February 23, 2016 Newsletter

Dear Friends,

Tangents:

1909: Silver Dart makes aviation history

On Feb. 23, 1909, engineer J.A.D. McCurdy piloted the first powered airplane flight by a British subject in the British Empire – and made Canadian history.

On Feb. 23, 1954, the first mass inoculation of children against polio with the Salk vaccine began in Pittsburgh.

PHOTOS OF THE DAY

A full moon rises over the Statue of Liberty seen from the Port Liberte neighborhood of Jersey City, N.J., Monday. Julio Cortez/AP

A man plays hockey on Lake Ontario at sunset in Kingston, Canada, Monday. Lars Hagberg/The Canadian Press/AP

A fisherman prepares to cast his line standing in the surf as a full moon rises at Mollymook Beach, located south of Sydney, Australia, Tuesday. David Gray/Reuters

Market Closes for February 23, 2016

MarketIndex Close Change
DowJones 16431.78 -188.88  -1.14%
 
S&P 500 1921.27 -24.23-1.25%  
 
NASDAQ 4503.582 -67.025  -1.47%
 
TSX 12763.44 -82.19 
-0.64%

International Markets

MarketIndex Close Change
NIKKEI 16052.05 -59.00
-0.37%
HANGSENG 19414.78 -49.31
-0.25%
SENSEX 23410.18 -378.61
-1.59%
FTSE 100 5962.31 -75.42
-1.25%

Bonds

Bonds % Yield Previous  % Yield
CND.10 Year Bond 1.123 1.128
CND.30 Year Bond 1.916 1.925
U.S.   10 Year Bond 1.7225 1.7570
U.S.30 Year Bond 2.5789 2.6086

Currencies

BOC Close Today Previous  
Canadian $ 0.72487 0.72937
US$ 1.37955 1.37105
     
Euro Rate1 Euro=   Inverse
Canadian $ 1.52839 0.65429
US$ 1.10137 0.90796

Commodities

Gold Close Previous
London GoldFix 1221.35 1211.00
     
Oil Close Previous
WTI Crude Future 30.07 31.48

Market Commentary:

Canada

By Eric Lam

     (Bloomberg) — Canadian stocks erased their gains and ended lower as a selloff in energy companies overshadowed a rebound in Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc.

     The Standard & Poor’s/TSX Composite Index lost 0.6 percent to 12,763.44 at 4 p.m. in Toronto. The benchmark gauge rallied as much as 0.9 percent before a rout in crude led to plunging energy stocks.

     The S&P/TSX has outpaced equities across the developed world this year, topping returns from markets in the U.S., U.K. and Germany and is less than 2 percent away from wiping out declines for the year. The MSCI World Index of developed-nation markets is down 7.4 percent in 2016. While raw-material stocks have performed the best in the Canadian equity index this year, the resource-rich gauge has been whipsawed by swings in oil and commodity prices.

     Energy producers sank 2.7 percent as five of 10 industries in the S&P/TSX retreated on trading volume 8.4 percent lower than the 30-day average. Shares in the benchmark gauge currently trade at almost 20 times earnings, about 1.1 times more expensive than S&P 500 shares, according to data compiled by Bloomberg.

     Oil fell 4.6 percent in New York, slipping from a two-week high. Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi, speaking at the IHS CERAWeek oil conference in Houston, said his country isn’t cutting output. Saudi Arabia agreed with Russia last week to freeze output on the condition other major producers, notably Iran and Iraq, follow suit.

     Iran’s oil minister earlier called the proposal “ridiculous” as it puts unrealistic demands on the country, according to the ministry’s news agency Shana. Saudi Arabia, Russia, Venezuela and Qatar reached a preliminary agreement in Doha last week to freeze output at January levels. Oil is still down about 14 percent this year.

     Valeant Pharmaceuticals International Inc. rebounded 5 percent for the first increase in four days. The company had tumbled 20 percent during its three-day slide. Valeant will restate some of its past earnings after a board committee reviewed the drugmaker’s relationship with mail-order pharmacy Philidor. Valeant didn’t rule out further disclosures. The company plans to hold a call to discuss fourth-quarter results on Feb. 29.

     Valeant, briefly the largest company in the S&P/TSX by market capitalization last year before the stock plunged amid scrutiny over its pricing practices, slumped last week after analysts at Wells Fargo Securities initiated coverage with an underperform rating, the equivalent of a sell, on Feb. 19.

     Bank of Montreal slipped 0.2 percent, erasing a gain after reporting first-quarter earnings that were ahead of analysts’ estimates Tuesday. Profit was boosted by contributions from its purchase of General Electric Co.’s transportation-finance business. It’s among the first of the nation’s largest lenders to report results this week. National Bank of Canada lost 2.3 percent as profit declined after writing off C$164 million on its investment in Maple Financial Group Inc.

US

By Anna-Louise Jackson and Jiayue Huang

     (Bloomberg) — U.S. stocks declined from six-week highs, paced by banks as the recent rally’s strongest performers lost momentum while investors assessed global growth prospects amid renewed concern that China will remain a drag.

     Lenders, which have buttressed the latest rebound in equities, fell Tuesday with JPMorgan Chase & Co. and Citigroup Inc. losing at least 3.2 percent. Freeport-McMoRan Inc. declined 8.7 percent and Chevron Corp. sank 4.4 percent as a rout in crude oil weighed on commodity shares. Apple Inc. and Microsoft Corp. fell more than 2.2 percent, dragging down the technology group.

     The Standard & Poor’s 500 Index fell 1.3 percent to 1,921.27 at 4 p.m. in New York, a day after surging 1.5 percent to the highest since Jan. 6. The Dow Jones Industrial Average slid 188.88 points, or 1.1 percent, to 16,431.78. The Nasdaq Composite Index lost 1.5 percent. About 7.1 billion shares traded hands on U.S. exchanges, 13 percent below the three-month average.

     “Things started to go downhill a little bit last night after the PBOC decided to allow the yuan to depreciate relative to the dollar,” said Brian Jacobsen, chief portfolio strategist with Wells Fargo Funds Management LLC, which oversees $242 billion. “We need to get a bit more clarity from Fed officials as far as how they’re viewing China to get a better handle on what the global growth outlook looks like and also what the future path of U.S. interest rates looks like.”

     A global stock rally stumbled today after the People’s Bank of China lowered its daily reference rate for the yuan by the most in six weeks, reigniting concerns over the health of the world’s second-biggest economy. This anxiety had eased in the past week, helping the S&P 500 cut its 2016 decline in half in six trading sessions.

     Oil retreated from a two-week high as Saudi Arabian Oil Minister Ali al-Naimi said the market should set prices in his first speech since an agreement with Russia last week to freeze output. Saudi Arabia won’t cut oil production as other countries would be unlikely to assist in restraining output, leaving the burden of adjusting supply with high-cost producers, the minister said. West Texas Intermediate crude futures fell 4.6 percent.

     Heading into Tuesday’s session, the S&P 500 had rallied 6.4 percent since reaching a 22-month low on Feb. 11, trimming its 2016 decline to less than 5 percent. Concern that weakness in China will damp global growth, and that lenders will suffer as some energy producers struggle to stay solvent amid low oil prices has weighed on equities this year. The main U.S. stocks benchmark closed 9.8 percent below its all-time high reached last May.

     “The global economy is mired in what I would think of as growth purgatory and this week’s economic data is an illustration of that,” said Michael Arone, the Boston-based chief investment strategist at State Street Global Advisors’ U.S. intermediary business. The firm oversees $2 trillion. “Despite the recent rally off of the early February lows, it’s way too early to sound the all-clear.”

     Economic data today were mixed as investors attempt to gauge the strength of U.S. growth, and the potential path for interest rates. A report showed sales of previously owned homes unexpectedly rose in January to the second-highest pace since early 2007. Separate data showed February consumer confidence decreased, while another report indicated home values steadied in the year ended December, putting residential real estate on healthier footing to contribute to the economic expansion.

     The Chicago Board Options Exchange Volatility Index rose 8.3 percent today to 20.98, the largest increase in two weeks. The measure of market turbulence known as the VIX closed yesterday at the lowest since Jan. 5 amid the longest streak of declines in four months.

     Nine of the S&P 500’s 10 main groups declined on Tuesday, with energy and raw-materials the worst performers as they lost at least 2.3 percent. Financial and technology shares dropped 1.8 percent. Utilities and consumer staples were little changed.

     The selloff in oil dragged energy producers to the steepest loss in three weeks, as all 41 members of the benchmark’s group retreated. Cabot Oil & Gas Corp. tumbled 11 percent, the most in four years, after the explorer increased the size of its secondary offering to 44 million shares. Consol Energy Inc. and Range Resources Corp. both fell at least 9 percent.

     Raw-materials companies in the benchmark dropped 2.4 percent, the biggest slide in two weeks. Ecolab Inc. tumbled 7.4 percent, the most since 2011, after the company reported quarterly results that missed analysts’ estimates. Alcoa Inc. decreased 4.3 percent following its strongest one-day advance in nearly seven years.

     Banks had their biggest drop since the S&P 500’s 22-month low on Feb. 11. JPMorgan lost 4.2 percent after saying today at a gathering of analysts and investors that it plans to set aside $1.65 billion to cover impaired loans to energy and mining companies. Its investment bank has also seen revenue from sales and trading fall about 20 percent so far in 2016 from a year earlier.

     Comerica Inc., the strongest performer among lenders during the prior six sessions with a nearly 15 percent climb, fell the most today, down 4.5 percent. Among the broader financials, Goldman Sachs Group Inc. slid 2.6 percent and Morgan Stanley dropped 3.4 percent.

     Western Digital Inc. declined 7.2 percent, the worst among tech shares, after the company said it will buy memory-chipmaker SanDisk Corp. for $15.8 billion in cash and stock. Western is going ahead with the merger without a $3.78 billion infusion from Tsinghua Unisplendour Corp. The Chinese company pulled out of its plan to buy a stake in the computer-storage manufacturer after the deal came under scrutiny by U.S. regulators. SanDisk slipped 1.6 percent.

     Better-than-expected earnings helped propel several stocks higher. Frontier Communications Corp. rose 13 percent, the most since July 2014, while Motorola Solutions Inc. gained 6 percent, the steepest climb since August. Macy’s Inc. rallied 3 percent to levels last seen in November. Texas Roadhouse Inc. surged 13 percent to an all-time high after its profit beat estimates, and the restaurant chain said lower beef prices would help 2016 performance.

     With the earnings season approaching an end, about three- quarters of S&P 500 firms exceeded profit projections, while less than half have topped sales forecasts. Retailers Target Corp., Lowe’s Cos., Kohl’s Corp. and Gap Inc. are due to report this week. Analysts estimate earnings at S&P 500 companies fell 4.2 percent in the fourth quarter, compared with Jan. 15 predictions for a 7 percent slump.

Have a wonderful evening everyone.

Be magnificent!

Expansion is life; contraction is death.

Love is life, hatred is death.

We began to die the day we began to contract, to hate others

and nothing can prevent our death,

until we come back to life, to expansion.

Swami Vivekananda

As ever,

Carolann

Gray skies are just clouds passing over.

                -Frank Gifford, 1930-2015

 

Carolann Steinhoff, B.Sc., CFP®, CIM, CIWM

Portfolio Manager &

Senior Vice-President

 

Queensbury Securities Inc.,

St. Andrew’s Square,

Suite 340A, 730 View St.,

Victoria, B.C. V8W 3Y7