Global equities: Where are the opportunities now?

After a year of divergence in global equities, Patrice will break down the key drivers behind his funds’ performance in 2025 and offer his outlook on where he sees opportunities ahead in 2026.

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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.

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I'm Pamela Ritchie. Geopolitical headlines have been driving a ton of market

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conversation but how much of that actually filters into

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international equity returns?

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As the U.S. and China continue to exert influence globally

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where might those dynamics begin to show up in investable markets, even if

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at all? Joining us here today for a look at how global power shifts,

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political cycles and valuation differences could matter for international

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equities is portfolio manager Patrice Quirion.

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Patrice manages several Fidelity funds including Fidelity Global Fund.

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Happy New Year. Warm welcome to you.

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Happy New Year, pleasure to be here.

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Great to see you again.

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Let's begin with, we'll invite everyone to send questions in,

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what hasn't changed from last year? Actually, over the course of the last 10

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days it feels like it's been a barrage of changes.

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Investing wise what's not changed?

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The reality is we spend a lot of time at the beginning of every year sort of

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thinking of what will be the new story in 2026 or whatever year we're

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in. The reality is the market doesn't care that this is the beginning of a new

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year. As you should expect the reality is our thesis doesn't

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change overnight because we are in January.

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As a result, most of my investment views are unchanged versus where we were

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last year. My views remain that international markets are

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starting to gather more attention, flows are going back,

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interest is going back. The valuation differential remains.

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It is a little bit less than it was at this time last year but...

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Because it was such low levels at that point.

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Yes, last year we were probably peak negativity right after

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the U.S. election on international markets, that has changed in a big way over

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the course of the past 13,14 months

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but I think it remains. There is a valuation differential,

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positioning differential that can create opportunities in international

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markets. What has not changed in my case, through

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the course of last year I think Europe got a decent lift

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so we were more selective from a big overweight position.

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We've taken profit in many areas and we've allocated that

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to a good extent to Asia and particularly China.

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That has not changed. I still think there is a very good risk-reward potential

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towards the Chinese equity market, notably around the consumer

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sectors, the technology where there's some important breakthroughs coming out

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of there.

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Maybe one thing that is starting to change a little bit in my

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view of the world is after quite a few years of being significantly

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underweight in the U.S., notably around the tech sector,

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we are starting to find opportunities around the

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consumer sectors or the sectors

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that are going to benefit from lower interest rates, which I think

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could be something different about 2026.

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We'll see the lag effect of the rate cuts that did take place

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and could continue to take place maybe starting to lift the real

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economy. This is a thematic that will apply globally

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including in the U.S.

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I am spending more of my time looking at generally more

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consumer, real economy, housing,

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transports related cyclicals, everywhere

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across the globe. I think that's an interesting opportunity for the year ahead

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that is different than last year.

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And it sounds less regionally specific.

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Yes, I think that's fair.

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The past number of years there's been enormous regional

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differentiation given the weight of the

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tech leadership, which is so heavy in the U.S., much less present than the rest

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of the world, given the slowdown that we've

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seen in China and the repercussions that has on Asia and

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Europe to some extent.

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I think this is likely to have less of a continued effect

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and, if anything, maybe a risk of reversal on that.

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The pickup, or the hope for pick up, that we're starting to

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see signs of on the real economy largely driven

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by lower rates globally, that has the potential to

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bring a reemergence of consumer confidence

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on the traditional economy, traditional sectors.

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I think this is pretty much the case across all the big geographic

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continents.

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When you take a look at things that are related to the real economy,

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you can talk about defensives but the things that we use every day, we do every

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day. Companies that produce things that just are part of our waking and

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living our daily lives are sometimes smaller

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companies, you're also going down cap.

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That is one interesting thing that I'm increasingly tilting the

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portfolio towards.

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While the last few years have been really good for a global equity market,

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especially in the U.S., it's been a market that's been mostly driven by

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large-cap stocks, partly from a factor of

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the sectors where those companies add the momentum

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but also I think a little bit of

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investors less willing to to allocate towards those smaller companies,

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especially more cyclical ones, where they were impacted

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by that weaker consumer, by that slowdown in

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industrial demand and transports, etc.

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It leaves us at the point today where increasingly

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small-cap to me look interesting in terms of what expectations

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are baked in, how cheap are they on normalized earnings.

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I think it's especially the case in Europe.

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It is across the board but I think it is more visible or the

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undervaluation seems more meaningful across

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European small-caps. So this is a part of the

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portfolios where I did rotate out or reduce the

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big overweights in Europe, notably through financials that have been just

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really good performers for the past number of years.

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I reduced that, moved the money, as I mentioned, a little bit more to Asia, a

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little more in the U.S., as we talked about, but

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trying to come back towards small-caps in general and

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maybe with a greater focus on European small-caps that are

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tied to a recovery of the consumer, of construction,

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industrial, transports, et cetera.

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The multinational story for companies headquartered in

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Europe versus multinationals headquartered in the U.S., for instance,

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are they still cheaper than the U.S. counterparts?

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Is that still there?

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I was doing a baby shark thing a while ago, has that closed?

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It partially closed but it certainly did not fully close

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and far from it. The international markets have done better than

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the U.S. market for the past year or so.

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It's not because earnings growth has been superior.

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The U. S. has still been leading the charge on earnings growth but

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that very excessive valuation differential that we

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got to in late 2024 partially closed

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and partially that is reflected on

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comparing multinationals very similar to

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U.S. multinationals either from Europe or from Japan that

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were meaningfully less expensive.

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For a global manager like myself where we don't have constraint in terms

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of where do we allocate on a geographic basis, if I'm offered

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two very similar companies, one meaningfully less expensive than the other one

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because it is in a different market just from a headquarter perspective.

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That is starting to close

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but I think there's still quite some ways to go on that so

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I remain overweight on the international markets

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in large part for that reason.

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The follow-up question to sort of the European versus U.S.

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multinational question is actually the Chinese multinational

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question. How do you view larger companies there and smaller

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companies? We'll start with large.

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There's a very limited list of Chinese multinationals.

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China is more at a stage where the big companies are domestic champions

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but with very limited out of China exposure,

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at least in revenues or earnings terms.

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That, in my opinion, will be a major change for the

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... I can't tell you it will be major change for 2026 but it will be a major

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change for the decade to come.

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They're building towards that [crosstalk].

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We are at that stage where the domestic champions out of China are

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slowly, and in some cases more quickly, trying

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to expand their power, bring their products to market,

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products that are increasingly very competitive

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not only in terms of price but in terms of quality of products as well, and

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trying to displace Western multinationals initially out of

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Southeast Asia, the CIS.

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Maybe South America.

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South America has been one of that.

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It's one of the calculations in some of the maneuvers we've seen

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geopolitically. It's just to make sure they knock out certain markets so that

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Chinese multinationals don't have as good a grip on those

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economies.

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Yes, and I think we can use that as a transition to what's happening in

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Venezuela. Before getting into the specifics of Venezuela

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I think it's important to understand that this Chinese-U.S.

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rivalry is certainly there.

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I think that we are at a stage where the

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circle of influence of China has grown significantly,

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especially in emerging markets.

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It's been the case for a longer time in Southeast Asia,

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clearly CIS, Middle East, Africa.

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CIS?

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The old Russia and the sphere of Russia.

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Latin America is in a way a little bit closer to home for North America.

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And more controllable in that sense from a calculation.

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Yes. This is where if we rewind the clock a

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decade or two ago all of South America was essentially

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under the sphere of influence of the United States.

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Over the past 10 years or so it has totally flipped

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where most of those countries now have...

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Ports. I mean, all things built and owned by China.

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Yes, and the reality is China has been their big customer

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mostly for commodities but also financing infrastructure

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as one example.

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China today has more influence on South America than the U.S.

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has. I think the Venezuela events here,

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a lot of the media puts the focus on this is for the

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oil reserves, which is probably part of

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the reality.

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I think the bigger construct here is I

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suspect there's an element of the U.S.

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trying to reverse that grip that China took

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on the continent.

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We are seeing it not only in Venezuela.

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We saw it with pretty direct support of the Milei government in Argentina.

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What does that mean for markets? The reality is Venezuela

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has no investable companies, Argentina, very limited,

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very small market cap company so that was not investable

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per se. I think where my mind is shifting is

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what is investable within Latin America.

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The only real country of size is Brazil and

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we are going into an election year next year.

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Here's it's all totally speculation but I think it's not

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out of the possibility that the U.S.

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tries to bring closer relationship, greater control

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on Brazil and could do that by trying to

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support a more pro-business, more pro-U.S.

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government as we go into next elections which...

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And many other countries have already in South America voted

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that way.

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Exactly.

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Certainly, the U.S. had pretty big influence on the outcome in Argentina.

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If we were to see something similar then suddenly Brazil, which is seen as

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a country always flip-flopping between pro-business or

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pro-population governments,

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maybe the odds are shifting higher for a more pro-business,

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pro-U.S. government which could create a more favourable

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setup for a country like Brazil.

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I know this is sort of further out in the future, sort of second or third

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derivative impact of what's happening in Venezuela but in

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my mind as a global equity manager this is the kind of questions that

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will have an impact as opposed to something that is purely geopolitical

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but not really investable for the portfolios, like what happened in Argentina

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and Venezuela.

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

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DialoguesFidelity podcasts available on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever

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else you get your podcasts. Now back to today's show.

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You mentioned commodities there and that certainly has a lot to do

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with what's going on with Venezuela recently.

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With commodities you invest, you put some of those into the portfolio, some of

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them are the producers themselves.

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Tell us a bit where tipping points are for various different ...

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we know the precious metals side of things has been extraordinary, is

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there a point where you take some of the chips

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off the table there?

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To walk through my framework, I typically don't love investing in

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commodities. They are lower quality, more volatile,

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not really what I'm typically looking for in a portfolio.

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If we get to extremes or very dislocated valuation

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I will make occasional exceptions.

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We did some of those not on the energy side but on

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the metal side and especially around copper going back a couple years

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ago when copper prices were $3

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to $4 a pound which was clearly insufficient

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to stimulate new mining development spending.

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CapEx, basically.

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The reality is with the world that is electrifying everything,

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despite the maybe lesser focus on ESG today, the reality

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is electrification of everything is still going ahead,

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plus the demand from data centres which is sort of adding to that

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trend, the reality is we need to continue to build electrical infrastructure

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at a pretty good clip. All of that requires copper.

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At a price where that was insufficient to stimulate new

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mining you could see an eventual, not an immediate,

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not a current deficit in copper production but an eventual deficit

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that will need to be answered with higher prices.

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That, I think we saw this happening, the market realized

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that in a way over the course of the past 6 to 12 months.

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We've seen metal prices including copper moving up

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materially to a point where now copper around $6 a pound

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as opposed to $3 and something, there is

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the incentive to build new mines. It is economic to build new mines at this

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price. I think it is less obvious to own the

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producer stocks because they already got the commodity price adjustment.

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I'm not saying it cannot go higher, it certainly can, but it

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doesn't have to, if that makes sense.

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They can just produce at this level and put money into their companies at this

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level.

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In the portfolio I have been reducing, exiting

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the producer side but what that leaves us

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with is a commodity price that is now supportive of new development.

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I think we will enter a phase of CapEx spending around commodities, especially

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around metals, certainly copper, certainly gold at these prices

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where every discovery is profitable, and

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we do, or we have kept the exposure to

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mostly industrial companies that are selling into the

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commodity CapEx cycle.

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So equipment to mine, to build new mines

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and we do keep those positions into the portfolio while

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we are exiting the metal producers that we've had.

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There's a great question coming in right now just coming back to the basics of

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international investing in many cases, and that is the U.S.

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dollar, the weakness, the perceived continued either weakness,

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either further weakening, or just even sitting at these levels for some time.

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That is expected.

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What does it mean for an investor who wants to make sure they have exposure

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internationally?

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There's been a lot of talk about the U.S.

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dollar potentially being weaker as we see potential

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for repatriation of capital outside the U.S.,

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potential for the U.S.

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interest rates to converge lower towards where the

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ECB or the Bank of Canada already is as an example, like interest rate

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differential is a big driver of currencies.

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The reality is the U.S. dollar has been pretty resilient, pretty stable through

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that.

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I think the argument is maybe not so much on

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a guaranteed reduction in the value of the

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U.S. dollar, although the interest rate differential could close

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further so could be in theory supportive for other currencies

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relative to the U.S.

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dollar, but I think there's maybe increasingly a need to think about

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the rest of the world or other currencies offering an

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entrance policy against maybe a less likely scenario

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but a more dramatic scenario of concerns

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bubbling up around the viability of the U.S.

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fiscal position which could lead to

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weakness on the U.S. dollar, especially if that was to lead to

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— this is all speculation, those are opinions, those are not base case, this is

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more the insurance policy again, but if the solution to the

19:35.741 --> 19:37.910
current deficits in the U.S.

19:37.910 --> 19:42.147
is to have interference at the central bank depress interest

19:42.147 --> 19:45.784
rates as inflation moves back up into an economic recovery scenario--

19:45.784 --> 19:45.918
That's a concern for the U.S. dollar.

19:45.918 --> 19:50.088
--that would be a very negative

19:50.088 --> 19:52.524
outcome for the confidence in the U.S.

19:52.524 --> 19:56.628
dollar. We're not talking about a scenario where it

19:56.628 --> 20:00.599
goes down a few percentage points and therefore you want to be in the

20:00.599 --> 20:04.036
rest of the world to capture that 2,3%.

20:04.036 --> 20:07.005
This is more like insurance against the scenario where the U.S.

20:07.005 --> 20:11.410
dollar comes down materially, I can't tell you how much,

20:11.410 --> 20:15.380
but well over 10%, this

20:15.380 --> 20:19.484
unlikely event, we would be extremely pleased to have

20:19.484 --> 20:23.655
exposure to not only gold, what is

20:23.655 --> 20:28.026
happening right now, but to other currencies, especially currencies that

20:28.026 --> 20:32.431
are maybe on an economic basis

20:32.431 --> 20:36.535
undervalued, and the obvious one is the renminbi rate where every

20:36.535 --> 20:41.540
Chinese company competing across the globe is extremely competitive,

20:41.540 --> 20:45.110
probably as a reflection of the renminbi being too weak.

20:45.110 --> 20:48.580
And kind of on their way up fundamentally in a lot of ways.

20:48.580 --> 20:52.784
Exactly. In the past one would have argued that China needed a weak renminbi

20:52.784 --> 20:56.722
because their companies were solely competing

20:56.722 --> 20:59.891
on cheap products.

20:59.891 --> 21:04.296
The reality is today they are not only competing on the cheap products,

21:04.296 --> 21:07.165
the products are very cheap.

21:07.165 --> 21:11.737
The Chinese corporate sector could still be extremely competitive

21:11.737 --> 21:15.340
even with a much stronger renminbi.

21:15.340 --> 21:19.144
Gold could be an insurance against that tail scenario on the U.S.

21:19.144 --> 21:23.248
dollar but so can other currencies,

21:23.248 --> 21:26.351
notably the renminbi, in my opinion.

21:26.351 --> 21:28.487
Let's actually stick with the U.S.

21:28.487 --> 21:31.123
but on a slightly different note.

21:31.123 --> 21:35.127
Lots of things are happening. We've got the stimulus that's sort of being

21:35.127 --> 21:39.031
dumped into the economy via the one Big Beautiful Bill, and that's ongoing and

21:39.031 --> 21:41.767
happening. What about the march to midterms?

21:41.767 --> 21:43.568
That also is happening.

21:43.568 --> 21:47.372
If we take a bit of a step back, the markets have been strong for the past

21:47.372 --> 21:51.209
number of years but the economy has not.

21:51.209 --> 21:55.614
It's been that K-shape economy, the top few per cent of the population

21:55.614 --> 21:59.885
had a huge wealth effect mostly driven by

21:59.885 --> 22:03.989
the AI and AI derivatives lately, but at the

22:03.989 --> 22:08.627
same time you had the main street economy or the majority of consumers

22:08.627 --> 22:11.930
feeling the brunt of cumulative inflation.

22:11.930 --> 22:15.434
Yes, inflation is lower percentage but we still had that massive run-up that

22:15.434 --> 22:17.502
left the [indecipherable].

22:17.502 --> 22:19.805
We had the impact of higher interest rates.

22:19.805 --> 22:23.909
I know this is reversing right now but the reality is today we stand

22:23.909 --> 22:27.846
at a point where the markets have done well but the majority of

22:27.846 --> 22:32.184
the population, majority of voters are not feeling great.

22:32.184 --> 22:36.254
That needs to change going into the midterms if the current

22:36.254 --> 22:41.259
administration wants to have odds of keeping power.

22:41.259 --> 22:42.694
That usually means spending.

22:42.694 --> 22:44.730
Exactly. I think it means combination of a few things.

22:44.730 --> 22:45.364
And policy.

22:45.364 --> 22:50.535
Lower interest rates. I think that is why we are seeing so much

22:50.535 --> 22:54.573
interference or talks of suggestions of much

22:54.573 --> 22:56.942
lower interest rates at the Fed.

22:56.942 --> 22:58.777
I think we are likely to get those.

22:58.777 --> 23:03.281
We can debate magnitude but rates are likely going lower because

23:03.281 --> 23:07.252
they are needed. The mainstream economy, everything tied to

23:07.252 --> 23:12.290
interest rates is seeing very weak demand at the moment.

23:12.290 --> 23:17.028
The employment situation is

23:17.028 --> 23:21.032
getting gradually worse so we could get

23:21.032 --> 23:26.938
things like that, we could get stimulus measures, don't

23:26.938 --> 23:31.109
know what form it may take but could we get a tariff

23:31.109 --> 23:35.147
dividend cheque in the mail or something along those lines, could we get

23:35.147 --> 23:39.151
policies around housing a little bit like what's starting to trickle like

23:39.151 --> 23:43.655
yesterday's announcement trying to limit ownership of residential

23:43.655 --> 23:46.758
real estate by institutional investors.

23:46.758 --> 23:50.796
I think we will see more of these measures but ultimately the goal,

23:50.796 --> 23:55.634
no matter what's the measure, is to get the Main Street economy

23:55.634 --> 23:58.303
improving from pretty depressed levels.

23:58.303 --> 23:59.871
So invest in that.

23:59.871 --> 24:04.009
If we can find companies that are tied to the

24:04.009 --> 24:09.214
80% of the population, mostly consumer stocks,

24:09.214 --> 24:13.251
mostly tied to housing because housing in any geography has

24:13.251 --> 24:17.389
a huge impact on the consumer confidence on the real economy.

24:17.389 --> 24:21.193
If we could find housing plays, if we can find transportation plays, if we can

24:21.193 --> 24:25.497
find restaurants or retail that would benefit from

24:25.497 --> 24:29.668
that sort of cyclical bottom and eventual rebound of

24:29.668 --> 24:33.805
the real economy, the market is starting

24:33.805 --> 24:36.041
to hint at that.

24:36.041 --> 24:39.711
Some of those stocks have clearly made their bottoms.

24:39.711 --> 24:44.082
Clearly, it's not a guarantee but appear to have made their bottoms.

24:44.115 --> 24:48.520
A lot of them are still inexpensive on a normalized economic

24:48.520 --> 24:52.824
environment type of profitability potential.

24:52.824 --> 24:56.828
This is why I was mentioning earlier, I think there is starting to

24:56.828 --> 24:59.464
be a subset of opportunities opening up in the U.S.

24:59.464 --> 25:03.568
which is very far away from the composition of

25:03.568 --> 25:07.906
the index given the tremendous weight of the tech sector.

25:07.906 --> 25:12.177
If you look at the S&P 500 equal-weighted that will

25:12.177 --> 25:15.080
be more representative of the real economy.

25:15.080 --> 25:19.050
I think that after a few years of tough performance there

25:19.050 --> 25:23.255
we can start to see some green shoots starting to

25:23.255 --> 25:24.256
form over this year.

25:24.256 --> 25:27.726
As you say, it's sort of a global story which is part of the thing that you

25:27.726 --> 25:29.861
started out saying.

25:29.861 --> 25:34.232
As we close out this discussion just remind

25:34.232 --> 25:38.270
investors perhaps where your style of investing and the

25:38.270 --> 25:40.906
way that you're investing benefit ...

25:40.906 --> 25:44.876
who's it for? You've got a Canadian investor that's probably traditionally been

25:44.876 --> 25:48.780
overweight U.S. and maybe particular stocks in the U.S.,

25:48.780 --> 25:53.184
at this moment walking into this new year

25:53.184 --> 25:57.956
where do you think your fund fits? For whom does it fit in particular ways?

25:57.956 --> 26:02.160
The quick pitch is, essentially, I think we are, or have just

26:02.160 --> 26:05.330
passed this inflection point of leadership between the U.S.

26:05.330 --> 26:07.065
and the rest of the world.

26:07.065 --> 26:11.136
The rest of world is much closer to the bottom of their economic cycles.

26:11.136 --> 26:13.605
The valuations are less demanding.

26:13.605 --> 26:17.642
While the U.S. is closer to the peak of its cycle, mostly because

26:17.642 --> 26:21.546
of the tech sector and the impact it had, the valuations are much more

26:21.546 --> 26:23.415
demanding.

26:23.415 --> 26:27.218
There's the currency tail risk, as we talked about.

26:27.218 --> 26:30.422
But we need to be careful about what we buy in international markets

26:30.422 --> 26:34.359
because if you simply go and look at the broad European

26:34.359 --> 26:38.396
or Asian indices you'll end up with a lot of large

26:38.396 --> 26:44.402
multinational consumer companies, pharmaceutical companies,

26:44.402 --> 26:48.440
banks, that are maybe not giving you the type of exposure

26:48.440 --> 26:49.107
you want.

26:49.107 --> 26:53.612
I think what we are searching for, what I am building a portfolio to,

26:53.612 --> 26:56.982
is to get exposure on the parts of the market and the rest of the world and in

26:56.982 --> 27:01.286
the U.S. that are depressed, where expectations

27:01.286 --> 27:04.889
are low, where fundamentals have been bad for a long period of time and where

27:04.889 --> 27:07.325
we see potential of that improving.

27:07.325 --> 27:11.529
This is very much tied around the consumer, certainly in China, increasingly

27:11.529 --> 27:14.132
in Europe, increasingly in the U.S.

27:14.132 --> 27:18.003
It's tied to housing in a lot of ways or the construction derivative plays on

27:18.003 --> 27:22.207
that. It is tied to all of what's

27:22.207 --> 27:26.311
driven by that, some on the industrial side,

27:26.311 --> 27:31.316
some on transport side, as I mentioned, and bringing an element of

27:31.316 --> 27:33.885
discipline around price.

27:33.885 --> 27:37.956
The funds look extremely different from the indices and I think trying

27:37.956 --> 27:41.693
to pinpoint the exposures of what we really want to have.

27:41.693 --> 27:45.764
I'm not going to buy large banks in China.

27:45.764 --> 27:49.768
I'm targeting consumer travel stocks or tech stocks that will

27:49.768 --> 27:54.339
benefit from the trends. I'm not buying pharmaceutical companies in Europe

27:54.339 --> 27:58.376
like most of the index. I'm targeting retailers

27:58.376 --> 28:02.313
that will benefit from an eventual recovery of consumer confidence.

28:02.313 --> 28:05.517
This is really different, actually, to a lot of investing out there.

28:05.517 --> 28:09.521
It just has to be said. Patrice Quirion, we're going to thank you very much for

28:09.521 --> 28:13.558
sharing your outlook for this year, where you're investing and just

28:13.558 --> 28:15.960
how different it is. I think investors really appreciate that.

28:15.960 --> 28:16.628
Thanks for your time.

28:16.628 --> 28:17.962
Pleasure to be here. Thank you.

28:17.962 --> 28:21.900
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28:21.900 --> 28:26.037
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We'll end today's show with a short disclaimer.

28:55.567 --> 28:59.404
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,

28:59.404 --> 29:03.341
and do not necessarily reflect those of Fidelity Investments Canada ULC or

29:03.341 --> 29:07.345
its affiliates. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not

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29:09.881 --> 29:12.183
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Or an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any entity or securities

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29:28.733 --> 29:31.035
Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

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