FidelityConnects: Jurrien Timmer – The global macro view November 24, 2025
Jurrien Timmer, Fidelity’s Director of Global Macro, shares his thoughts on what’s moving the markets around the world, to help you be better prepared for what may be next.
Transcript
00:01.001 --> 00:06.573
<b>Subtitles are AI Generated</b>
00:07.040 --> 00:08.775
Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.
00:08.775 --> 00:12.879
I'm Pamela Ritchie. Equity markets are recovering after indigestion
00:12.879 --> 00:14.981
took over through last week.
00:14.981 --> 00:19.085
The question of whether a slowing equity market can make it a stronger
00:19.085 --> 00:21.388
equity market is being asked.
00:21.388 --> 00:25.358
Perhaps this is a useful shift in the narrative away from zero-sum
00:25.358 --> 00:29.596
talk. Will the next few weeks of greater government data releases in
00:29.596 --> 00:34.200
the U.S. and the annual dance, if you will, before a year-end Fed decision
00:34.200 --> 00:37.670
allow for markets to calmly march forward?
00:37.670 --> 00:41.775
Here to help us understand where a 5% drawdown in equity market lands
00:41.775 --> 00:45.712
us as we approach the final month of the year is Fidelity's
00:45.712 --> 00:48.214
Director of Global Macro, Jurrien Timmer.
00:48.214 --> 00:50.483
A delight to see you. We're seeing you from across the pond.
00:50.483 --> 00:52.819
Thank you for joining us, Jurrien.
00:52.819 --> 00:55.155
Yes, thank you. I'm at my parent's house.
00:55.155 --> 00:59.259
We're here for the Thanksgiving holidays and fingers crossed
00:59.259 --> 01:03.563
that the Wi-Fi holds up because it's sort of peak internet hours
01:03.563 --> 01:06.966
here at 5:30 in the afternoon.
01:06.966 --> 01:10.403
Well, we're delighted to have you and if it happens to go to audio or something
01:10.403 --> 01:13.640
like that we will roll with it. That is absolutely fine.
01:13.640 --> 01:16.776
We'll invite everyone to send questions in for Jurrien over the next little
01:16.776 --> 01:20.880
while. I was struck, certainly, by the discussion of what we saw last
01:20.880 --> 01:23.750
week, what we might be landing in this week.
01:23.750 --> 01:28.221
You've been pointing to some time that you're not so uncomfortable, actually,
01:28.221 --> 01:33.660
with a little bit of a pullback. That's what we've gotten.
01:33.660 --> 01:37.730
It sounds a little backwards but we've
01:37.730 --> 01:42.068
been looking at analogs to the internet bubble back 25
01:42.068 --> 01:46.539
years ago and will the AI boom become a bubble,
01:46.539 --> 01:50.643
the action in sort of the non-profitable tech, the other cats
01:50.643 --> 01:54.614
and dogs of companies that promise a lot of great
01:54.614 --> 01:58.952
things but don't really have earnings, or in some case even revenues to
01:58.952 --> 02:03.389
back it up, but it's sort of trust me, we'll create something.
02:03.389 --> 02:07.193
A lot of those stocks, of course, went to the moon, we can pull up slide 8,
02:07.193 --> 02:11.364
those stocks have been coming back down
02:11.364 --> 02:15.568
to earth. Again, we're looking at Bitcoin miners
02:15.568 --> 02:19.706
which kind of became a hyperscaler theme, the meme stocks,
02:19.706 --> 02:24.244
non-profitable tech like nuclear names, anything that was even remotely
02:24.244 --> 02:28.348
related to anything AI, they've
02:28.348 --> 02:32.485
been coming down as investors
02:32.485 --> 02:36.723
have started to question sort of the circularity of
02:36.723 --> 02:40.660
what some of what we're seeing, the big providers of
02:40.660 --> 02:45.498
... the picks and shovels, if you will, financing its
02:45.498 --> 02:49.602
buyers even though those buyers don't necessarily have
02:49.602 --> 02:52.939
any customers for their product.
02:52.939 --> 02:56.209
It's sort of a build it and they will come.
02:56.209 --> 02:58.077
Of course, we've seen that before.
02:58.111 --> 03:02.015
Cisco did that back in the internet bubble days.
03:02.015 --> 03:06.352
I think as we've seen some of these hyperscalers borrow
03:06.352 --> 03:10.356
a ton of money in the bond market in the last few
03:10.356 --> 03:14.460
days and weeks I think the markets are sobering up a little bit that
03:14.460 --> 03:18.431
some of the pie in the sky stuff that we're seeing really needs to
03:18.431 --> 03:20.133
be backed up.
03:20.133 --> 03:24.137
As painful it is for anyone who is in those stocks I think it's
03:24.137 --> 03:26.005
actually very healthy.
03:26.005 --> 03:29.342
I mean, I don't want to be the one that says corrections are healthy because
03:29.342 --> 03:33.279
they're always healthy until they actually happen to you.
03:33.279 --> 03:37.350
I would rather have a shaking of the tree now, if
03:37.350 --> 03:41.621
you will, that kind of shakes out the weak handed longs, the paper
03:41.621 --> 03:45.558
hands as we call it in crypto, now than have it
03:45.558 --> 03:50.063
just be uninterrupted and ends up in a parabolic move later.
03:50.063 --> 03:54.000
Because I can tell you, bubbles, once they burst, we saw this
03:54.000 --> 03:57.870
in 2000, it leaves a lot of scar tissue behind.
03:57.870 --> 04:01.808
I'd rather have an occasional reset on the way
04:01.808 --> 04:05.812
to a sustainable boom than having it all sort
04:05.812 --> 04:07.647
of end in tears now.
04:07.647 --> 04:11.451
Who knows, maybe we were never gonna have a bubble, maybe we won't, maybe it's
04:11.451 --> 04:15.588
not even a boom but I would prefer this over
04:15.588 --> 04:17.023
the alternative.
04:17.023 --> 04:21.027
It's so fascinating. In terms of liquidity coming out of
04:21.060 --> 04:25.431
the market, for instance, or shaking out some leverage,
04:25.431 --> 04:29.435
liquidity, those are all, you know, L words that go along
04:29.435 --> 04:32.305
with sort of bubbles and so on, what did we see there?
04:32.305 --> 04:36.576
I mean, is there sort of a calmer, less liquidity sloshing
04:36.576 --> 04:38.745
around? Just a little bit, I mean, we're not talking a ton here.
04:38.745 --> 04:41.814
Is that good too?
04:41.814 --> 04:45.752
If we go to slide 1 we can see the degree to which some
04:45.752 --> 04:51.124
of these more speculative corners of the market have come down.
04:51.124 --> 04:53.626
I think part of it is year end.
04:53.626 --> 04:57.764
I mean, we're not at year end yet but it's been a pretty momentous ride
04:57.764 --> 05:01.734
this year. We're still up double digits in the S&P and that's
05:01.734 --> 05:07.273
despite a 21% decline in March and April.
05:07.273 --> 05:11.444
Again, I think investors are looking at the returns,
05:11.444 --> 05:15.882
they're looking at the uninterrupted course
05:15.882 --> 05:20.453
of this AI narrative and may be wondering, okay,
05:20.453 --> 05:23.856
what is going to be the killer app at the end of the day that's going to pay
05:23.856 --> 05:27.627
for all of these hundreds of billions of capex spending?
05:27.660 --> 05:32.131
I think these are all the right questions to ask because I would rather have a
05:32.131 --> 05:36.669
10-year boom than a one-year bubble. I think we all would.
05:36.669 --> 05:39.072
I think there's a number of factors going on.
05:39.072 --> 05:41.674
Of course, the Fed is also in play.
05:41.674 --> 05:45.978
I think that's maybe a little bit overplayed,
05:45.978 --> 05:50.016
and we'll talk about the Fed, but all of a sudden that December rate
05:50.016 --> 05:54.420
cut that we all thought was a given is now anything
05:54.420 --> 05:57.223
but a given. Again, we'll talk about the Fed in a moment.
05:57.223 --> 06:01.227
It's hard to believe that that's really a reason why
06:01.227 --> 06:05.398
all of this stuff all of a sudden is happening but it was maybe icing
06:05.398 --> 06:08.768
on the cake for investors saying, you know what, it's been a hell of a ride,
06:08.768 --> 06:12.972
maybe we could ride it all the way into Christmas but
06:12.972 --> 06:15.875
why don't we take some chips off the table now?
06:15.875 --> 06:20.179
I think part of it is what's going on.
06:20.179 --> 06:24.517
The question is, obviously, how much further it will go.
06:24.517 --> 06:28.888
S&P is down 5% from the high which history shows is
06:28.888 --> 06:32.024
really mostly a nothing burger if that's where it stays.
06:32.024 --> 06:35.762
I mean, the market is down that much almost any time.
06:35.762 --> 06:39.899
Even a 10% to 15% correction is relatively common, it
06:39.899 --> 06:44.237
happens usually once a year. Of course, we had one already this year.
06:44.237 --> 06:48.374
If we go to slide two, you look at the Mag Seven, it's still
06:48.374 --> 06:50.443
kind of in that range.
06:50.443 --> 06:54.414
Again, it has been a meteoric ride since that April 8th
06:54.414 --> 07:00.319
low. It can only go up so much at a time.
07:00.319 --> 07:04.257
One thing we're seeing actually is that even though we think it's just the
07:04.257 --> 07:08.461
speculative corners of the market or even the AI names, and we saw
07:08.461 --> 07:12.398
the Nvidia earnings release which was gangbusters
07:12.398 --> 07:16.436
but then that reversal, but it actually is happening under the
07:16.436 --> 07:20.606
surface as well. You can see in the bottom panel here that only
07:20.606 --> 07:24.911
a minority of stocks are now above their 50-day moving average.
07:24.911 --> 07:28.981
It's not quite oversold enough to say, okay, wow, that probably
07:28.981 --> 07:33.286
is a bottom. Maybe we'll go back and forth a little bit further.
07:33.286 --> 07:36.189
Again, that's really not terrible.
07:36.189 --> 07:40.760
If you look at that chart, or let's say go to slide 3, you look the S&P
07:40.760 --> 07:44.630
cap-weighted index, which is the one with the blue line, versus the
07:44.630 --> 07:48.968
equal-weighted, which is the one with the purple line, it's been
07:48.968 --> 07:53.139
quite a ride for the last, what is that, seven, eight months.
07:53.139 --> 07:57.143
In a way we're having reverse seasonals right now because usually the
07:57.143 --> 08:01.180
summer is weak, you get a bottom in early October and then you've got
08:01.180 --> 08:05.251
the Santa rally. We've actually had a positive
08:05.251 --> 08:09.989
summer and now we're have weakness in late November.
08:09.989 --> 08:14.460
Again, seasonals only work all else being equal and certainly in
08:14.460 --> 08:17.430
2025 nothing else is equal these days.
08:17.430 --> 08:21.534
It's been a fascinating year. I'm fascinated to see how you and others
08:21.534 --> 08:25.304
will write the history books on this one.
08:25.304 --> 08:29.509
You've mentioned, I think, before in some notes that within the
08:29.509 --> 08:33.880
discussion of is AI overdone a piece of it is
08:33.880 --> 08:37.917
does the world need AI to make us all much more
08:37.917 --> 08:41.854
productive or else the debt is going to be
08:41.854 --> 08:46.292
an issue? There's sort of a leap there and I'd love you to
08:46.292 --> 08:49.428
bridge it for us, if you don't mind.
08:49.428 --> 08:53.666
There's a lot riding on the AI boom, not
08:53.666 --> 08:55.401
only the stocks in question.
08:55.401 --> 09:00.439
Again, Nvidia, at least was last week a $5 trillion company,
09:00.439 --> 09:04.377
the Mag Seven are almost 40% of the S&P,
09:04.377 --> 09:08.381
a lot of concentration risk, and that risk is great when it's going
09:08.381 --> 09:12.318
well but it's not so great when it doesn't.
09:12.318 --> 09:14.053
A lot in the stock market, at least the U.S.
09:14.053 --> 09:17.557
stock market, is riding on the AI boom.
09:17.557 --> 09:21.427
Geopolitically there's a lot riding because it is kind of like an arms race
09:21.427 --> 09:23.963
between the U.S. and China.
09:23.963 --> 09:28.534
Both countries want to get to that dominance point
09:28.534 --> 09:32.104
as fast as possible.
09:32.104 --> 09:36.175
Like you said, there's a larger narrative as well and that is that the world is
09:36.175 --> 09:40.313
being, or most of the developed world is being strangled by
09:40.313 --> 09:44.250
an ever larger debt burden. Canada, the U.S.,
09:44.250 --> 09:48.387
the UK, Europe, China, Japan, you have debt-to-GDP
09:48.387 --> 09:53.426
levels, including government, corporate and household,
09:53.426 --> 09:58.130
that in many places is exceeding 300%.
09:58.130 --> 10:02.068
With demographics ageing, and I'm seeing it here in Holland even with
10:02.068 --> 10:06.005
my own parents this week, where is the growth
10:06.005 --> 10:10.242
going to come from, because the speed limit, the non-inflationary
10:10.242 --> 10:14.280
speed limit for the economy is essentially growth in the labour force plus
10:14.280 --> 10:16.649
growth in productivity.
10:16.649 --> 10:20.653
We have ageing populations in many places in
10:20.653 --> 10:24.757
the world. There's now a backlash against immigration, certainly in the U.S.,
10:24.757 --> 10:28.728
probably you have a little bit of that in Canada, in Europe, of course,
10:28.728 --> 10:32.498
with refugees, that's been at play as well.
10:32.498 --> 10:36.769
If you're not gonna naturally boost the speed limit by having just
10:36.769 --> 10:41.474
more people working then you need to do it through
10:41.474 --> 10:43.509
productivity.
10:43.509 --> 10:46.112
AI is the great promise on that.
10:46.112 --> 10:50.016
The way people are describing AI, at
10:50.016 --> 10:54.387
least the proponents of how it could work well, is that
10:54.387 --> 10:58.658
essentially the hyperscalers are creating running
10:58.658 --> 11:02.628
water, the way people did centuries ago, or
11:02.628 --> 11:06.899
like electricity or infrastructure, they're laying the pipes for
11:06.899 --> 11:10.936
a new economy to function on and that new economy
11:10.936 --> 11:14.974
is beyond, obviously, ChatGPT, that only gets you so far,
11:14.974 --> 11:19.311
but really a whole new way of creating efficiencies
11:19.311 --> 11:20.713
in business.
11:20.713 --> 11:24.950
If that does create a productivity boom then
11:24.950 --> 11:28.954
that would be the great hope to lift that non-inflationary speed limit,
11:28.954 --> 11:32.958
because right now the speed limit is pretty low, which doesn't
11:32.958 --> 11:36.996
mean it can't be exceeded but if
11:36.996 --> 11:39.298
it does you create inflation.
11:39.298 --> 11:43.269
If you create the non-inflationary speed limit then you have a lot more room
11:43.269 --> 11:47.873
to grow without the Fed or the Bank of Canada or other central banks
11:47.873 --> 11:50.876
raining on the parade, if you will.
11:50.876 --> 11:55.181
Then you can really grow your way out of debt, or at least keep
11:55.181 --> 11:57.483
pace with it.
11:57.483 --> 12:01.954
There's a lot riding on this both at the micro, the macro and the
12:01.954 --> 12:04.657
super macro level.
12:04.657 --> 12:08.961
I speak to my colleagues over here in Boston who are
12:08.961 --> 12:11.831
very involved in the AI space and,
12:11.831 --> 12:15.634
but we don't really know how this cookie is going to crumble.
12:15.634 --> 12:19.772
We don't know what the apps are going to be but right
12:19.772 --> 12:21.741
now they're laying the groundwork.
12:21.741 --> 12:25.377
It's the picks and shovels are creating the infrastructure.
12:25.377 --> 12:29.448
It costs a lot of money because all of whatever it is that we're going to be
12:29.448 --> 12:33.886
doing it's going to be very power hungry and that requires
12:33.886 --> 12:37.690
electricity which requires a lot of investment.
12:37.690 --> 12:41.694
You could have all the hopes being fulfilled but at the
12:41.694 --> 12:45.631
same time that doesn't mean that the companies that are building this
12:45.631 --> 12:50.569
system are actually going to reap the benefit.
12:50.569 --> 12:54.774
The depreciation schedule of all this capex may not be in line
12:54.774 --> 12:58.210
with when the promise comes to fruition.
12:58.210 --> 13:02.648
I think for the market that's where we are right now in terms of
13:02.648 --> 13:06.752
trying to figure out what the end game is even if everyone agrees that the
13:06.752 --> 13:10.589
endgame for you and me and for society are going to be good.
13:10.589 --> 13:13.793
Hello, investors. We'll be back to the show in just a moment.
13:13.793 --> 13:17.129
I wanted to share that here at Fidelity, we value your opinion.
13:17.129 --> 13:20.166
Please take a few minutes to help us shape the future of Fidelity Connects
13:20.166 --> 13:24.637
podcasts. Complete our listener survey by visiting fidelity.ca/survey,
13:24.637 --> 13:27.006
and you could win one of our branded tumblers.
13:27.006 --> 13:30.309
Periodic draws ending by March 30th, 2026.
13:30.309 --> 13:33.913
And don't forget to listen to Fidelity Connects, the Upside, and French
13:33.913 --> 13:37.950
DialoguesFidelity podcasts available on Apple, Spotify, YouTube, or wherever
13:37.950 --> 13:41.620
else you get your podcasts. Now back to today's show.
13:41.620 --> 13:44.523
You've done lots of work on Bitcoin.
13:44.523 --> 13:46.192
We've seen Bitcoin slide.
13:46.192 --> 13:49.895
It's part of the market narrative, certainly from the last week.
13:49.895 --> 13:54.133
With everything that you're describing and in terms of economies becoming much
13:54.133 --> 13:58.337
more productive there's also the issuance of stablecoins, all
13:58.337 --> 14:02.174
kinds of coins, of course, have been issued, but this idea that governments
14:02.174 --> 14:06.378
themselves, in terms to be able to control a central bank digital
14:06.378 --> 14:10.449
asset, either replacing their own dollars, shekels,
14:10.449 --> 14:14.854
whatever it is, but that will lead to faster
14:14.854 --> 14:18.691
processing of everything. There's a productivity in just sort of the transition
14:18.691 --> 14:21.927
of money. It leads to the financial sector, certainly.
14:21.927 --> 14:25.397
Can you just comment on that? I mean, we've seen central banks recently
14:25.397 --> 14:28.334
starting to announce the fact they're going down this road, some faster than
14:28.334 --> 14:32.304
others but we're going down the road.
14:32.304 --> 14:35.407
We had the Genius Act in the U.S.
14:35.407 --> 14:38.043
last year, I guess it was last year--
14:38.043 --> 14:40.179
In the summer, yeah.
14:40.179 --> 14:43.649
--that really legitimizes stablecoins.
14:43.649 --> 14:47.753
The angle from the Treasury department run by
14:47.753 --> 14:51.690
Scott Bessent I think, undoubtedly, is if we can get a
14:51.690 --> 14:55.527
lot of stablecoins out there that means they all have to buy a lot of
14:55.527 --> 15:00.065
Treasuries as the backup for the value.
15:00.065 --> 15:04.570
It's interesting because the Genius Act forbids
15:04.570 --> 15:08.807
the stablecoins from paying an
15:08.807 --> 15:12.745
interest rate. For the stablecoins
15:12.745 --> 15:16.882
themselves, and we saw the Circle IPO was incredibly
15:16.882 --> 15:21.020
successful, these companies essentially have a licence to mint money.
15:21.020 --> 15:25.090
If they can earn 4% by having Treasury bills backing
15:25.090 --> 15:29.061
up their stablecoins and they're not allowed by law to pay interest
15:29.061 --> 15:32.031
on them then that's a pretty lucrative deal.
15:32.031 --> 15:36.335
My guess is that the stablecoins obviously make the
15:36.335 --> 15:39.338
financial system run a lot smoother.
15:39.338 --> 15:41.907
They're disintermediating the banks.
15:41.907 --> 15:45.878
If I'm sending money to Holland or somewhere else, if you
15:45.878 --> 15:49.848
send that through Zwift I think three or four different banks touch that.
15:49.848 --> 15:51.583
Of course, there's an expense.
15:51.583 --> 15:56.555
The promise with stablecoins is that could become much more frictionless.
15:56.555 --> 16:00.893
Stablecoins themselves, I don't think are going to be a
16:00.893 --> 16:02.995
store of value just because they don't pay interest.
16:02.995 --> 16:06.966
You're not going to trust a stablecoin more than you
16:06.966 --> 16:11.103
would the Treasury or bank deposits,
16:11.103 --> 16:15.074
which are, of course, insured, because those stablecoins own the same bills
16:15.074 --> 16:19.178
that you could buy directly from the Treasury or a money market fund and
16:19.178 --> 16:21.080
get actually a nice interest rate.
16:21.080 --> 16:24.683
I don't think they're going to totally disrupt the system.
16:24.683 --> 16:29.088
They could steal some market share from banks just for convenience
16:29.088 --> 16:34.159
cash where you're not really concerned about what kind of interest rates it
16:34.159 --> 16:38.130
yields but certainly it's a game changer and in a
16:38.130 --> 16:40.599
way it extends the reach of the U.S.
16:40.599 --> 16:41.867
dollar.
16:41.867 --> 16:46.171
In that sense rather than kind of disrupting
16:46.171 --> 16:50.509
the dollar's reserve status, which is what Bitcoin and stablecoins were
16:50.509 --> 16:54.446
seen as doing a few years ago, I think if anything
16:54.446 --> 16:58.417
they will further the reach of the
16:58.417 --> 17:02.554
U.S. dollar which might mitigate some of the stories about fiscal dominance
17:02.554 --> 17:04.990
and what that does to the dollar.
17:04.990 --> 17:09.128
You mentioned Bitcoin, slide 14, you can
17:09.128 --> 17:13.232
see Bitcoin has really had quite a run lower here.
17:13.232 --> 17:17.202
It peaked at 125,000 just in October and we
17:17.202 --> 17:19.872
got to 80,000 last week.
17:19.872 --> 17:24.209
We're higher now, I think we're about $86,000.
17:24.209 --> 17:26.211
The question is why is that happening?
17:26.211 --> 17:28.447
I think there's a couple of reasons.
17:28.447 --> 17:32.985
Ironically, maybe stablecoins have slightly
17:32.985 --> 17:36.588
diminished the need for Bitcoin because now you can have--
17:36.588 --> 17:38.023
That's what I was wondering.
17:38.023 --> 17:40.359
--electronic money.
17:40.359 --> 17:43.996
Bitcoin was never going to be a great medium of exchange just because it's too
17:43.996 --> 17:45.731
scarce, it's too volatile.
17:45.731 --> 17:49.401
Then there are some questions about what we call these Bitcoin treasury
17:49.401 --> 17:53.372
companies like MicroStrategy that really have
17:53.372 --> 17:57.342
not been buying as much and their stocks
17:57.342 --> 17:59.144
are actually quite down.
17:59.144 --> 18:03.382
What we've been seeing is some whales, these very big
18:03.382 --> 18:07.419
OG type of holders essentially taking profits,
18:07.419 --> 18:11.790
which you can't argue with, I mean, they've been owning them since Bitcoin
18:11.790 --> 18:13.725
was a penny.
18:13.725 --> 18:17.863
While they were doing that a few months ago these Treasury operations were
18:17.863 --> 18:22.968
taking that supply and adding it to their portfolio.
18:22.968 --> 18:25.637
That's not happening right now.
18:25.637 --> 18:29.808
As we've said many times Bitcoin is like Dr. Jekyll and Mr. Hyde.
18:29.808 --> 18:34.780
It can be boring gold one moment and it can be the Nasdaq the next moment.
18:34.780 --> 18:38.984
Right now you have the global money supply is robust
18:38.984 --> 18:41.420
but it's not growing very fast.
18:41.420 --> 18:45.357
At the same time you have the stock market
18:45.357 --> 18:49.394
now wobbling and these high momentum leverage plays
18:49.394 --> 18:53.699
wobbling as well and Bitcoin is kind of like falling
18:53.699 --> 18:57.136
in cahoots with those groups.
18:57.136 --> 18:59.004
I think it's a correction.
18:59.004 --> 19:00.739
I don't think it is much more than that.
19:00.739 --> 19:04.843
Bitcoin is volatile, of course, we know that but it's sort of getting caught up
19:04.843 --> 19:08.046
in the storm of the non-profitable tech.
19:08.046 --> 19:12.217
If we pull up slide 9 we can just pivot to that for a moment and just
19:12.217 --> 19:15.420
you to what degree those have now sold off.
19:15.420 --> 19:19.525
They more than doubled in the span of eight,
19:19.525 --> 19:22.995
nine months and we're now getting back closer to support.
19:22.995 --> 19:27.399
So these are the non-profitable tech stocks and the next chart, slide 10,
19:27.399 --> 19:31.336
are the meme stocks. These are thematic baskets from
19:31.336 --> 19:35.874
Goldman Sachs and you can see how much closer we're getting, slide
19:35.874 --> 19:39.811
10 are the meme stocks, that we
19:39.811 --> 19:44.349
are getting closer to that support line which I think will probably hold.
19:44.349 --> 19:49.488
Yeah, the next slide. We'll just take a quick look at that, if that's
19:49.488 --> 19:51.790
okay. I'll ask you another question in between.
19:51.790 --> 19:56.128
The discussion of what is safe and the
19:56.128 --> 20:00.432
memories, I guess, of fixed income and equities going down
20:00.432 --> 20:04.770
the chute at the same time in 2022, it's a different story.
20:04.770 --> 20:07.806
There's some worries that that correlation is still there but, in fact, bonds
20:07.806 --> 20:12.044
are doing exactly what they're meant to do at this point, aren't they?
20:12.044 --> 20:15.080
We can go to slide 11.
20:15.080 --> 20:19.251
Frankly, I'm pleasantly surprised how well behaved
20:19.251 --> 20:22.421
the bond market has been this year.
20:22.421 --> 20:26.358
You remember earlier back in February, March, early
20:26.358 --> 20:31.563
April when we had the tariff tantrum the dollar was going down,
20:31.563 --> 20:35.567
Treasury yields were going up, so the two best known safe
20:35.567 --> 20:40.105
havens other than gold were not being very safe.
20:40.105 --> 20:43.976
That was really one of the questions of fiscal dominance and will foreign
20:43.976 --> 20:48.513
investors continue to support our bond market were really
20:48.513 --> 20:52.618
very prominent. Things have really quieted down.
20:52.618 --> 20:56.822
The 10-year yield is around 410, 415, very, very
20:56.822 --> 20:59.758
quiet. The Fed has delivered two rate cuts.
20:59.758 --> 21:03.895
Even if they don't go in December they are now fairly close into the
21:03.895 --> 21:08.100
neutral zone that the Fed really should not be seen as a burden
21:08.100 --> 21:11.036
on the financial system.
21:11.036 --> 21:13.905
The Fed ended quantitative tightening as well.
21:13.905 --> 21:18.110
What we're seeing with this 5% decline and, again, it's only 5%, it's
21:18.110 --> 21:22.447
sort of a rounding error in the grand scheme of things but it's not caused
21:22.447 --> 21:28.086
by the bond market, which is a nice change because really since 2022
21:28.086 --> 21:32.057
most routes in the stock market were caused by rising yields, and that
21:32.057 --> 21:33.725
is not happening.
21:33.725 --> 21:37.763
In the top part here, the top panel, I show the drawdown in the stock
21:37.763 --> 21:41.767
market, which is the orange line, the drawdown in the bond market,
21:41.767 --> 21:45.704
which is the grey line, and you can see the bond market is not in any kind of
21:45.704 --> 21:49.875
drawdown so that shows you that the 60 and the 40 are
21:49.875 --> 21:54.112
currently not correlated. In the bottom panel I show the
21:54.112 --> 21:57.849
12-month correlation and the 5-year correlation.
21:57.849 --> 22:01.853
You can see that back in 2019 stocks and bonds
22:01.853 --> 22:05.824
were steeply negatively correlated and then by late
22:05.824 --> 22:10.162
2022 they were steeply, positively correlated.
22:10.162 --> 22:14.166
Right now the 5-year correlation is positive because you're looking
22:14.166 --> 22:18.103
back five years and that 2019 data has fallen off
22:18.103 --> 22:20.906
so you have really just that positive period.
22:20.906 --> 22:25.177
But if you look at the 12-month correlation it's slightly positive
22:25.177 --> 22:29.514
but I would say bonds at this point have become an uncorrelated asset,
22:29.514 --> 22:31.483
and that's what we wanna see, right?
22:31.483 --> 22:35.554
We wanna have diversifiers in a portfolio and if
22:35.587 --> 22:39.791
bonds are not gonna be negatively correlated at least they should be as
22:39.791 --> 22:42.627
uncorrelated as possible and not positively correlated.
22:42.627 --> 22:46.598
Right now they are uncorrelated and that means we can
22:46.598 --> 22:50.869
own bonds, get a positive real yield and not worry
22:50.869 --> 22:54.673
that bonds and stocks necessarily are going to go down at the same time, which
22:54.673 --> 22:58.944
doesn't mean they won't in the future but at least right now they're providing
22:58.977 --> 23:00.145
some ballast here.
23:00.145 --> 23:02.647
That's great. There's a couple of questions that are rolling in.
23:02.647 --> 23:06.685
One is just putting the number of options that expired last week
23:06.685 --> 23:11.556
into context and what that contributed possibly to
23:11.556 --> 23:16.795
last week's roiling volatility.
23:16.795 --> 23:21.433
Slide 6 actually shows the call-put ratio.
23:21.433 --> 23:24.770
You can see that that has come way down.
23:24.770 --> 23:28.740
So the average of the call-put ratios, the number of calls
23:28.740 --> 23:32.577
versus puts outstanding on the S&P, is about 1 1/4.
23:32.577 --> 23:37.015
It's not 1 just because generally the market goes up so generally there
23:37.015 --> 23:40.285
are more calls out there than puts.
23:40.285 --> 23:45.157
We went from a ratio of 1.7, 1.5
23:45.157 --> 23:49.261
to now 1.17 which is not what we saw in April
23:49.261 --> 23:51.730
where it was well below 1.
23:51.730 --> 23:56.601
But it shows that excess
23:56.601 --> 24:01.072
demand or excess froth, if you will,
24:01.072 --> 24:04.976
has quickly come down, which you would expect, of course, because, again, some
24:04.976 --> 24:08.947
of these speculative names are way down from their highs.
24:08.947 --> 24:11.416
So you would except to see this.
24:11.416 --> 24:15.353
To me, it sounds harsh because a
24:15.353 --> 24:19.391
lot of people may have been playing in those names, but to me this
24:19.391 --> 24:23.662
is like a palate cleanser that if this really is a transformative
24:23.662 --> 24:27.732
boom that we're in we don't want it to end anytime before
24:27.732 --> 24:32.671
it needs to just because stocks were driven to
24:32.671 --> 24:35.807
unrealistic levels and then the bubble implode.
24:35.807 --> 24:39.344
I think for the long term this a good thing.
24:39.344 --> 24:43.415
As always, diversified, long term
24:43.415 --> 24:47.385
investors should take advantage of moments
24:47.385 --> 24:51.523
of volatility and rebalance, just as they should when the market goes up
24:51.523 --> 24:53.258
a lot or goes down a lot.
24:53.258 --> 24:57.329
This is a good opportunity to sit down with your advisors, well,
24:57.329 --> 25:01.366
you are advisors on this call, but to sit down with your clients and say,
25:01.366 --> 25:04.135
okay, where do you want to be? Where should you be?
25:04.135 --> 25:07.405
Where are you? Are you over your skis, are you under your skies?
25:07.405 --> 25:11.743
Again, international stocks I think are
25:11.743 --> 25:16.214
a very nice way to play, to diversify
25:16.214 --> 25:19.384
against concentration risk in the U.S.
25:19.417 --> 25:23.288
which, of course, has been somewhat top-heavy.
25:23.288 --> 25:27.292
Thank you. It's a great segue, as some people say, segue to ask
25:27.292 --> 25:29.594
you about share buybacks.
25:29.594 --> 25:33.832
Share buybacks in Europe have kind of traditionally not been there
25:33.832 --> 25:36.067
in Europe. I mean, they are more now.
25:36.067 --> 25:40.105
But this question of share buybacks, is there lots of room to do all kinds
25:40.105 --> 25:43.141
of share buybacks when you're dumping all your free cash flow and everything
25:43.141 --> 25:47.078
you got as a company into expanding capex
25:47.078 --> 25:49.447
for AI to make sure you're not left behind?
25:49.447 --> 25:53.985
Do you have money left to buy up, hoover up your shares?
25:53.985 --> 25:58.189
It's a great question and definitely something that I'm wondering
25:58.189 --> 26:02.127
about. It's hard to find historical data to
26:02.127 --> 26:06.097
really explore that question because buybacks were not really
26:06.097 --> 26:08.333
a thing back during the internet bubble.
26:08.333 --> 26:13.438
The buyback era kind of began in the mid-2000s and
26:13.438 --> 26:15.874
has been a very prominent feature for the U.S.
26:15.874 --> 26:20.011
market ever since. But you do wonder that if there's so
26:20.011 --> 26:24.549
much capex going on ... I think the
26:24.549 --> 26:28.787
capex bill this year is like $600 billion just for these hyperscalers,
26:28.787 --> 26:31.056
gigantic numbers.
26:31.056 --> 26:35.093
Does that diminish the excess free cash flow
26:35.093 --> 26:39.064
which will then impede their ability to buy
26:39.064 --> 26:43.435
back a lot of shares and essentially monetize their
26:43.435 --> 26:47.105
shareholders. I think that's a very legitimate question.
26:47.105 --> 26:52.143
Maybe the shareholders, the investors look through that
26:52.143 --> 26:56.548
but the math in the discounted cash flow model is
26:56.548 --> 27:01.252
pretty clear. You have dividends, you have buybacks, that's called the payout.
27:01.252 --> 27:05.924
The payout ratio is the share of that payout versus earnings.
27:05.924 --> 27:09.928
In the U.S. that payout ratio used to be almost like 90%, now it's
27:09.928 --> 27:13.898
about 75% of which two-thirds is
27:13.898 --> 27:17.435
buybacks and one third is dividends.
27:17.435 --> 27:21.539
In Europe and Japan the payout ratio is now the
27:21.539 --> 27:25.443
same. It's very competitive which is one reason I like Europe and Japan so
27:25.443 --> 27:27.779
much. The composition is different.
27:27.779 --> 27:31.149
It's one third buybacks, two-thirds dividends.
27:31.149 --> 27:35.186
To me, if the buyback story, it's not gonna
27:35.186 --> 27:40.558
end but if it goes down that should in theory
27:40.558 --> 27:45.196
lower valuations for the companies who are engaged in them at
27:45.196 --> 27:46.865
the same time that non-U.S.
27:46.865 --> 27:50.869
stocks, especially developed stocks, are now much more competitive.
27:50.869 --> 27:53.038
Their payout is growing as much as the U.S.
27:53.038 --> 27:57.042
and the payout ratio is as high as in
27:57.042 --> 28:00.912
the U.S. but they're trading at 16 times earnings, the U.S.
28:00.912 --> 28:05.316
is trading at 25 times earnings. That to me could be another catalyst
28:05.316 --> 28:09.120
where the relative, the comparative advantage, if you will, of non-U.S.
28:09.154 --> 28:13.158
stocks finally starts to take hold.
28:13.158 --> 28:17.495
This is fascinating. Just as a final wrap-up, you sort of gave us context
28:17.495 --> 28:19.597
about last week and where we go.
28:19.597 --> 28:23.401
What would you set us up for this week, maybe longer than this week but just
28:23.401 --> 28:26.671
sort of short term.
28:26.671 --> 28:30.842
We'll go to slide 5. I would just remind everyone that
28:30.842 --> 28:33.111
markets are volatile. They've gone up a lot.
28:33.111 --> 28:37.382
The market has doubled in three years, three plus years.
28:37.382 --> 28:42.287
It has gone up almost tenfold since the secular bull market began.
28:42.287 --> 28:45.857
We're now talking about whether or not this is going to end in a bubble.
28:45.857 --> 28:50.061
I'm not saying that we are but even if you were convinced
28:50.061 --> 28:54.099
that it is, if you look at the analog in this chart of the
28:54.099 --> 28:58.636
current cycle and the period from 1998 to 2000
28:58.636 --> 29:02.674
you can see how many large drawdowns there
29:02.674 --> 29:06.878
were of 10% or more on the way to new all-time
29:06.878 --> 29:11.082
highs. Again, I don't want to overplay this analog but
29:11.082 --> 29:15.120
when the stakes are high and expectations are high and the valuations
29:15.120 --> 29:19.891
are high to match that and we're a
29:19.891 --> 29:24.329
very long way into a very big bull market people
29:24.329 --> 29:28.500
are gonna cash in their chips and they may be wrong.
29:28.500 --> 29:31.536
You're gonna see periods like this where all of a sudden the market goes down
29:31.536 --> 29:35.640
for no reason. It's a good time to kind of reassert where
29:35.640 --> 29:38.576
are the fundamentals, where are they earnings, what am I willing to pay for
29:38.576 --> 29:43.281
those earnings through a P/E and what parts of the world provide
29:43.281 --> 29:47.352
a good hedge against a very concentrated
29:47.352 --> 29:48.987
U.S. market.
29:48.987 --> 29:51.156
Fascinating. We are so grateful for your time.
29:51.156 --> 29:54.125
Jurrien Timmer, thank you for joining us. We wish your family very well during
29:54.125 --> 29:56.194
this week of Thanksgiving and just being together.
29:56.194 --> 29:57.862
We'll see you next week.
29:57.862 --> 30:00.765
Thanks for watching or listening to the Fidelity Connects
30:00.765 --> 30:05.069
podcast. Now if you haven't done so already, please subscribe to Fidelity
30:05.069 --> 30:08.439
Connects on your podcast platform of choice.
30:08.439 --> 30:11.276
And if you like what you're hearing, please leave a review or a five-star
30:11.276 --> 30:15.246
rating. Fidelity Mutual Funds and ETFs are available by working with
30:15.246 --> 30:18.616
a financial advisor or through an online brokerage account.
30:18.616 --> 30:22.320
Visit fidelity.ca/howtobuy for more information.
30:22.320 --> 30:26.157
While on Fidelity.ca, you can also find more information on future live
30:26.157 --> 30:30.295
webcasts. And don't forget to follow Fidelity Canada on YouTube, LinkedIn,
30:30.295 --> 30:31.596
and Instagram.
30:31.596 --> 30:34.465
We'll end today's show with a short disclaimer.
30:34.465 --> 30:38.303
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,
30:38.303 --> 30:42.240
and do not necessarily reflect those of Fidelity Investments Canada ULC or
30:42.240 --> 30:46.244
its affiliates. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not
30:46.244 --> 30:48.780
be construed as investment, tax, or legal advice.
30:48.780 --> 30:51.082
It is not an offer to sell or buy.
30:51.082 --> 30:55.420
Or an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any entity or securities
30:55.420 --> 31:00.225
cited. Read a fund's prospectus before investing, funds are not guaranteed.
31:00.225 --> 31:03.795
Their values change frequently, and past performance may not be repeated.
31:03.795 --> 31:06.130
Fees, expenses, and commissions are all associated
31:06.130 --> 31:07.932
with fund investments.
31:07.932 --> 31:10.535
Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

