FidelityConnects: Markets at mid year: CIO insights on what matters next
As we reach the halfway point of the year, markets are recalibrating—and investors are looking ahead to what’s next.
Join Andrew Marchese, Chief Investment Officer and Portfolio Manager, for a mid‑year check‑in on global equities and the forces shaping markets for the rest of 2026. Andrew will unpack what’s driven returns so far, where opportunities and risks are emerging, and how investors should be thinking about positioning as the year unfolds.
Transcript
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<b>Subtitles are AI Generated</b>
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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.
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I'm Pamela Ritchie. Canada's economy has entered a technical recession and
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with most of the second quarter behind us it is still probably too
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early to tell how fully markets are pricing all of that in, if at all.
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Our next guest says with all of the geopolitical uncertainty that's unfolded
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through this year so far investors are treating markets a little bit
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like a glorified casino with short term moves masking
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perhaps what's really happening underneath.
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Where should advisors lean in?
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What's being misread? How is he positioning portfolios for opportunities
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beyond the headlines? Joining us here today for a mid-year check-in on
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global equities and the forces shaping markets is Fidelity Chief Investment
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Officer and portfolio manager, Andrew Marchese.
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Reminder just that today's webcast features live French, Mandarin and
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Cantonese audio interpretation.
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Welcome, Andrew, great to see you. Thank you for joining us.
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Great to be here.
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A very exciting moment to have you here to ask a few questions.
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We'll invite everyone joining us here to send questions in for Andrew over the
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next half hour or so.
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Can we just begin with getting the technical recession thoughts on
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this? It's a couple of quarters in a row not looking so
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great. There's other things going on though. What do you think?
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What I'm more concerned about is the corporate profit backdrop globally which
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looks ... it started the year looking very good, it's actually gotten better.
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I'm concerned about ... if you go back about 10, 11 years
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we were in a global profits recession even though the economy was
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not ringing recession, was kind of fine.
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You can have the opposite. I'm most concerned about profits.
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That's what actually fuels us from an investing perspective
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and kind of sets the foundation for opportunities to invest in.
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We'll leave it for now in that sense and sort of let it be a little bit.
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Give us a view of the world, the pieces that you're looking at.
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We'll take a look at all of them but there's lots of geopoliticals we were
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talking about. I want to ask you about inflation that goes along with some of
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the geopolitical story.
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If you had to rank sort of three risks that are out there that you are aware of
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what would they be?
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I think you start with the fact that on the positive side,
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as I said, the global profits engine is
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coming into the year doing very well and accelerating, but we've priced some
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of that in.
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Valuation is never a catalyst for a correction but
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it does make you wary in certain areas of the market, not all
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areas. Capital will go where you can kind of
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exploit a valuation discount or buy growth at a
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discount to other growth which is already being priced in for a blue sky
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scenario or a perfect scenario.
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That's one aspect. I don't look at that holistically for
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the market as kind of painting it with the same brush.
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I think it's all about finding and exploiting opportunities to invest
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in a disproportionate way.
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That's one of them.
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I've always maintained that the conflict in the Middle East is transient.
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It will resolve itself.
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Certainly, we would like the Strait open more sooner than later.
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It's probably gone on longer than it should.
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The longer it goes on that poses a risk to a
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supply shock to commodities.
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That has a knock-on effect to the economy as we kind of progress into
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the second half of the year.
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That deserves to be monitored.
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What are the ramifications for that from both a consumer
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demand perspective, so discretionary purchases, and what
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does that mean for industrial manufacturing margins.
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Your input costs go up, generally speaking, could
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that mean that margins fall and then earnings have to be negatively revised
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in the back half of the year or even into the first half of next year.
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That would be the other risk. This goes on too long and at
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some point the market kind of says, okay, we've maybe been complacent
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on this issue from a pricing perspective and we need to kind of price it
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accordingly. It's a smaller risk but a risk nonetheless.
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Really interesting. The backdrop being that companies are earning more
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and it's been astonishing to watch the earnings story play out much
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more on that. When you link the story of sort of a short termism
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in the markets, we mentioned the casinos which, actually, I think comes from
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you as sort of a feeling of that's in there.
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Again, that is sort of short term story, you're looking longer,
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but discuss the phenomena and really what it does to markets, maybe the
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psyche of markets and investors' maneuvers.
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Sometimes you find that capital will flow into things that do make
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sense from an earnings perspective but the expectations down the road get
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priced in for some kind of real blue sky or perfect scenario
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and people are unaware that some of this stuff is actually cyclical.
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It's a CapEx cycle like every other CapEx circle.
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We have all read and done research on the fact that it is
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one of the most exciting and maybe most lucrative CapEx cycles that
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we've ever seen in history.
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That being said, all good things must
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come to an end at some point.
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The important thing to remember when investing is try to engage when that point
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will come.
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We've seen hundreds of billions of dollars invested into
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the area of artificial intelligence, by all accounts that may be
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going up in the year or two years to come but at some point that
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number does start to decelerate.
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Historically, when that number decelerates the market treats it very
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negatively. We just have to be aware of that.
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I think also with that, and the amount of liquidity that's in
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the system, you get speculation in certain areas of the market where business
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models are not yet well-founded, they're not robust, companies don't
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have really much of a hope of earning what their stock price would say
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they're going to earn.
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Speculation is all part and parcel of that.
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Some of the stuff is legit with real businesses, with real revenue and
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cash flow and profits and other parts is more hope.
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Every time we go through a market cycle, in particular if you have one or two
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themes that really break away from the path you're going to get that.
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You're going get that kind of euphoria and maybe things aren't
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always well thought out so you get pockets of what you term to be the
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casino aspect of it all. People thinking they can't lose in a certain area,
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they treat it all kind of homogeneously.
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That's really not a great way to invest.
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It can work for a short period of time.
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You benefit from an investment perspective thematically
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but eventually things get parsed aside and only the true companies
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with long term robust business models, great capital allocation stories,
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their stocks kind of survive and go forward.
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You've spoken before that ...
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and I think maybe over the course of several years at this point ...
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that the world is going through a deglobalization after globalizing for
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20-odd years.
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It's reverting, probably started in COVID, the supply chain story.
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Take Canada as sort of a case in point, ultimately, for investing within
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it, what it is doing right now to react to
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that, is trade a huge part of that?
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How is Canada sort of making sure that within that
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deglobalizing world is doing what it needs to do.
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How do you see that?
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I see kind of Liberation Day, April
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2nd of last year, as kind of the Minsky moment for nations to
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kind of move forward in a different path and the catalyst
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to think differently about their
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economies going forward.
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Prime Minister Carney has talked about the middle and the middle having to make
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new trade alliances as the US has embarked
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on more of an isolationist mentality.
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Their hopes, really, I think at the end of the day, for a weaker dollar.
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We've seen governments all
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over the world try to reduce
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their exposure to the US dollar, whether that means selling US Treasuries or
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buying gold as kind of a hedge against all of this.
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The world is changing. It is a slow march.
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The question I've often got is if there was a new administration
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post 2028 i the US would that change anything?
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History would tell you it's actually slow to reverse despite
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the intentions of some of these ...
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I think, as our Prime Minister said, it's incumbent upon us as a nation
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to figure out a way to form new trade alliances and grow faster
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than we have in the past. Maybe we haven't been as optimal on that front
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as we could have been and now we don't have the benefit of certainty
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with our partners to the US.
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I think necessity is the mother of all invention kind of thing.
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I think to that kind of point I think we've,
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April of last year kind of forced the hand of a lot of countries around the
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world. To the extent in Canada, and other nations around
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the word with respect to natural resources, what you have in the ground is
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going to become increasingly important.
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Your ability to spend both on the public and the private
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side is going to become vitally important to make sure that your nation is
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equipped to deal with those new trade
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alliances.
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In Canada what does that mean? New pipelines, maybe it means changing laws with
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respect to the ports in British Columbia and shipping goods out.
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It can mean all of that. It could be investing in the defence industry or the
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aerospace industry or any number of new innovative
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industries to make yourself
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... you have to rely on yourself to a greater degree.
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I think April of last year put a spotlight on all that.
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With the defence industry, if you sort of go back in history and read
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all the histories of how wars and defence spending comes up, it's often to
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protect the assets that the nation has itself.
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As much as the people and the borders it is also what's inside.
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You mentioned those things that are in the ground inside the country broadly
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are going to be worth more.
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Just sort of take us there from an investment perspective.
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How do you lean in to that?
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I think if you look at the last natural resources bull market,
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which happened between 2000 and 2010, there was
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a lot of consolidation that happened globally.
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The assets ended up in the hands of fewer players.
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There's fewer ways to invest in this publicly.
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As we know, as commodity prices rise and things that
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were once not economically feasible
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from an exploration perspective become economically feasible.
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To the extent that new capital comes into the
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mining industry or oil and gas industry and any one number of
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commodities, and those things now meet the merits of, well,
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it actually does make economic sense to go mine for this,
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companies are going to be looking to do that.
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There are fewer companies than there were just 20 years ago to do that.
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There's a scarcity value around that, to the extent
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that those assets are in safer geopolitical places in the world
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they're probably inherently worth more just based on that.
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That puts Canada in a great spot.
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You mentioned there aren't as many companies because of consolidation last
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super cycle time round.
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There are lots of companies, and we saw the TSX go up massively last year
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because of the resource stocks, broadly speaking, certainly the
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gold side of things. Are we going to see more companies get made?
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Is the environment there, the landscape there for new companies to
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come public?
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History would tell you yes. If you embark down kind of a
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broader secular, I don't want to use the word super cycle but a secular cycle
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then, yes, all those projects that were once not economically viable
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maybe become economically viable.
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Companies will look for capital to exploit them.
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It'll be more issuance, secondaries.
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There may be more IPOs going forward.
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That's what history will tell you occurs during these types of cycles.
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It's exciting.
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Yeah, it could be.
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It could be really exciting. What do we need to know, going back to sort of the
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short term side of things, about rates?
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I mean, some of that's going to be expressed long term as well but inflation
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and rates, everything that you're discussing costs money to get it rolling.
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It, in theory, is inflationary for a period of time anyway.
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How do you protect against that as you're building out what you're discussing?
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I think about inflation more from a secular perspective than a
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cyclical perspective. I think the question becomes is the
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growth of M2 money supply over the better part of the last
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25 years or so and the mere fact now
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that you have, as I said, a supply shock to the system.
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If we become more fragmented as a global economy what kind of stress does
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that put from an inflationary perspective.
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You're seeing some of that in the bond market and yields are rising
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accordingly. Now, I think to some degree it's
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kind of interesting when you see bond yields move up the tech names actually
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move up with them for two
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reasons, I think. One, they can kind of outgrow ...
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some of them can outgrow the yield story.
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The other one is a lot of thought that the CapEx happens outside the general
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economy so they're going to grow independently.
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If you--
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They're not selling to the general economy if it goes up or down, collapses or
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whatever.
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--if you think that bond yields and inflation eventually slow an economy
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as an investor you seek out growth, growth opportunities that can grow
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independently over the overall economy.
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When you have tailwinds at your economic back you seek out more
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value, things that are more cyclical, that need a strong economic tailwind
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behind you to kind of get an increase in demand and so on
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and so forth. That drives the P&L of some of those cyclical value-oriented
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names. That kind of explains the behaviour on a day-in and day-out
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basis when tech's doing a little better and bond yields are reacting as such.
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I think we've had some people on this
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forum and other forums to suggest maybe we're never getting back to 2%.
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The question is do we kind of lurch into
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longer higher inflation, that will
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be the big thing to ask ourselves. That kind of dovetails into
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what Jurrien Timmer's talked about with a 60/20/20 diversified
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portfolio.
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With alts sort of breaking up the bond side of things a little bit.
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Alts can be many different things, and Fidelity offers alternatives to
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take advantage of things generally within stock markets, what
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else is in there from sort of a global perspective of what belongs in that
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other 20.
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Hard assets to preserve any negative ramifications that come from inflation.
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I agree with Jurrien, that 20% should come from fixed income.
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It's not a prediction in so much as it's a probabilistic
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exercise that with all the money supply, with everything
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that's going on in the geopolitical landscape, there is a
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non-zero risk here that we just lurch and grind forward from an
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inflationary perspective, and what does that do to bond yields longer term?
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For all the reasons I mentioned with respect to the world is changing and
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you want assets in the ground, to the extent that they're hard assets,
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industrial commodities like nickel and copper and the like, diversification
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away from the US dollar. If the US really wants a weak dollar, and I think
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they do, then the hedge on the other side is gold.
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What does it mean for land, arable land?
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Yeah, get into the agriculture piece of this.
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Right. That was a theme we heard way back in the early 2000s
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as well. Some of these things kind of come back and it's all because
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of the changing landscape, the abundance of
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money out there in the system, and the knock-on effect would then be
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there's a non-zero risk here that inflation just kind of grinds higher.
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Now, the opposition to that viewpoint would be artificial
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intelligence and other technological advances--
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Will take care of it.
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--will take care of the inflationary aspect of it and dampen it
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down so we don't need to worry. We'll be able to exist in a
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2% CPI world because inflation will take
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care of any undue pressure that is
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caused from an inflationary perspective.
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The other thing, just to kind of finish up on the inflation area front, is you
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start to get into this kind of world of people
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talk about affordability versus inflation.
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If you talk--
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It's two separate things almost.
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--if you talk about affordability, then affordability is really much more of a
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gross problem than inflation is.
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How do we address affordability for certain assets that
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we need to live in? If you're talking about the regular CPI
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you're not talking about a lot of things that affect consumers on a day-in and
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day-out basis. Is it more appropriate to look through
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things with that lens as opposed to the garden variety statistics
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around CPI.
18:16.562 --> 18:20.732
There usually is an investment for that to make sure that you have some pricing
18:20.732 --> 18:24.803
flexibility. You could either go through dividend strategies or you have other
18:24.803 --> 18:29.875
ways of investing to sort of help you with some of those.
18:29.875 --> 18:34.613
Is it fair to say that you look at the world as that possibly, or at least
18:34.613 --> 18:39.818
probably, being a way you should look at your investments, that inflation
18:39.818 --> 18:42.521
is there, it's here, might be around for a while.
18:42.521 --> 18:46.158
Yeah, I think you get a partial hedge through equities.
18:46.158 --> 18:50.229
Obviously, fixed income, you have potentially a very
18:50.229 --> 18:53.799
deleterious effect if inflation runs rampantly.
18:53.799 --> 18:56.535
Bond yields back up a lot.
18:56.535 --> 19:01.406
The ultimate is just to have that 20%
19:01.406 --> 19:05.377
invested in commodities, hard assets to a degree.
19:05.410 --> 19:09.548
That kind of gets you through. I think treat it kind of
19:09.548 --> 19:13.519
under that scenario, 80% of your portfolio,
19:13.519 --> 19:18.524
60% you would have a partial hedge, 20% you have a pretty decent hedge.
19:18.524 --> 19:22.628
If it doesn't come to fruition you still have the strategic
19:22.628 --> 19:26.598
importance of those hard assets because
19:26.598 --> 19:31.270
longer term if we're becoming less global, if the deglobalization
19:31.270 --> 19:35.340
theme continues to march forward, any way you cut it those have
19:35.340 --> 19:39.311
strategic importance whether or not you think of it as a
19:39.311 --> 19:40.312
inflationary hedge.
19:41.346 --> 19:44.950
We're approaching, obviously, the sort of various dates for the CUSMA
19:44.950 --> 19:47.119
discussions and final dates and so on.
19:47.119 --> 19:51.790
What does trade look like, you can use Canada as an example, in
19:51.790 --> 19:54.059
a world like that? There's still going to be trade. People are still putting
19:54.059 --> 19:56.828
things on lots of great big ships that are all over the world and sending them
19:56.828 --> 20:00.232
across the world. It's still there but it looks different.
20:00.232 --> 20:04.203
I look at CUSMA as like you're trying to solve a
20:04.203 --> 20:07.372
problem for the here and now.
20:07.372 --> 20:11.476
This alliance that we have in place and the flow of goods that
20:11.476 --> 20:15.547
happen across these borders, somebody threw down the gauntlet,
20:15.547 --> 20:17.950
now we've got to go back to the table and figure it all out.
20:17.950 --> 20:22.020
That's a here and now problem. I don't know how it gets resolved
20:22.020 --> 20:25.991
but you're going to
20:25.991 --> 20:27.793
figure it out in some way, shape or form.
20:27.793 --> 20:32.130
It probably results in no one party being exceptionally
20:32.130 --> 20:36.335
happy but everybody can kind of just go, okay, we're mostly the way there.
20:36.335 --> 20:38.637
Does it resemble what we have?
20:38.637 --> 20:40.572
I have no idea.
20:40.572 --> 20:44.676
I'm very quick to point that. We don't know.
20:44.676 --> 20:46.979
We're not privy to those discussions and what have you.
20:46.979 --> 20:50.916
The bigger one I think from an investment standpoint is coming back to the
20:50.916 --> 20:54.019
new alliances that are formed.
20:54.019 --> 20:57.956
You deal with the here and now but the growth, the future,
20:57.956 --> 21:01.893
is based on everything that this country and others can do with each
21:01.893 --> 21:06.198
other in a way for whatever reason we didn't pursue before
21:06.198 --> 21:10.335
but maybe, as I said earlier, the Minsky moment occurred in April of last
21:10.335 --> 21:14.873
year and it requires a
21:14.873 --> 21:19.011
very strict disciplined approach to a new strategic way of
21:19.011 --> 21:21.847
thinking about the country.
21:21.847 --> 21:24.149
Hopefully, we address that.
21:24.149 --> 21:28.520
It's gonna take many, many years, if not decades, to do it but
21:28.520 --> 21:32.524
I'm more optimistic on this country than I've been in a long, long
21:32.524 --> 21:35.193
time. I think we have the...
21:35.193 --> 21:36.194
It's really cool.
21:36.695 --> 21:40.098
I think we're not only saying the right things but there's signs that we're
21:40.098 --> 21:44.036
doing the right things. I think you have to remember this takes a
21:44.036 --> 21:46.872
long time. You're not going to see it immediately.
21:46.872 --> 21:51.009
The CUSMA stuff, you see it more immediately.
21:51.009 --> 21:53.979
There's a journey here but there's ways to invest at which you've addressed.
21:53.979 --> 21:57.949
There's a couple of questions coming in on the impact of the
21:57.949 --> 22:02.220
three quite well telegraphed big IPOs that are coming,
22:02.220 --> 22:03.922
the excitement around them.
22:03.922 --> 22:07.926
I might ask you sort of a question on that but more broadly what's
22:07.926 --> 22:13.265
the market effect? You've got these behemoths coming in, it's pretty exciting.
22:13.265 --> 22:17.235
What should investors know about it sort of around the edges and maybe
22:17.235 --> 22:18.470
for investing within them?
22:18.470 --> 22:21.807
I think just from a market mechanic standpoint, you're right, it creates a lot
22:21.840 --> 22:22.808
of euphoria.
22:23.775 --> 22:27.913
You get more supply, you could, you may,
22:27.913 --> 22:31.883
in situations where there is a lot of excitement and high
22:31.883 --> 22:36.188
valuations flows move
22:36.188 --> 22:39.858
in that area and as a result you've got to sell something to buy something.
22:39.858 --> 22:41.259
Potentially within the equity market.
22:41.259 --> 22:45.364
Right. You cause a price dislocation in other aspects of
22:45.364 --> 22:49.401
the market which for the patient and the astute
22:49.401 --> 22:51.870
could be a great buying opportunity.
22:51.870 --> 22:56.007
I think that it's very interesting from a liquidity
22:56.007 --> 23:00.479
perspective. If you back out the investment theses for the companies that
23:00.479 --> 23:05.550
are being issued and you really look at it from a liquidity standpoint
23:05.550 --> 23:09.688
and the causal effect, it's always very interesting to see
23:09.688 --> 23:11.957
what else is behaving the way it is.
23:11.957 --> 23:14.059
That's where the opportunities ...
23:14.059 --> 23:17.295
you can run with the herd if you want to, and that's fine.
23:17.295 --> 23:20.198
There's plenty of people who do it and there are plenty of who are successful
23:20.198 --> 23:24.169
at it. The more intriguing thing for those who are patient
23:24.169 --> 23:28.407
and diligent can be is there anything else being sold to
23:28.407 --> 23:30.609
buy what's being issued.
23:30.609 --> 23:31.710
It's a great company.
23:31.710 --> 23:36.381
Right. Great company, it got dislocated, now when I look at it I can be patient
23:36.381 --> 23:40.852
and my 5-year compounded annual return will be
23:40.852 --> 23:44.489
tremendous. Like I always say, those are the ones that are interesting because
23:44.489 --> 23:48.493
you just have to make one decision, which is buy it and wait, as opposed
23:48.493 --> 23:52.464
to being kind of almost like a
23:52.464 --> 23:55.934
high frequency trader, to a degree, in the other stuff.
23:55.934 --> 23:59.938
It goes back to the casino nature that we're seeing in some areas of
23:59.938 --> 24:04.309
the market. Let's go back to one of the geopolitical discussion points, you
24:04.309 --> 24:08.380
were talking more about the Straits of Hormuz need to open, the oil story
24:08.380 --> 24:12.517
there. Lots of thoughts on don't chase oil when it was
24:12.517 --> 24:15.353
circling up. It's still up high.
24:15.353 --> 24:18.690
What happens on the way down or where it could land?
24:18.690 --> 24:22.093
I mean, is it a land of opportunities, really, is the question.
24:22.093 --> 24:27.399
I think the question is how does the whole situation get resolved?
24:27.399 --> 24:31.336
Does it get resolved in a somewhat messy way that everybody
24:31.336 --> 24:35.907
is not quite pleased with and so do you have an embedded
24:35.907 --> 24:39.010
war premium in the price of crude going forward?
24:39.010 --> 24:40.011
You don't...
24:40.145 --> 24:42.447
It could always flare up again, sort of thing.
24:42.481 --> 24:48.386
Yeah, and just like it's messy where
24:48.386 --> 24:51.289
nothing is operating like it used to.
24:51.289 --> 24:55.327
Things are operating but it's not as efficient and painless
24:55.360 --> 24:59.564
as it used to so you would have some kind of premium embedded in the price of
24:59.564 --> 25:02.968
crude for that reason.
25:02.968 --> 25:07.005
I think that's basically kind of my take on crude.
25:07.005 --> 25:08.006
The concern there.
25:09.140 --> 25:11.810
In the meantime you've got to have a balanced approach.
25:11.810 --> 25:12.911
You can't really...
25:12.911 --> 25:16.915
I've been doing this for 28 years and my approach has always
25:16.915 --> 25:18.617
been balanced.
25:18.617 --> 25:21.553
Make less decisions not more decisions.
25:21.553 --> 25:25.790
It's easy to get caught up in the euphoria of certain aspects
25:25.790 --> 25:30.295
of the market and that's been true every year that I've
25:30.295 --> 25:36.001
spent here at Fidelity. There's always something really running
25:36.001 --> 25:40.906
or thematic in nature and you just gotta kind of always remember that
25:40.906 --> 25:44.943
balance generally wins. I always think of it
25:44.943 --> 25:49.014
as your investment is kind of like you're flying a plane
25:49.014 --> 25:53.018
to get somewhere and ideally you want as little
25:53.018 --> 25:54.419
turbulence as possible.
25:54.419 --> 25:57.055
Land gently.
25:57.055 --> 26:00.926
It's fine if we get you there but if we get you in a bumpy and all over the
26:00.926 --> 26:03.895
place way that's not a fun ride.
26:03.895 --> 26:07.866
When it's not a fine ride I think you're more apt to make less
26:07.866 --> 26:12.037
optimal decisions. I think from that perspective, yes, the return
26:12.037 --> 26:14.906
matters but also the path to return matters.
26:14.906 --> 26:18.777
It's very good to be reminded of that, ultimately.
26:18.777 --> 26:22.847
Let's go in just quickly to inflation but the rate story.
26:22.881 --> 26:26.818
We've got someone new at the Federal Reserve, lots of interest
26:26.818 --> 26:31.056
around that. I think everyone knows the headline stories there.
26:31.056 --> 26:33.291
It's really the direction of rates from here.
26:33.291 --> 26:35.493
We heard a lot about the US. They'll just sit on hold.
26:35.493 --> 26:38.797
They're high enough. It's not like they came down to rock bottom.
26:38.797 --> 26:42.867
Other parts of the world did come down in a rate cycle, cutting
26:42.867 --> 26:45.570
cycle much lower.
26:45.570 --> 26:49.608
What's your rates outlook? Give us a few countries broader take.
26:49.608 --> 26:52.377
When we started the year, Jan.
26:52.377 --> 26:56.481
1st, I think the US was kind of the outlier in saying we haven't
26:56.481 --> 26:59.784
cut enough, we would like to.
26:59.784 --> 27:05.056
I think since the conflict started in late February,
27:05.056 --> 27:09.027
and we're seeing some of the economic numbers continue to get better
27:09.060 --> 27:13.932
in North America on the manufacturing and service side,
27:13.932 --> 27:17.902
combined with all the discussion we had about inflation earlier, job
27:17.902 --> 27:21.873
market's fine, you can't
27:21.873 --> 27:25.710
really point to cutting anymore. That's been the stepwise change.
27:25.710 --> 27:29.714
Now the question is for a lot of economists out there, not only with
27:29.714 --> 27:33.718
respect to the United States but other countries, who's gonna
27:33.718 --> 27:35.787
tighten first and by how much?
27:35.820 --> 27:36.021
Australia broadly.
27:36.021 --> 27:40.091
Right, Australia did it. Who goes after them
27:40.091 --> 27:42.193
and by how much?
27:42.193 --> 27:47.032
I think really for many developed nations right now
27:47.032 --> 27:51.136
market implied policy outlook is for flat, don't
27:51.136 --> 27:55.473
touch it, wait for something to develop.
27:55.473 --> 27:59.411
The bias, I think if you took a sample size of
27:59.411 --> 28:04.849
economists out there the bias is towards tightening.
28:04.849 --> 28:08.653
One could point to the inflation argument but the other argument is growth has
28:08.653 --> 28:11.656
been good, particularly in North America.
28:11.656 --> 28:16.127
Which is a good reason to hike says Denise Chisholm, for instance.
28:16.161 --> 28:19.631
Well, yeah. If you start overheating then, yeah, you have high oil plus high
28:19.631 --> 28:25.003
growth. There's probably a good reason to say the bias is towards tightening.
28:25.003 --> 28:25.303
I think the...
28:25.303 --> 28:27.872
And the economy can handle it because there's growth.
28:27.872 --> 28:29.574
You would think so.
28:29.574 --> 28:33.578
The only way that that argument fails on itself is probably if there
28:33.578 --> 28:36.948
is a material downgrade in employment.
28:36.948 --> 28:41.152
If employment numbers, for whatever reason, were to come undone
28:41.152 --> 28:43.321
then it's hard to justify that.
28:43.321 --> 28:45.457
It might keep you on the sidelines a little longer.
28:45.457 --> 28:49.627
Do you want to finish up with just sort of the long term opportunity of AI
28:49.627 --> 28:51.863
in the markets? We've all been looking at it.
28:51.863 --> 28:55.166
There's certainly the story of the resources that go into making sure we can
28:55.166 --> 28:59.537
power it all. We all know about data centres.
28:59.537 --> 29:03.374
What's the opportunity as an equity investor right now in AI?
29:03.374 --> 29:05.777
We're a couple of years in now, long way to go, though.
29:05.810 --> 29:09.948
I think what's been very clear since last
29:09.948 --> 29:14.619
year is that the AI theme has outperformed
29:14.619 --> 29:16.888
the broader market.
29:16.888 --> 29:20.859
Even within that AI theme the leader has been the semiconductors in chip
29:20.859 --> 29:23.328
space.
29:23.328 --> 29:26.364
That reminds me a lot of 1999.
29:26.364 --> 29:30.401
It was the equipment guys that we all knew were cyclical but you
29:30.401 --> 29:32.070
wait for the CapEx to kind of--
29:32.070 --> 29:34.205
Peter out.
29:34.205 --> 29:38.643
--exhaust itself. People point to a shortage of supply in fabs
29:38.643 --> 29:40.378
and the ability ...
29:40.378 --> 29:42.981
you're always going to have more chips and need more chips and so on and so
29:42.981 --> 29:47.018
forth. Endless demand and not price sensitive at all from
29:47.018 --> 29:50.722
the people who are buying these things. It paints a very, very blue sky
29:50.722 --> 29:53.091
backdrop.
29:53.091 --> 29:57.095
As I said, we know all this ends and then the longer term, multi-year
29:57.095 --> 30:01.266
beneficiaries of it still remain to be seen, who they are.
30:01.266 --> 30:05.837
I always like to kind of think to myself,
30:05.837 --> 30:10.875
in '99, 2000 we talked about WorldCom,
30:10.875 --> 30:15.413
Nortel, Qualcomm, Dell,
30:15.413 --> 30:15.513
Cisco.
30:15.513 --> 30:15.547
Some of them are still around.
30:15.547 --> 30:19.717
I was gonna say, Qualcomm
30:19.717 --> 30:22.954
I think is the only one we still really talk about in terms of being a nouveau
30:22.954 --> 30:26.191
company, even then.
30:26.191 --> 30:30.228
We talked those companies but the real beneficiaries of the
30:30.228 --> 30:32.931
internet buildout were none of them.
30:32.931 --> 30:36.267
Some of them weren't even companies at that point in time and some of them were
30:36.301 --> 30:40.371
privates who didn't have more to a shingle to their name.
30:40.371 --> 30:44.375
You have to wonder if artificial intelligence will be the
30:44.375 --> 30:47.712
same way, will it spawn new industries, new companies that are...
30:47.712 --> 30:49.380
That are the real winners, ultimately.
30:49.380 --> 30:53.318
Maybe that's it. The winners right now are quite apparent
30:53.318 --> 30:57.288
and evident before us, are they the winners in 10 years?
30:57.288 --> 30:57.922
Time will tell.
30:57.922 --> 31:01.459
We need to have a chat ongoing about that one in particular.
31:01.459 --> 31:04.329
Andrew Marchese, thank you for enlightening us, bringing your views and
31:04.329 --> 31:06.231
insights to Fidelity Connects.
31:06.231 --> 31:08.867
Thanks for watching or listening to the Fidelity Connects
31:08.867 --> 31:13.171
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31:42.567 --> 31:46.404
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,
31:46.404 --> 31:50.341
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31:50.341 --> 31:54.345
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31:54.345 --> 31:56.881
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Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

