absolutely. So I think in the United States, I mean,

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this is also something that really keys back to the dollar

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story, too. So, you know, you've seen the Federal Reserve

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cut a couple of times, and their policy rate, it's

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fairly close to what I would say is generally neutral.

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And I think it's consistent with what the

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wider economy is suggesting they can do.

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So they could cut a couple more times.

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But generally speaking, they're in the right neighbourhood.

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But I think the key risk that will unfold, and this year

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is especially relevant, is that you're going to get a new

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Fed chair. And we're going through the

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candidates right now and there's a lot of jockeying taking

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place both on Twitter and behind the scenes.

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But, you know.

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It's like a presidential run for something, it's going on

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forever.

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Yeah, no, but we've been given some notion that

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there should be a decision that's made in the next couple of

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weeks or fairly early in the year.

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So what we'll end up seeing, I think, is then, again,

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the risk that... Monetary policy isn't being set

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exclusively for economic reasons, but there's now enough

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political overlay.

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Because as we've heard from the administration, there's a

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very clear desire to see lower interest rates, regardless of

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what's going on in the economy.

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So if the successful candidate for the Fed chair

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is sympathetic to that narrative, then again, you start

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to see interest rate cuts that, again, are

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largely driven by political considerations.

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And then that has a very clearly implication for

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the direction in the currency. Not only is it

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raising fears of a lack of central bank independence,

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which again is sacrosanct to a well-functioning currency,

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but also again just speaks to that interest rate

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differential that's beginning to shift further away

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from the US dollar.

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And then that brings us to Canada, where as you mentioned,

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the Canadian rate cut story, I think that's more or less

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done unless something really goes wrong with the economy.

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So if you actually look at the way the market is priced

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today, there's some probability the next move by

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the Bank of Canada will be a hike.

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And part of that was catalysed on a really strong GDP

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report. But again, when you look at where things sit,

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Canada moved early and moved by a lot.

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And now we're kind of working our way through a lot of the

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reasons why the Bank of Canada cut.

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So if the economy continues to remain on track...

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At some point, you can imagine that that would then

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necessitate the Bank of Canada to potentially take some of

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that stimulus away.

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Again, not tomorrow, not even in the first half of this

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year, most likely. But at some point it does serve as a

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reminder that central banks are inevitably cyclical.

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And at some you're going to start to see the other side of

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that. And that's one of the things that I think maybe not a

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2026 story globally, but as a forward-looking

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investor, you just have to keep that in the back of your

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mind and not be too conditioned to just think of that

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central bank's move in one way and cuts to cut interest

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rates.

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And if that is later in the year, we think

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that might jive with towards the end of

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a trade talks, NAFTA, lots of different words for

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it, is being renegotiated.

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We know that we're kind of entering that right now.

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And probably some geopolitical moves will

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come to bear in those talks.

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We don't know to what extent. But I guess just tell

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us a little bit about the idea of...

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Whether free trade as we know it, I think a lot of people

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think that's over, what might it be replaced

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with just at this point, or what are some of your working

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models?

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Yeah, I think in this sense, when we look at Canada

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and the negotiations around NAFTA, that could be one of

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those really big stumbling blocks that we encounter this

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year. So this is the year for the formal renegotiation

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of that agreement. Obviously, there's been a lot of stuff

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that's happened behind the scenes, and there's a lot tariff

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applications and then removals and a lot sort of sabre

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rattling on that that I think we're we've we've been

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unfortunately accustomed to at this stage, but this is

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really the year where a lot of that comes out.

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And I think what at minimum we will need to brace for a fair

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bit of volatility just reopening that trade

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debate that we thought that might have been sort of pushed

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to the side as the US was focused on other

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countries. But it is unfortunately Canada's turn and

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Mexico's turn as well in the spotlight this year.

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So that's something that we'll have to be watching very

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carefully and try to figure out where the.

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The rules end up landing and I think ultimately

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what you really want from a Canadian perspective is just

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clarity. So whether it's tariffs of this or tariffs

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of that on this industry or that industry, whatever it ends

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up being, it just needs to be written down and put into

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place because that to me really addresses the key source

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of uncertainty and that's the hardest thing for corporations

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or businesses to really operate in as a world of uncertainty

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when you're trying to make investment decisions and hiring

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decisions when you don't know with the...

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Rules of the game are when it comes to trade.

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But then if you think about the US and globalisation more

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generally, and this is another important part to think

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about, is that I don't think we're going back to a

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globalised world.

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And that is something that, again, we've seen in bits and

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pieces in recent years. And it really comes down to the

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notion of how the US administration views as tax

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policy. Because if you remember, a tariff is just one

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form of a tax. So it can be used in

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conjunction with you know, household taxes,

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corporate taxes, but really it's part of the mix, and it

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seems...
It's good to remember it that way, it's one of the tax

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leavers.

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Exactly, and the desire for this administration is to

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primarily use that tariff lever to raise revenue,

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and they've raised a fair bit of revenue, to then fund other

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tax cuts more domestically.

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And that's kind of consistent with that sort of America

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First policy that we've seen recently.

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<b>Hello, investors. We'll be back to the show in just a moment.</b>

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<b>else you get your podcasts. Now back to today's show.</b>

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Do you think that it also, I mean, as we move to a

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less globalised world, one of the questions that is

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being asked is what either new trade deals

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or relationships or even, you know, country ownership

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of pieces of companies looks

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like? I mean we've seen a few examples of it.

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It clearly is something that the Trump administration is

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okay with, at least, in some cases.

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From an investor's perspective, is there anything to

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think about that? Is it in some way dilutive?

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Does it change the policy of a company itself because

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new people are owning it?

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How do you look at that?

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When it comes to the individual companies, this is where,

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again, we really rely on our building block managers who are

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doing the security selection and trying to navigate a lot of

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those risks as they apply to individual countries.

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But if you take a step back, or companies, I should say, and

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if you took a step and look at the country and the regional

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allocations, again it's just something that you really think

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of as reinforcing the desire for diversification.

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So you don't want to have all of your eggs in one basket,

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because ultimately you can get these policy decisions that

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can really cause a great deal of stress that aren't

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entirely predictable.

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And when we think about how we've allocated accordingly,

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again, we're trying to get that diversification across

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regions. We also appreciate that there can be more

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regional stories that we can try to invest in.

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So when the world was very globalised and moved in sort of

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one synchronous cycle, it's kind of hard to distinguish

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between regions because they all kind of move together.

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But now if you've got more fractures between countries,

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you can have a Europe idiosyncratic story that you can

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invest in. You can have something that's unique to emerging

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markets or different subparts of that emerging market

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basket. In that as an acid allocator.

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Is a lot of fun because you can find these stories that can

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trade differently than what would be the case if you're just

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following one global cycle.

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If you're able to follow international

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cycles, not one global cycle, spread out a bit,

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broaden a bit.

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What does it mean to the fears, perhaps from your

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perspective, another investor's perspective, about the AI

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bubble bursting, whether it is a bubble where there isn't?

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If you are not so concentrated in some

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of the big names, or maybe even some of the secondary

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names, because you can be more global about it, does that

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spread out that risk?

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I mean, it does to some extent, but I think ultimately that

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is really an important theme that we'll also see unfold

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this year. And it's not calendar year specific per se,

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but as this investment takes place within AI,

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ultimately you need to find the use case to try to monetize

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a lot of this. Because as we've talked about in the past,

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we've... Spent a tonne of money on CapEx.

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And when we talk to our analysts, and they're closer to

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these companies than I ever will be, they speak to

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that spending as being motivated by competition

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among the companies, and still justified economically and

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financially, but at some point, the longer this runs, you're

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gonna need to see that monetization take place.

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So it's something that we're watching.

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We've invested within the US, specifically around

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that theme. And ultimately there, we're really relying on

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those managers and those analysts that I spoke about,

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they're the ones that are going to give us a signal.

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In terms of saying, well, this has run too far, or this has

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potentially further to run.

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And that's something that we will take and could potentially

13:53.720 --> 13:56.200
be a catalyst for a pretty sizable change in our

13:56.200 --> 13:58.760
positioning, just because it is a really important theme

13:58.760 --> 14:01.320
that we'll really define this year, and we want to be able

14:01.320 --> 14:04.400
to be on top of it, literally every day.

14:04.400 --> 14:07.400
Are you more exposed to it or are more interested

14:07.400 --> 14:10.680
in it? You'll find the right word for this, but the energy,

14:10.680 --> 14:13.920
the sort of picks and shovels, the data centre, build out

14:13.920 --> 14:17.000
beyond the technology companies that are

14:17.000 --> 14:19.320
leading the way, and they're also some of the word data

14:19.320 --> 14:22.360
centre owners as well, but what piece of

14:22.360 --> 14:25.840
it are you most interested in, most exposed to?

14:25.840 --> 14:28.680
Yeah, at this point again, it's largely down to our managers

14:28.680 --> 14:31.720
who look at the entire sort of universe of AI plays

14:31.720 --> 14:35.160
either directly or tangentially or every combination

14:35.160 --> 14:37.440
thereof. And they're the ones that will pivot their

14:37.440 --> 14:40.160
individual portfolios accordingly.

14:40.160 --> 14:42.840
So using global innovators and listening very carefully to

14:42.840 --> 14:45.280
what Mark Schmelle is saying and what he sees and where his

14:45.280 --> 14:48.440
opportunities are. So that does, again, two things for

14:48.440 --> 14:49.960
us. First, it gives us.

14:50.000 --> 14:52.240
All the security selection he's able to bring into the

14:52.240 --> 14:55.040
portfolio, but also it's a signal to us to say that, okay,

14:55.080 --> 14:57.280
something's changing here, that we need to maybe make a

14:57.320 --> 15:00.360
larger broader tilt either out of those

15:00.400 --> 15:02.040
plays or out of the U.S.

15:02.080 --> 15:04.600
Or anywhere else. And we'll see how that unfolds, but that's

15:04.600 --> 15:05.760
what we're trying to balance today.

15:05.760 --> 15:08.560
I mean, one of the things I think he says, actually, is

15:08.560 --> 15:09.560
energy.

15:10.320 --> 15:13.760
And over the weekend, because the US has gone into Venezuela

15:13.800 --> 15:16.280
in the way it has, one of the questions is there will be

15:16.320 --> 15:19.240
more energy on the market for North America, at least, and

15:19.280 --> 15:20.280
maybe beyond that.

15:21.400 --> 15:23.640
But the other argument is we're going to need it no matter

15:23.680 --> 15:26.920
what. How do you parse through that piece of the discussion?

15:26.960 --> 15:29.040
Yeah, I mean, this is the debate that a lot of people are

15:29.080 --> 15:32.520
having right now, that if you do bring Venezuelan crude oil

15:32.560 --> 15:34.840
into market over the next little while, then there's no

15:34.880 --> 15:36.400
guarantee that's going to happen tomorrow.

15:36.440 --> 15:39.160
There's a lot infrastructure that needs to take place and a

15:39.200 --> 15:41.280
fair bit of money that will need to be spent and that won't

15:41.280 --> 15:44.280
happen instantly. But it does raise the concern, is this a

15:44.320 --> 15:45.760
direct competitor to...

15:45.760 --> 15:47.640
You know, Canadian crude oil given that there are similar

15:47.640 --> 15:50.680
grades. And we spent a fair bit of time

15:50.680 --> 15:52.240
thinking about that as well.

15:52.240 --> 15:54.440
And I think the first observation to make is that, again, if

15:54.440 --> 15:56.560
the global economy holds up this year, there will be a lot

15:56.560 --> 15:58.320
of demand for energy.

15:58.320 --> 16:02.120
And that will be beneficial both to newfound

16:02.120 --> 16:05.200
Venezuelan capacity but also existing Canadian capacity

16:05.200 --> 16:08.080
and also with the AI trend, as long as that's still

16:08.080 --> 16:10.720
happening in the background and can be positive for

16:10.720 --> 16:13.040
commodity prices, because we really haven't seen oil prices

16:13.040 --> 16:15.280
respond in the same way as we've seen other commodities.

16:15.280 --> 16:18.400
So. There is some at least historical evidence to suggest

16:18.400 --> 16:20.520
that oil could potentially catch up.

16:20.520 --> 16:22.760
So, you know, tangentially that's one of the reasons why

16:22.760 --> 16:25.000
we're a little bit more optimistic on Canada.

16:25.000 --> 16:27.360
But also when you just think about that competition between

16:27.360 --> 16:30.320
different countries when it comes to providing crude, a lot

16:30.320 --> 16:34.200
of the structure there that is kind of nuanced,

16:34.200 --> 16:37.560
but Venezuela can do a lot to access Gulf Coast refineries,

16:37.560 --> 16:40.280
but a lot the refinerries in the Midwest are still very much

16:40.280 --> 16:42.200
linked by pipeline into Canada.

16:42.200 --> 16:42.560
So there are.

16:42.560 --> 16:43.400
Which is where we're selling.

16:43.440 --> 16:45.640
Exactly. So there's a little bit of a distinction there.

16:45.640 --> 16:48.480
But it also, again, serves as another reminder that Canada,

16:48.520 --> 16:49.800
you know, we can't rely on the U.S.

16:49.840 --> 16:52.200
To anywhere the same degree as we would have in the past.

16:52.200 --> 16:55.120
So if there's an additional catalyst to build pipelines to

16:55.160 --> 16:58.360
tidewater on the West Coast and to think about alternative

16:58.400 --> 17:01.000
trading partners as well, not just within crude but more

17:01.000 --> 17:03.560
generally, this was another really clear example of saying,

17:03.600 --> 17:05.840
well, you know you need to think a little more holistically

17:05.880 --> 17:07.560
about how you trade with the world.

17:07.560 --> 17:10.600
And steadily reduce your reliance on the U.S., and

17:10.600 --> 17:13.160
we had a federal budget late last year that helped to sort

17:13.160 --> 17:15.600
of at least catalyse some of those priorities.

17:15.600 --> 17:18.120
And again, this will take time, but when you look at the

17:18.120 --> 17:21.080
delta and the rate of change, it is starting to move in the

17:21.080 --> 17:23.880
right direction, and that's another reason why we want to

17:23.880 --> 17:26.960
look more carefully at Canada as a way to play that

17:26.960 --> 17:28.320
as an investment thesis.

17:28.360 --> 17:31.560
Come back to the type of horizon you're looking at Canada

17:31.560 --> 17:32.560
with.

17:32.960 --> 17:36.080
At the end of last year, you and your colleagues at GAA

17:36.120 --> 17:39.320
will have said a little bit of a darkest before

17:39.360 --> 17:40.920
the dawn type feel to that.

17:40.960 --> 17:42.880
Are we any closer to the dawn?

17:42.880 --> 17:43.800
How do you want to describe that?

17:43.800 --> 17:46.720
Yeah, unfortunately, this sunrise is measured in quarters in

17:46.720 --> 17:48.280
years as opposed to minutes in seconds.

17:48.280 --> 17:48.960
It's January, it is.

17:48.960 --> 17:50.520
It's January. It's a little dark. Yeah, exactly.

17:50.520 --> 17:50.800
We're waiting for... Yeah, exactly.

17:50.800 --> 17:53.000
We're waiting for that leap shift from daily savings to

17:53.000 --> 17:55.080
maybe change things, but no. Just the end of January.

17:55.080 --> 17:57.160
Exactly. But no, but more realistically, I mean, this is

17:57.160 --> 18:00.000
taking place. And it's just taking place very gradually.

18:00.000 --> 18:03.080
But we also know that markets don't wait for

18:03.080 --> 18:05.200
evidence to be sort of presented to them.

18:05.200 --> 18:08.360
So markets are investing on the theme of progress and

18:08.360 --> 18:11.320
on the team of improvement. And we've seen the TSX perform

18:11.320 --> 18:13.240
pretty remarkably well over the last year.

18:13.240 --> 18:14.400
It's astonishing. As long as.

18:14.400 --> 18:16.200
As long as that can kind of continue, as long as you're

18:16.200 --> 18:18.640
seeing the policy infrastructure moving at the pace that it

18:18.640 --> 18:21.640
will, and corporations responding to that, but

18:21.640 --> 18:24.400
also seeing opportunities in their own right, now that is

18:24.400 --> 18:27.320
beginning to shift. And I see no reason for that, at least

18:27.360 --> 18:29.480
from a policy perspective, to change.

18:29.480 --> 18:32.600
So the market will inevitably respond to that theme as

18:32.640 --> 18:35.200
well, and obviously still beholden to global developments,

18:35.200 --> 18:37.280
and this goes back to the notion that the setup for this

18:37.280 --> 18:38.760
year is good, but not without risk.

18:38.800 --> 18:41.800
But there still is, you know, reason to think under the

18:41.800 --> 18:44.000
surface that... That these trends are moving in the right

18:44.040 --> 18:46.840
direction and we as investors want to be part of that.

18:46.840 --> 18:49.920
Biggest risk is whether AI is or is not

18:49.920 --> 18:52.760
a bubble or at least, yeah, is that the biggest risk?

18:52.800 --> 18:55.200
It's up there. It's hard to make a rank order of these.

18:55.240 --> 18:58.360
We've got central bank independence, we've got the

18:58.360 --> 19:00.840
Monroe Doctrine reasserting itself in the United States as

19:00.880 --> 19:02.560
well. So there's a lot of things that can still go bump in

19:02.560 --> 19:03.960
the night, to quote Jeff Moore.

19:05.240 --> 19:08.000
But ultimately, I think when you want to look at the way the

19:08.000 --> 19:10.320
world is set up, again, the economy is a really important

19:10.320 --> 19:12.440
part of it, and the economy is okay.

19:12.440 --> 19:14.640
So now we're now trying to chase down these various policy

19:14.640 --> 19:18.120
risks and wondering, first, are they likely to be realised,

19:18.120 --> 19:21.480
and second, is the knock-on effect significant enough to

19:21.480 --> 19:24.560
not only impact just the market, but could it also then

19:24.560 --> 19:26.160
spill into the economy more generally?

19:26.160 --> 19:29.080
And as we assess those risks over the course of the year,

19:29.080 --> 19:32.080
that will be the catalyst for us to evolve our positioning.

19:33.520 --> 19:36.680
Speaking of Jeff Moore, tell us

19:36.720 --> 19:39.440
a little bit about asset allocation in terms of your

19:39.480 --> 19:42.480
exposure to equity and what about bonds just to make

19:42.520 --> 19:44.120
sure that you're covered?

19:44.120 --> 19:46.600
Yeah, we can't forget about bonds at all.

19:46.600 --> 19:49.720
So I mean, really, our positioning hasn't changed very

19:49.720 --> 19:52.920
much relative to the latter part of

19:52.920 --> 19:56.040
last year. So really, there's just two main views that

19:56.040 --> 19:58.400
we're trying to express. The first is being overweight beta

19:58.400 --> 20:01.680
and overweight equities. Again, the economic backdrop is

20:01.680 --> 20:04.840
sufficiently benign. We are very, again, tied into that

20:04.840 --> 20:07.880
AI theme and working with managers to help, again

20:07.880 --> 20:09.440
calibrate that position accordingly.

20:09.440 --> 20:11.440
But Generally speaking, we're overweight risk.

20:11.480 --> 20:14.160
So we have that position overweight to equities and

20:14.160 --> 20:17.680
underweight bonds by association.

20:17.680 --> 20:20.360
And then the second theme is just being underweight US

20:20.400 --> 20:23.440
dollars and expecting that US dollar to continue to

20:23.480 --> 20:26.360
depreciate. And we have some of that, again, expressed

20:26.360 --> 20:27.920
explicitly across currencies.

20:27.920 --> 20:30.920
But I think one of the cleanest ways to play a weaker US

20:30.960 --> 20:34.240
dollar story is just an overweight or an allocation to gold.

20:34.280 --> 20:36.160
And we've had a fairly hefty allocation there.

20:36.200 --> 20:38.440
It's remained consistent through time.

20:38.440 --> 20:41.040
And that's just the cleanest way for us, again, to play the

20:41.040 --> 20:43.560
risk that we still see the US dollar moving lower.

20:43.560 --> 20:45.600
Not necessarily in a straight line, these things always have

20:45.600 --> 20:48.720
volatility, but as a balance of risk, I think you still

20:48.720 --> 20:51.880
see less dollarization in the world and

20:51.880 --> 20:55.160
a push more towards alternative currencies like gold in

20:55.160 --> 20:56.040
that context.

20:56.040 --> 20:59.560
And so you'll use the incredible portfolio

20:59.560 --> 21:02.960
managers that are at your discretion

21:02.960 --> 21:05.600
here at Fidelity. But you overlay with things like

21:05.600 --> 21:10.360
commodities. You'll also take a look at inflation-protected

21:10.360 --> 21:13.200
bonds, where that's needed.

21:13.200 --> 21:15.320
So this is the actual commodity gold.

21:15.320 --> 21:18.560
You take a lot at, I guess, gold miners through various

21:18.560 --> 21:20.760
portfolio managers. Yeah. So the underlying managers.

21:20.760 --> 21:20.840
Thank you so much. Have a great day.

21:20.840 --> 21:22.320
Yeah, so the underlying managers can make the call on the
miners

21:22.320 --> 21:25.400
themselves, but from our pure plate position, it's easiest

21:25.440 --> 21:28.480
just to own the bullion, which we do in an ETF form.

21:28.480 --> 21:30.880
Really, really interesting.

21:30.880 --> 21:33.920
It has been astonishing watching the

21:33.920 --> 21:36.080
price of gold do what it's done over the course of the last

21:36.080 --> 21:39.440
year. I guess the question is, going forward, is it

21:39.440 --> 21:41.760
just as likely to do just as well?

21:41.760 --> 21:43.520
For all the reasons that you're pointing out, it sort of

21:43.520 --> 21:45.240
sounds like the same case is there.

21:45.240 --> 21:48.640
Yeah, as an investor when an asset class goes parabolic

21:48.640 --> 21:51.040
like the price of gold has, I mean, it's uncomfortable

21:51.040 --> 21:54.240
because especially with gold because you can't

21:54.280 --> 21:56.400
tie it to sort of those more traditional financial

21:56.400 --> 21:59.920
fundamentals like a balance sheet or

21:59.960 --> 22:01.680
earnings or dividends.

22:01.720 --> 22:03.080
So you have to go into.

22:04.400 --> 22:07.560
You go into a world of at least more nebulous

22:07.600 --> 22:10.360
type of correlations that themselves can be pretty fickle

22:10.400 --> 22:13.160
and volatile because we remember, it wasn't that long ago

22:13.160 --> 22:16.240
that it was a well-established correlation between gold and

22:16.280 --> 22:19.320
real interest rates and then that really broke down and then

22:19.320 --> 22:22.160
it became a correlation between Gold and central bank buying

22:22.160 --> 22:24.240
and I think that's still an important theme.

22:24.240 --> 22:26.760
But if you just look at all those different catalysts that

22:26.800 --> 22:29.920
have driven gold, again, And you just look at the balance of

22:29.920 --> 22:32.720
risk, and is the world going to get better?

22:32.760 --> 22:35.320
More peaceful or potentially more volatile.

22:35.360 --> 22:38.200
And unfortunately we're weighing on the side of it becoming

22:38.200 --> 22:39.800
more volatile and more uncertain.

22:39.840 --> 22:42.200
And that traditionally I think is still a pretty good reason

22:42.200 --> 22:44.360
to have gold as part of a portfolio.

22:44.400 --> 22:47.400
So these things will never go to the moon necessarily, but

22:47.400 --> 22:49.800
ultimately as a diversifier to risk.

22:49.840 --> 22:52.480
Because that's, again, a really important part of why we

22:52.480 --> 22:53.960
have an asset in our portfolios.

22:54.000 --> 22:57.160
It's not just to contribute to return, but it's to diversify

22:57.160 --> 23:00.320
the more traditional benchmark components of

23:00.360 --> 23:02.840
equities and bonds. And that's really why I think.

23:02.880 --> 23:06.000
Gold is an important part of

23:06.000 --> 23:06.920
that mix.

23:06.920 --> 23:10.200
A couple of pieces of developments in

23:10.240 --> 23:13.640
the U.S., so the midterms will be later on this year

23:13.680 --> 23:15.120
and some of your thoughts on that.

23:15.160 --> 23:18.640
Also, the AIPA, which is the Supreme Court,

23:18.680 --> 23:21.320
may be overturning the whole underpinning of U.

23:21.360 --> 23:22.720
S. Tariffs, we don't know yet.

23:23.960 --> 23:26.880
Each of those, you'll watch those how, they're important, I

23:26.880 --> 23:28.920
mean, one of them would be a real mess to have to pay back

23:28.920 --> 23:29.720
the tariffs.

23:29.720 --> 23:32.280
Yeah, that's going to be a logistical nightmare if that

23:32.320 --> 23:35.320
comes to pass. But where we've come down, at

23:35.360 --> 23:38.400
least on that, is that even if AIIPA is ruled to

23:38.400 --> 23:41.080
be unconstitutional, there are enough other tariff

23:41.120 --> 23:43.920
provisions within the executive office that you can more or

23:43.960 --> 23:47.480
less offset all of that with different and new tariffs.

23:47.480 --> 23:49.800
So again, it's a headache for the lawyers and all the

23:49.840 --> 23:52.280
bookkeepers when it comes to putting all that together, but

23:52.280 --> 23:55.240
it doesn't really change the wider narrative that we about

23:55.280 --> 23:58.000
earlier, where the U.S. Is relying heavily on tariffs as a

23:58.040 --> 24:00.840
source of revenue. And one way or another, that will remain

24:00.840 --> 24:04.520
in place. So that's the IEPA story, and the Supreme Court is

24:04.520 --> 24:06.480
resuming its session on Friday of this week.

24:06.480 --> 24:09.200
And I think it's fairly high on their docket list in terms

24:09.200 --> 24:11.120
of what they will be able to rule on.

24:11.120 --> 24:13.600
So we're kind of bracing for obviously volatility around

24:13.600 --> 24:16.560
that. But again, the undercurrent is that there's still

24:16.560 --> 24:19.080
other tariff provisions that will not really change, I

24:19.080 --> 24:22.200
think, how the US will approach tariffs and trade

24:22.200 --> 24:24.360
more generally. And then on the midterms.

24:24.360 --> 24:26.560
Yeah, in the midterms. I mean, what do you want out of that?

24:26.560 --> 24:28.960
Yeah. Usually investors want nothing.

24:28.960 --> 24:32.080
Exactly. No, I mean, it's hard enough to try to forecast the

24:32.080 --> 24:34.800
economy and financial markets to overlay that with politics

24:34.800 --> 24:36.320
is next to impossible.

24:36.320 --> 24:39.440
But I mean you traditionally see the party that

24:39.440 --> 24:42.560
wins the last presidential election loses some ground in

24:42.560 --> 24:44.760
the midterms, at least when it comes to Congress and the

24:44.760 --> 24:48.200
Senate. So we'll see how that unfolds

24:48.200 --> 24:51.720
ultimately. But I think this is also a

24:51.720 --> 24:54.120
administration in the US that has been very much driven by

24:54.120 --> 24:55.600
the executive office. So.

24:55.600 --> 24:58.560
Less has been required of Congress, to put it sort of

24:58.560 --> 25:01.560
cynically. So it may certainly add a little bit

25:01.560 --> 25:04.840
more in terms of political commentary and

25:04.840 --> 25:08.320
a lot of potential, you know, I guess,

25:08.320 --> 25:10.120
yeah, I would leave it as commentary.

25:10.120 --> 25:13.120
And it doesn't necessarily flow through to

25:13.120 --> 25:15.560
the application of policy, which again seems to be very much

25:15.560 --> 25:17.680
concentrated within the White House.

25:17.680 --> 25:21.320
So, leading, possibly, to a version of gridlock,

25:21.320 --> 25:24.120
which just for the purpose of continuing to trade without

25:24.120 --> 25:26.760
too many changes in policy coming along is generally good

25:26.760 --> 25:27.840
for markets. Absolutely. I mean... No, absolutely.

25:27.840 --> 25:30.960
I mean, you want to have at least a direction of policy.

25:30.960 --> 25:33.640
But if that's going to be disruptive and very volatile to

25:33.680 --> 25:36.480
the extent to which Congress is still relevant, gridlock is

25:36.520 --> 25:38.720
maybe not the worst scenario for us today.

25:38.760 --> 25:41.600
You've got a paper coming out from GA, you guys are working

25:41.640 --> 25:44.240
on this, you and Alon and David Wolf.

25:45.480 --> 25:47.240
What are sort of the big pieces of AI?

25:47.280 --> 25:49.600
I think AI is one of them, which we did touch on.

25:49.600 --> 25:50.200
What else?

25:50.240 --> 25:51.840
I mean, that's question number one.

25:51.880 --> 25:55.320
So as always, we start our new year with

25:55.360 --> 25:58.480
questions for advisors that are top of mind for us and that

25:58.480 --> 26:00.400
shape the way that we're viewing the world.

26:00.400 --> 26:03.400
And the first topical question is, AI, is it a bubble?

26:03.440 --> 26:06.160
Because as it touches so many parts of the market and

26:06.200 --> 26:08.480
there's so much attention on it, it really does, I think,

26:08.520 --> 26:11.040
drive the narrative that we expect this year.

26:11.080 --> 26:13.120
And we've touched a little bit on some of the things that we

26:13.160 --> 26:15.360
are looking at and some of the decisions that we've made

26:15.360 --> 26:18.440
around that theme. But also, we're speaking again

26:18.440 --> 26:21.200
about the US dollar and the direction of the risks that are

26:21.200 --> 26:24.240
embedded within that, and that has a knock-on impact

26:24.240 --> 26:27.200
on positioning. And then the third real major theme, and

26:27.200 --> 26:29.320
we've talked about it as well, is just how we're viewing

26:29.320 --> 26:32.120
Canada. So again, that optimism has progressed as time has

26:32.120 --> 26:35.160
gone on. Our allocations have shifted with respect

26:35.160 --> 26:36.760
to how we view Canada.

26:36.760 --> 26:39.040
So we just want to make sure that we are giving everybody

26:39.040 --> 26:41.360
our top-of-mind thinking on that as well.

26:41.360 --> 26:44.360
So that's the genesis of the paper that's

26:44.360 --> 26:45.560
coming out next week, I think.

26:45.600 --> 26:47.280
Coming out next week. Okay, we'll look forward to that.

26:47.320 --> 26:49.960
And you're neutral on Canada, which is quite a big change

26:50.000 --> 26:52.360
from a couple of years ago, where you were deeply underway,

26:52.400 --> 26:52.440
is that Yeah.

26:52.440 --> 26:54.800
Yeah, I mean, at least to the natural question, I mean, when

26:54.800 --> 26:57.440
you start becoming outright overweight.

26:57.440 --> 26:59.200
And again, we just need to see progress.

26:59.200 --> 27:00.680
So we talk about the darkest before dawn.

27:00.680 --> 27:03.440
So we need a few more rays of sunshine poking over the

27:03.440 --> 27:06.640
horizon to really give us that motivation to take a

27:06.640 --> 27:07.800
larger allocation there.

27:07.800 --> 27:09.160
But what's that mean?

27:09.160 --> 27:12.480
Like, just give us a little bit of a hard example there.

27:12.480 --> 27:14.080
Yeah, I think part of it is time.

27:14.120 --> 27:16.240
So honestly, as we're working through the housing market

27:16.280 --> 27:19.600
cycle, that's another real headwind to Canada's economy.

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We are getting towards the end of that five-year reset

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from very low COVID-level interest rates.

27:25.400 --> 27:28.480
So once we get beyond some of that, I think you'll start

27:28.480 --> 27:30.680
to see a little better position for household balance

27:30.720 --> 27:32.800
sheets, so a little more discretionary spending on that

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front. Obviously, the labour market has to hold up fairly

27:35.520 --> 27:37.600
well, and it's done a reasonable job of that.

27:37.640 --> 27:40.280
But we want to be just, again, confident that that's taking

27:40.320 --> 27:43.120
place. And then ultimately it's the tariff story and as

27:43.120 --> 27:44.680
NAFTA is to be negotiated.

27:44.680 --> 27:47.640
You know, where are we left in terms of A, the level of

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tariffs, but B, the degree of certainty that now companies

27:49.920 --> 27:53.320
can start to invest and hire based on that

27:53.360 --> 27:55.480
knowledge that they have, a reasonable amount of confidence

27:55.520 --> 27:58.680
that the rules of the game won't be changed after

27:58.720 --> 27:59.400
a tweet.

27:59.400 --> 28:02.600
Yes, less moving of gold

28:02.600 --> 28:04.840
posts would be nice.

28:04.840 --> 28:07.280
For investors, actually, we finished off last year talking a

28:07.280 --> 28:11.000
little bit about investors getting information online,

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lots of different places, which is all very, very good.

28:14.480 --> 28:17.280
I wonder if you just have a note as we start off the year

28:17.280 --> 28:20.360
for how investors do collect in a truly

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data saturated world, doesn't mean it's all good data.

28:23.560 --> 28:24.720
What would you suggest?

28:24.760 --> 28:26.920
Yeah, I mean, this was sort of driven home over the holidays

28:26.960 --> 28:29.360
where, you know, you spend a lot of time with family and

28:29.360 --> 28:32.280
friends, not all of which are portfolio managers.

28:32.320 --> 28:34.560
So you get a little bit of a sense of where people are

28:34.560 --> 28:37.040
drawing their information as they're asking you questions

28:37.040 --> 28:38.840
about the market and about the world.

28:38.840 --> 28:40.800
And I was just really stunned, and maybe I should have known

28:40.840 --> 28:43.120
better, but, you know, there's so many rabbit holes that

28:43.160 --> 28:45.400
exist out there where people are getting questionable

28:45.400 --> 28:48.160
information from unreliable sources, and that really is

28:48.160 --> 28:49.680
forming people's opinions.

28:49.680 --> 28:52.240
The fact that we're able to do these again and get back to

28:52.240 --> 28:54.320
the cadence of these webcasts, I think is really important

28:54.320 --> 28:57.480
because I think we want to do our best to contribute

28:57.480 --> 29:00.480
more signal versus noise out there in

29:00.480 --> 29:03.360
the world. And this webcast series, I think, is a really

29:03.360 --> 29:04.320
important part of that.

29:04.320 --> 29:07.240
Well, we're delighted to kick off the new year with you,

29:07.240 --> 29:09.000
David Tulk. Thank you and have a happy new year.

29:09.040 --> 29:09.760
You as well. Thank you.

29:09.800 --> 29:10.840
We'll speak to you soon.

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<b>Thanks for listening to the</b>

29:14.640 --> 29:16.200
<b>FidelityConnects podcast.</b>

29:16.200 --> 29:19.120
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29:23.880 --> 29:27.080
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29:32.800 --> 29:35.880
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29:35.880 --> 29:38.920
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29:49.320 --> 29:52.200
<b>We'll end today's podcast with</b>

29:52.200 --> 29:54.760
<b>a short disclaimer.</b>

29:54.760 --> 29:57.560
<b>The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are</b>

29:57.560 --> 30:00.680
<b>those of the participants, and do not</b>

30:00.680 --> 30:03.200
<b>necessarily reflect the views of Fidelity Investments</b>

30:03.200 --> 30:06.080
<b>Canada ULC, or</b>

30:06.080 --> 30:08.320
<b>any affiliated companies.</b>

30:08.320 --> 30:11.200
<b>This podcast is for</b>

30:11.200 --> 30:14.120
<b>informational purposes only and should</b>

30:14.120 --> 30:17.000
<b>not be construed as investment,</b>

30:17.000 --> 30:19.840
<b>legal, or tax advice.</b>

30:19.840 --> 30:22.720
<b>It is not an offer to</b>

30:22.720 --> 30:25.640
<b>buy or sell or an</b>

30:25.640 --> 30:28.520
<b>endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any</b>

30:28.520 --> 30:30.760
<b>securities or entities cited.</b>

30:30.760 --> 30:33.960
<b>Read a fund's prospectus before</b>

30:33.960 --> 30:37.480
<b>investing. Funds are not guaranteed.</b>

30:37.480 --> 30:40.360
<b>Their values change frequently,</b>

30:40.360 --> 30:43.240
<b>and past performance may or may not</b>

30:43.240 --> 30:44.640
<b>be repeated.</b>

30:44.640 --> 30:47.640
<b>Fees,</b>

30:47.640 --> 30:48.960
<b>expenses, and commissions are all associated with fund</b>

30:48.960 --> 30:50.240
<b>investments.</b>

30:50.240 --> 30:52.200
<b>Thanks for watching and see you next time!</b>

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