Market Watch – January 6, 2012

Euro tensions; U.S. manufacturing accelerates

Prime Minister Papademos warned Greece may default on its debts in March unless unions accept further salary cuts. Inspectors arrive on January 15 to assess Greece’s progress in cutting its deficit and to approve the next portion of bailout funds. France drew solid demand at its first debt auction of 2012 with yields rising only slightly despite fears for its AAA rating. Debt sales next week by Italy and Spain are seen as the year’s first big tests of eurozone countries’ ability to borrow at affordable levels. U.S. manufacturing grew at its fastest pace in six months in December, as the index of factory activity rose to 53.9, from 52.7 in November. Readings over 50 indicate expansion.

Many U.S. retailers reported solid sales gains for December, capping a tough holiday season that saw heavy discounting. More expensive stores such as Macy’s and Saks as well as specialty retailers such as Victoria’s Secret did well, while Target and J.C. Penney lowered their outlooks. A survey by the Canadian Federation of Independent Business found small business confidence rose in December to 65.0 – almost a point and a half higher than in November – with business owners in Alberta and Saskatchewan the most optimistic. A national survey found more than two-thirds of Canadians plan to contribute the same amount or more to their RRSP as last year, despite the tough economy.

Markets

U.S. starts year on upswing

U.S. stocks rose for a third day on Thursday, to a two-month high, as positive reports on manufacturing, construction and employment bolstered optimism. In China, the Shanghai Composite dropped to its lowest level since March 2009 on concerns that a European recession will curb exports. Ford was Canada’s top-selling automaker in 2011 for the second consecutive year, boosted by sales of the F-Series pickup truck, which make up three-quarters of its total sales. Chrysler Canada sales jumped 13% in 2011 to their highest level since 2002. Electric car sales sputtered in 2011, as high prices and supply bottlenecks led to lower-than-expected sales for both Nissan’s Leaf and General Motors’ Chevrolet Volt.

A European slowdown will impact global IT spending, according to two big research firms – Gartner lowered its 2012 growth forecast to 3.7% from 4.6%, while Forrester dropped its view to 5.4% from 9.6%. A record 1.2 billion apps were downloaded during Christmas week as an estimated 20 million Android and Apple devices were activated by people who received iPads and smartphones as gifts. Food price inflation will ease in 2012, according to the Food and Agriculture Organization; however, economic instability and currency market fluctuations will likely lead to continued volatility.

Our Recommendation

Outlook remains cautiously optimistic

  • Equities: With a rather volatile and challenging 2011 behind us, we look ahead to 2012 with slightly more optimistic lenses as valuations look compelling, corporate balance sheets are strong, and dividend yields are attractive in this low interest rate environment.
  • Fixed income: Term Call – given the recent decline in yields, we no longer see value in the mid-to-long end of the curve and recommend investors stay short at this time. Sector Call – underweight Canada, overweight Municipals, Provincials and Corporates. Currency Call – we recommend Canadian investors remain in Canadian dollars for their fixed income holdings.
  • Portfolio strategy: Our 2012 objective will be to raise cyclical exposure when easing monetary policy is extended, China’s PMI index bottoms, and the S&P500 settles above its 200-day average.
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