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The end of income investing — for now

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As interest rates declined and people found they could only renew their GICs at 2.5% or less, the search for high-income stock alternatives reached its peak, although the search for yield has been an investing battle cry for several years now.

You want 5% or 6% yields?  Here is what you get in Canada this year:

REITs: 6% yield; -11% total return YTD

Utilities: 6% yield; -8% total return YTD

Telecommunications: 5% yield; -1% total return YTD

REITs, telecoms and utilities since 2009 have been money in the bank. What happened?

Following 2008, when REITs were down 38%, they have annually returned 53% in 2009, followed by 22%, 21%, and 16% in 2012.

Utilities in 2009 returned 19%, followed by 18%, 6% and 4% last year. Strong returns for what are considered safe investments.

Another traditionally lower-volatility, higher-income sector has been telecommunications. In 2009, it was one of the worst performers (in a strong year) but still returned 8%. This was followed by 19%, 23% and 12% in 2012.

All three sectors are down this year. Is this just a temporary blip?

I believe there is a real change happening, and that the market shifts are not going to be positive for income investments for three main reasons.

The 3 strikes against income investing today

Strike 1: Some income investments are just too expensive today, while other sectors have been beaten down. Comparing Enbridge Inc. to Barrick Gold Corp. highlights this movement.

Enbridge is a fantastic business that made it through the 2008 crash better than any other TSX 60 stock.  The problem is that the stock is arguably overvalued for that safety.

Enbridge in 2009 had a price-earnings ratio (the price paid by an investor for every dollar of profit) of eight, which is historically quite cheap for the company.  Since then, Enbridge’s stock price has simply gone up — until recently.  It now owns a P/E ratio topping 50. This is beyond expensive for a pipeline company, even one with significant growth expected.

As a result, this “very safe” company has a real risk of price declines unless its profitability rises meaningfully.

On the flip side, Barrick Gold (which I now own) was trading at 50 times earnings in 2009 and is now trading at forward earnings of eight.  Forward earnings are based on the price of a company for every dollar of expected earnings in the next year.

This does not suggest that everyone should sell Enbridge and buy Barrick Gold, but it does show that the old adage of “buy low and sell high” is hard to do, although always in style.

Of course, things that are low can go lower, and things that are high can go higher, but when it comes to valuations, they often eventually come back to their normal ranges.

Today, many, but not all, income investments are expensive from a historical perspective.

Strike 2: When interest rates go up, income investments such as utilities, REITs, bonds and preferred shares usually go down in value.

After a three-decade period of interest rate declines, it certainly looks like we hit bottom in the first few months of 2013. With 10-year Government of Canada bond yields comfortably under 2%, there was little room to go down further. Having said that, the super-low interest-rate environment not only lasted longer than anyone expected, but we are still living it today since 10-year rates are under 3%.

The key is that the trend has changed. While rates may move in fits and starts (not always going up), the long-term trend is definitely higher, and that is not good news for interest-sensitive investments, because it starts to make risk-free GICs look more compelling.  It also makes the cost of leverage much higher for these companies.

Strike 3: The investment cycle suggests it is time to move out of interest-sensitive sectors.

Fidelity Investments in the U.S. recently put together a report on how different sectors of the market perform depending on where we are on the business cycle.

The key takeaway is that in a recession phase of the market, the clear winners are consumer staples, utilities, telecom and health care. We are past that phase in North America.

The report then goes on to outline what sectors in the U.S. do well in the early-growth, mid-cycle and late-cycle stages.

Some might think we are past the early phase of the business-cycle recovery, but the fact that central banks haven’t yet raised interest rates suggests we are still likely in the latter stages of the early phase.

In this stage, consumer discretionary, materials, industrials, technology and financials usually outperform, while energy, utilities and telecom lag. We are seeing that right now.

As we head towards the mid-cycle, when interest rates begin rising, technology, energy, industrials and health care tend to outperform. It is not until the late stages of a business cycle that utilities and consumer staples start to reemerge as places to be overweight. We are likely at least a year away and possibly a few years from that stage.

These are but a few of the many key pieces of information that might go into your portfolio choices, but they certainly help to explain the performance changes in income stocks.

Some things, of course, have not changed.

Income remains important. Low volatility is still highly valued by many investors, but the focus needs to be about corporate cash flow and profitability, not yield. This is something that some investors have forgotten in the search for ever-higher yields. When a company can’t maintain its high income payout, the punishment is severe. Just look at names such as Atlantic Power, Yellow Media, Chorus Aviation and Just Energy.

Dividend growth is also still tremendously important as a measure of a company’s long-term health. Many historical studies show that companies with strong dividend growth over many years provide greater long-term returns than most other companies.

Sometimes that may mean investing in stock that has a yield of only 1.5% or 2%, but if it is sustainable and growing regularly, then the dividend growth will become a key driver of overall returns. Dividend growth typically means higher future profits, which often results in stock price appreciation as well.

So what does this all mean?

In my view, a traditionally focused income portfolio needs to be changed unless you want to see a long period of underperformance versus the overall market.

Change doesn’t mean the income yield has to drop too much; it may just need to come from a different sector. An example might be that you want more exposure to technology, with large companies such as Cisco or Apple paying 2% to 3% in dividends — and an expectation that they will increase over time. These are companies that my firm currently holds for clients.

It is also important to remember that a lower yield on your portfolio does not necessarily mean lower returns or digging into your capital.

If the total portfolio is growing at a rate faster than $2,000 a month, and you draw down $2,000 a month, you are essentially not touching your capital. It doesn’t matter if the portfolio has an income yield of 0% or 5% driving that growth.

Investing isn’t easy, and one of the main reasons is that things are always changing. It is looking clear that focusing only on Canadian income stocks and REITs is now one of those things that should change.

Ted can be reached at tedr@tridelta.ca or by phone at 416-733-3292 x221 or 1-888-816-8927 x221

TriDelta Investment Counsel Q2 Review – Interest Rates are only part of the picture

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How did the markets perform?

The second quarter of 2013 was very mixed across the globe.

  • The Toronto indices were all negative for the quarter, the TSX was down 4.1% and the TSX Small Cap was down 8%.
  • The Canadian Bond Universe was down about 2.4%
  • The U.S. stock markets continued to perform well. The S&P 500 was up 2.9% in local terms and 6.5% in Canadian currency as the Canadian dollar was weak during the quarter.
  • Global stocks were generally down in local terms but still positive when factoring in the weaker Canadian dollar. The EAFE Index (Europe, Australa, Far East) was down almost 1% in local currency and up 2.8% when priced in Canadian dollars.
  • The MSCI Emerging markets index was down 8% and down 4.7% with currency.

So the message for the quarter:

Many markets were down and the Canadian markets were in the middle of the pack.

 

How did TriDelta perform?

Overall, the second quarter was fairly flat for TriDelta clients – but very positive in comparison to the Canadian market for stocks and bonds.

Virtually all clients outperformed the Canadian Stock and bond markets during the quarter with a range of returns from 1.0% to -2.5%.

The range of performance was primarily determined by model selection and asset mix. The Core (Growth) bond and equities portfolios outperformed the Pension equivalent and portfolios. Those with higher stock allocations outperformed portfolios holding more bonds.

The rationale for Pension underperforming Core during the quarter relates to some of the more defensive and stable dividend paying sectors like Utilities and Telecom which were two of the three worst performing sectors down 5.5% and 9.4% respectively. The worst performing sector for the quarter was Materials which includes mining stocks, was down 23%.

Once again all of our portfolios performed reasonably well under poor stock market conditions.

The key reasons for our decent performance would include:

  1. Meaningful stock exposure to the U.S. Market. At some point this may decline if we feel that the US market valuations are getting ahead of themselves, but we do not believe that is the case today. In addition, the US market gives us strong global exposure to several sectors that Canada lacks.
  2. Very low exposure to Materials stocks, especially precious metals. We never say never when it comes to sectors of the market. There may come a time when we begin to build more in these sectors.
  3. Growth outperformed Value. In general stocks with strong earnings growth profiles performed much better than stocks with very cheap valuations as investors looked for more certainty during the volatile quarter.

What are we doing about rising interest rates?
This seems to be the big question of the day. Clearly one of the big challenges in the quarter was the significant increase in long term interest rates.

This increase that reached a full percentage point for 10 year government bonds was the largest short term increase since 1994.

The immediate impact was for bond prices to fall. Longer term bonds fell more than short term, and corporates fell a little more than government bonds.

In addition, stocks that are deemed interest rate sensitive such as utilities and telecom stocks also fell with the rise in interest rates.5197885_s

The first thing to know is that we believe that the interest rate moves were overdone, and expect bonds to actually perform quite well over the next quarter. We do believe that interest rates will ultimately rise, but it will happen over time and not in major jumps. As a result, we expect the major jump in yields that we just experienced to slowly move lower over the coming months, before it moves ahead further.

We did make a move in late April to shorten the term of our bond holdings, and that helped our performance. We are now moving again to lengthen the term of bond holdings. This is not necessarily a long term move, but one that we believe will bring outperformance through the rest of the year.

In terms of stocks, we continue to believe in dividend growers, strong balance sheets, and consistent earnings, but we are also looking at some sector shifts within these parameters. From a historical perspective, certain sectors do tend to outperform during mid stages of a market recovery and in rising interest rate scenarios. We will continue to be looking for some opportunities in sectors like technology and energy. This is a slow shift that we believe will position portfolios better for growth in 2014.

For those who believe that it is time to sell all bonds and go into stocks, keep in mind the purpose of bonds is both for income and stability of the overall portfolio. Bonds can go down in value as they did last quarter, but in the last 61 years, the very worst period was from June 1980 to July 1981. During this unique time of soaring interest rates and high inflation, the prime rate surpassed 20%.

The total return for the bond market during that period was minus 11%. This is certainly a poor return, but keep in mind how different the inflation scenario is that we see today. In most years, bonds provide steady single digit returns. Stocks have been much more volatile. This basic fact leads to a fundamental investment belief.

The right mix of stocks and bonds for an individual can see some shifting based on markets, but in general, if you are risk averse, and holding 30% in stocks, we do not believe you should make a radical shift. The market will do its thing regardless of everyone’s beliefs, and you need to maintain your appropriate asset allocation and risk profile. To make major changes (often after the fact) is usually one of the biggest investment mistakes people can make.

More thoughts on Bonds

  • The latest bond sell-off was due to a combination of news that the US Fed sees “diminished downside risks to the outlook” and Bernanke’s comments that the Fed may trim its $85 billion bond buying initiative. The timing suggested it could start this year and end around mid-2014 if the economy grows in line with their forecast. This was not new news. This news has been in the market place as early as the turn of 2013. However, it certainly triggered a flight from bonds.
  • Fast money, ETF trading, and new pricing levels were the catalyst for the extreme ranges traded in such a short period. Get me out – now – mentality prevailed, and once that trade has passed, more rational trading ensued.
  • Tame inflation expectations and mixed economic releases argue for a new trading range with 10-yr yields between 2.00% and 2.50%, but not for the higher yields doomsayers are suggesting. If the recovery continues, ending of Quantitative Easing is still not tightening of US monetary policy. It’s a move to neutrality, and if history is a guide, central banks could be neutral for quite a while.
  • As active managers, and with an extremely liquid portfolio of holdings, we have positioned our portfolios to take advantage of the volatility that will be the norm until the markets enter the next interest rate cycle.

Why less Quantitative Easing is Just a Shell Game

We believe that a reduction in Quantitative Easing purchases will potentially overlap with reduced borrowing requirements of the US government. How ironic would this be if the pay down of debt matches the gradual reduction to Quantitative Easing? At some point, the disappearance of Quantitative Easing will overshadow the reduction of supply; however, by then, market participants will be focused on the next big issue.

 

What about the rest of the year?

For the rest of 2013 we expect the markets to move around in the ranges already established during the first half of the year. In other words we see limited upside and a couple of short term corrections that will provide some decent buying opportunities.

The risks and news items that may cause a correction are many and are well know to the market as they have been climbing these walls of worry since late 2012 and include the following:

  • The U.S. Fed slowing quantitative easing
  • Sequestration in the U.S. continues and is a drag on economic growth
  • Portugal, Italy and Greece continue to struggle
  • Growth in China slows
  • Continued political turmoil in many Emerging Market economies

Overall we continue to see the positive side winning out in the longer term:

  • Earnings growth continues to be positive
  • The U.S. jobs and economic data continue to improve
  • Stocks are still attractively priced
  • Few alternatives for investment dollars since GIC and cash rates are still very low
  • Global support from central banks to stimulate the economy continues to be in place

We have been raising cash in all portfolios recently and are continuing to looking for opportunities to sell call options for some clients on a number of holdings to help generate excess return and income if the markets pull back.

Dividend changes

Many of our holdings continued to increase their dividends during the second quarter. The following nine companies increased dividends and none of our holdings decreased their dividend paid over the last three months.

Company Name % Dividend Increase
Suncor Energy 53.80%
Potash Corp 25.00%
Apple Inc. 15.09%
Exxon Mobile 10.53%
Weston 10.50%
Baxter Intl 8.90%
Johnson & Johnson 8.20%
National Bank 4.80%
Canadian Imperial Bank 2.10%

 

Summary

Investment management is never easy, and the rush to get out of bonds is a great example of emotional decision making. It can be very hard to act against the emotional pull to sell something when everyone seems to be bailing.

When we step back and look at the world in July 2013, we see reasonable market valuations. Keep in mind that from deep recessions come long recoveries. We believe we remain solidly in this recovery phase. It won’t rise in a straight line, and we may very well see more volatility this summer, but the general trend remains positive for stock markets, with room for decent bond returns on an actively managed basis.

 

TriDelta Investment Management Committee

Cameron Winser

VP, Equities

Edward Jong

VP, Fixed Income

Ted Rechtshaffen

President and CEO

Anton Tucker

Executive VP

TriDelta Investment Counsel – Q1 2013 Investment Review and Outlook

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How did the Markets Perform?

The first quarter of 2013 was one of degrees of good for stock markets.

  • For the U.S. stock markets it was great. S&P 500 was up 10.5% (in Canadian currency).
  • For Global stock markets it was very good. The Global (outside of the Americas) EAFE was up 8.3% (in Canadian currency).
  • For the Toronto stock market it was good. The TSX ended the quarter up 3.3%.

The Canadian Bond Universe was up about 0.6%.

So the message for the quarter:

Everything was up, but Canada was a bit of a laggard versus the rest of the world.

 

How did TriDelta Perform?

The first quarter of 2013 was a very good one for TriDelta.

Virtually all clients outperformed both the Toronto Stock market and the Canadian bond index. Returns ranged from 3% to 7%.

This range of performances is tied closely to the clients risk tolerance.  Those with more of a stock & growth focus have outperformed to a larger extent than those with a conservative, fixed income weighted portfolio.

What is key for TriDelta is that our portfolios overall have a lower risk profile designed to outperform in poor stock markets. This is why we are particularly pleased that we also managed to outperform in strong markets.

The key reasons for our strong performance would include:

  1. Meaningful stock exposure to the U.S. Market. This has been a focus for TriDelta, and will likely continue for the foreseeable future. Among the reasons is that for risk management, we believe that Canadians need greater diversification than the Toronto market provides, and that at this point, there still remains many cases of better value outside of Canada.
  2. Focus on corporate bonds vs. Governments, and a belief that greater returns will be found in longer term bonds. We believe that long term interest rates will continue to remain low for the near future, and will allow us to deliver better bond returns than in the short term end of the market. This view may change during the course of 2013, but not today.
  3. Focus on companies with growing cash flows, which leads to growing dividends. This is not a get rich quick strategy. This is a ‘slow and steady wins the race’ strategy. This quarter, 16 of our holdings raised dividends and not one lowered. These are signs of stable growth.

 

Will we see Good Markets the rest of the Year?

In 2iStock_000000674097XSmall010, markets were up over 10%. However, there was still a period of over 15% decline during the year.

In 2012, the S&P 500 was up over 10%. During the year, it still had a 10% decline during the year.

The answer to the question is that at some point in 2013 there will likely be a meaningful decline. Possibly trading down to a 10% decline from its high. We’re unlikely to see consistently good markets for the rest of the year, but the key word is ‘consistently’. The markets remain volatile as they trend higher or lower, but we see many reasons to be positive for the rest of the year.

They include:

  • The U.S. economic trend is positive. There is growing house prices and an improvement in the unemployment numbers.
  • This positive economic trend is coupled with U.S. Government economic stimulus which is allowing companies (and individuals) to borrow funds at incredibly low rates. This combination is very rare and leads to extra strong stock market returns. The U.S. government is essentially committed to most of this stimulus through the end of the year.
  • If not investing in the market, you can only earn 1% or 2% (if invested well) on GICs and cash. The safe alternative is looking much weaker.
  • Europe is bad but stable. The Cyprus banking ‘crisis’ was met with a yawn from Global markets.  This was because of the confidence that is now in place in the European Central Bank and major governments to be able to stick handle their way through. Perhaps this confidence is unfounded, but it seems to be in place.
  • Asian growth appears to be on track despite some bumps over the past year.

One other note might be helpful for those looking for more positive signals.

There have been nine years since 1960 in which the S&P 500 rose more than 5% in January. 2013 is the tenth year it has happened. In eight of those nine instances, the market finished those years higher, with the lone outlier coming in 1987, due to the October crash.

The S&P 500 has averaged a 13% gain from February through the end of the year in those nine years.

 

When will Canadian Markets catch up?
This is a tough one to answer. Because of the concentrated nature of the Toronto Stock Exchange, the question really is, “When Will Energy, Mining and Precious Metals Do Better than the US Market?”

There are certainly components of the Canadian market that remain strong and steady, but Energy and particularly Mining and Precious Metals has underperformed. The Global Gold index is down 22% over the last year!! The Energy index is down 2%, while the Global Mining Index is down 12%.

These areas of the market are very cyclical and because of their volatility, tend to be areas that TriDelta is often underweight. We’re typically overweight companies that are under-valued, have good balanced sheets and have growing dividends. While these aren’t the hallmarks of energy and metals stocks, because of the downturn, there are several names that are looking more attractive.

While we are not going to predict when this cycle will turn, the catalysts will include strong growth signs from China and India, along with the natural sector rotation from a hot sector like Health Care (up 28% in the past year) to a cold sector. We consistently seek value among names regardless of sector, and look to sell some winners that become expensive. Given what has been happening in the market, this may involve some new money going into energy and metals in the coming months.

 

Dividend changes

We are strong believers in the power of dividend growth, and look to hold stocks that based on our analysis, are good bets to grow their dividends over time. This quarter was no exception, with 16 companies increasing dividends, and none decreasing.

 

Company Name % Dividend Increase
Cisco Systems 21%
Magna International 16%
Canadian National Railways 15%
Atco 15%
Rogers Communications 10%
Colgate Palmolive 10%
Canadian Utilities 10%
United Parcel Service (UPS) 9%
3M 8%
Pason Systems 8%
Lorillard 6%
Bank of Nova Scotia 5%
TD Bank 5%
RBC 5%
Transcanada Corp. 5%
BCE 3%

 

SUMMARY
At TriDelta we look forward to providing our current clients and new clients with three key deliverables:

  • A financial plan that gives you a roadmap, financial peace of mind to do more with your wealth and smart tax planning.
  • An investment plan that fits within your larger financial plan. An investment plan that will help you to achieve the long term life goals that you have set out.
  • An investment approach that lowers volatility, delivers increasing income, and uses proven financial discipline and mathematics to underscore buy and sell decisions.

The first quarter extends our strong 2012 performance, and has been a great example of achieving above average risk adjusted returns. In a world of low interest rates and low growth, we strongly believe our investment approach and philosophy is well suited to outperform.

We look forward to the challenges and celebrations in front of us in the remaining 9 months of 2013.

 

TriDelta Investment Management Committee
 

Cameron Winser

VP, Equities

Edward Jong

VP, Fixed Income

 

Ted Rechtshaffen

President and CEO

Anton Tucker

VP, Business Development

 

Bond market review – March 2013

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The hunt for yield will remain the consistent theme for 2013. In this 30 year low interest rate environment as governments across the globe are looking to reflate the economy.

At TriDelta Investment Counsel, we are constantly seeking opportunities to enhance portfolio yield and returns by actively managing the portfolio and applying tactical shifts along the yield curve and with credit quality.

Persistently low inflation readings will keep central banks at bay suggesting that we are sometime away from rising interest rates. Although ironically, the Bank of Canada may actually be forced to consider a cut to its overnight lending rates because of recent sluggish growth and anemic inflation readings.

Political and economic turmoil persist in Europe, although economic growth in the US is tilted higher. The Federal Open Market Committee (FOMC) will likely stay the course with Quantitative Easing (QE), as benefits outweigh the costs. However, tapered QE purchases in the months to come will be mitigated by smaller deficits and a projected decline of $260 billion in bond issuance in the US. Growth, inflation, and job targets, none of which are binding constraints for the US Federal Reserve, will not force the Fed off its agenda to maintain low interest rates for awhile.

We believe interest rates will stay low for a prolonged and indefinite period.  The bond market is far from being complacent given the disaster experienced during the financial crisis of 2006 to 2008.  Fixed income investors are still seeking yield; however, less from duration and more from credit.  At TriDelta we continue to monitor and favour:

  • Gradually, and if appropriate, increasing our bond portfolio’s overall term to maturity (duration) to take advantage of higher interest rates on longer term bonds.
  • Take advantage of the premium interest rates paid on corporate bonds versus the low rates on government bonds.

At TriDelta we have structured our portfolios to provide ‘risk adjusted returns’ by ongoing monitoring of market internals and seizing what we see as opportunities to outperform. We have opted to:

  • Remain a little shorter on term to maturity than the overall DEX Universe Bond Index for most clients.
  • We have over weighted the belly of the yield curve (and underweighted the wings) by not taking a significant duration risk.

bonds‘Yield curve’, ‘sector’ and ‘duration’ allocation is important in bond portfolios; as such, we take these into consideration as we design and manage our portfolios.

We believe that investors are fearful of higher overnight lending rates, but central banks have little control over the rest of the yield curve (aside from central bank operations; such as, quantitative easing) and as such have made portfolio tactical shifts to put the odds in our favour.

Lastly, higher quality non-government bonds (known as investment grade bonds) continue to remain cheap, whereas slightly lower quality (known as high yield bonds) are particularly cheap when compared to US equivalents.  We believe that there is a good likelihood that these Canadian bonds outperform their US counterparts.  In a worst case scenario, we believe corporate bonds will perform better than government bonds.  Our portfolios are overweight in corporate bonds for this reason.

The yield-to-maturity for the Core and Pension Models is at 4.64% and 3.59% which will help cushion any decline, or add to the capital gains.

At TriDelta we feverishly monitor trends and look to capitalize on the tactical opportunities available to boost bond portfolio yield and returns without sacrificing our capital preservation and seeking a consistent stream of income mandate.

Article written by Edward Jong, VP Fixed Income at TriDelta Financial

4th Quarter Investment Review and 2013 Forecast

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report2012 was another year of recovery with some scary moments along the way.

Globally, there continues to be many signs of improvement, but still a very slow recovery from a deep recession. The key from an investment point of view is not to get caught up in your current surroundings, but to focus on the direction. Today, that direction is positive. As a result, we are optimistic for the year ahead.

Even with a positive general outlook, we see a few red flags ahead of us this year which will likely see temporary pull backs in the market. We will try to use these pullbacks as buying opportunities. These might include:

  1. The United States will see meaningful government spending cuts take place which will slow their growth a little this year. It will come about as part of the negotiations to raise the debt ceiling. These cuts didn’t get done with the Fiscal Cliff negotiations, but look for them to happen around March – and will likely hurt markets in the
    weeks leading to an announcement.
  2. The quiet in Europe is a little disconcerting. Expect some noise as new governments come in to power, continued austerity measures cause public uproar, and look for more standoffs between expectations of EU bailouts and countries that still don’t meet the criteria required to receive them.
  3. Asia and Emerging Markets seem to be moving in the right direction at the moment, but when it comes to China in particular, it is often hard to really know the whole picture. As a result, you always want to be wary about counting on China to lead markets forward. We will be looking for any government announcements that could
    lead to a slowdown in growth.
  4. Canada faces some challenges around possible declines in real estate valuations and the increasing energy production out of the United States. Despite these concerns, we continue to see many positives in Canada, but in some cases there may be less room for growth here than in other recovering nations.

 

How did we do?

2012 was a positive year for TriDelta clients. While the TSX returned 4.0% and the DEX Bond Universe returned 3.6%, most TriDelta clients had a net return somewhere in the 4% to 10% range depending on their risk tolerance.

In addition to strong net returns, our clients had a much smoother ride than the Toronto stock index. Most clients never had a month with a loss of more than 1.3% during the year, while the TSX suffered a loss of 6.3% in May. This risk minimization is important for our clients as they are looking for peace of mind from their long term financial plan,
and from their month to month investment portfolio.

This combination of beating the stock market and bond market index with lower than average volatility is a fairly rare feat, and one that we are quite proud of.

 

What worked well

We remained significantly underweight precious metals and energy for most of the year. We added to our energy weight in the fall, and managed to capture much of the upside in the sector. Our stock weighting was 1/3 US based. With the US markets meaningfully outperforming Canada on the year, this was a value driver as well.

Our higher than average cash weightings (often 10% to 20%), didn’t slow us down much, helped to smooth out the bumps, and as discussed in the Q3 Investment commentary, we were able to buy in on a couple of pullbacks during the year – because the cash was available.

At TriDelta, we place the primary focus on capital preservation followed closely by a dividend growth approach to growing the assets. We seek risk adjusted returns, which means that at times of elevated market & economic risk we’re happy to give up some returns to ensure the safety of your hard earned capital.

On the fixed income side, we made the right call in terms of holding some longer term bonds. These bonds appreciated from the continuing decline in long term rates and stable short term rates.

Our best investments have been:

  • Pason Systems up 45% on the year – a smaller Canadian company that provides instrumentation systems for the oil and gas industry. It was purchased because it has a very clean balance sheet, steady growth in earnings and dividend growth, and appears to be very well run. We were looking for some additional exposure to energy with a well-managed service provider.
  • Southern Copper up 37% on the year – US headquartered Copper miner with very strong cash flow and dividend. Net profit margin over 35%. No debt issues and growth is currently powered by internal cash flow. We wanted some mining exposure but with good dividends and strong cash flow.
  • Baxter International up 38% on the year – US health care firm that provides products
    and services for hospitals and medical research. We saw similar fundamental strengths
    as others here, and a good valuation for entry.
  • Catamaran Corporation (formerly SXC Health Solutions) is up 63% on the year – Canadian based provider of pharmacy benefits management services and healthcare IT solutions to the healthcare benefits management industry. Great products, fast growing but managed growth. No dividend is paid here, so more of a growth name held by higher growth clients.

 

What did not work well

Sometimes our risk minimizing approach does keep us away from opportunities. One of those situations could be found in the second half of the year, as we saw strong gains in Europe and emerging markets that we did not participate in. These gains were not driven off economic strength as much as they were a bounce back from some of the significant declines over the past couple of years – and relative calm. We have started to add more non-North American exposure to portfolios.

Another investment that has hurt us in the short term was a Canaccord preferred share. We continue to hold the name as we see solid income, low valuations, and expect some recovery in 2013.

It can be difficult at times to hold poor performing investments, but we go back to the same numerical analysis that led us to own the investments originally. If there is no major change to the financials of the company, and it would pass our buy criteria today, then we won’t typically sell these investments. If something meaningful changes and the companies would no longer meet our original buy criteria, we will sell.

Our weak investments have been:

  • Joy Global lost 33% – occasionally a company doesn’t do what it should do based on the numbers. It may require more time, but in this case, we bought Joy Global because it was a diversified drilling equipment supplier with a steady growth profile. While the stock has improved a little from where we sold it, we were able to reinvest funds into Tesoro and other companies that made solid gains. In this case, we felt that other companies in the sector were holding up better and could provide more upside than holding Joy.
  • TransAlta lost 10% – we replaced it with Atco which is up 17%. In this case we made a relatively quick decision to move out of a company that had been underperforming its industry for a company that had been outperforming. Sometimes the best move you can make with an investment decision is to get out quickly. It requires an ability to be analytical and unemotional, something that many investment managers lack. In this case, the negative ended up a positive with Atco.

 

Dividend changes

We are strong believers in the power of dividend growth, and look to hold stocks that, based on our analysis, are good bets to grow their dividends over time. This quarter was no exception, with 9 companies increasing dividends, and none decreasing.

Southern Copper paid out a special one-time dividend which accounts for its 1,046% dividend growth.

Company Dividend Increase (%)
Southern Copper 1046%
Accenture 20%
Home Capital 18%
McDonalds 10%
Pason Systems 9%
George Weston 6%
National Bank 5%
Emera 4%
Merck 2%

 

Our view of the past quarter and the year ahead

Prior to last quarter we said that we expected a 5% pullback due to one of a variety of factors, one of which being the Fiscal Cliff negotiations.

As it turned out, we did see this decline correctly after the US election in mid-November, and we took advantage over the past few weeks by buying McDonalds, Cisco, 3M, and Cognizant across various portfolios. All have seen gains of 3% to 10% since.

Another move we made late in December was an interesting approach to tax loss selling. As mentioned earlier, we had purchased a Canaccord preferred share which we believe in, but had experienced losses in 2012. This was a Series A preferred share. For those clients who held the security in a taxable account, we sold in late December to capture the tax loss. Because we believe in the company, and didn’t want to risk being out of the name for the required 30 days, we immediately purchased the Canaccord Series C preferred share. If we bought back the same stock, we would lose the benefit of the capital loss, but by purchasing a different (although very similar) security, we remained fully in the investment, but are still able to capture the capital loss for this tax year. As it turns out, this was a good move, as the investment is up 14% in the past 3 weeks.

Our general view of things is similar to that entering 2012. We see choppiness driven by the news cycle in the U.S. and Europe. We see things as generally positive, but not significantly so. We see short term rates remaining flat, and still see some room for long term rates to fall – leading to some opportunities for capital gains in bonds.

This general belief continues to support our core themes of dividend growth, large cap, long term bonds, and some increasing international exposure.

On the positive side, the US is indeed showing the classic signs of a solid recovery – increased manufacturing, improving employment and increasing housing prices. We expect that this will continue – along with a terrific investment environment of low interest rates and government stimulus.

China also looks to be showing meaningful signs of improvement. This bodes well for much of the global economy and in particular for Canada and its commodities.

Speaking of interest rates, we continue to see gains for long term bonds – at least for the first half of the year. Assuming declines in government spending, a strategy of easy monetary policy, modest job growth, and low inflation, we see these combining to keep higher interest rates at bay.

The U.S. Federal Reserve will keep overnight interest rates near zero, and continue with forcing a flatter yield curve until there is both a “sustainable” and “substantial” improvement in the employment situation. The Canadian bond market will essentially be dragged accordingly; however, the Bank of Canada may want to depart (like they did in early 2012) from the dovish stance, but on balance it is unlikely.

As a result, TriDelta will continue to hold longer term bonds for higher yield and capital gains. A great example of this strategy in action was our switch from a Manulife bond with a 2015 redemption date that had a current yield near 3.75% to one with a current yield of almost 6%, an $86 price and a redemption date of 2041. Since the 2041 bond was purchased in September, the bond has increased in price by 6% on top of the yield. The bond that was sold is up 1% over the same time period. We are unlikely to hold this 2041 Manulife bond long term, but will be happy to continue to receive the high income over the short term, and hopefully get a 5% to 10% capital gain when it does get sold.

We see low growth in North America, likely in the 1% to 2% range – certainly not significant growth rates.

We see continued strength in the Canadian dollar, possibly gaining a few cents during major Debt Ceiling debates. This strength in the Canadian dollar vs. the U.S. dollar will underpin the need for increasing Canadian partnerships with Asia across many industries, energy in particular.

 

Summary

At TriDelta we look forward to providing our current clients and new clients with three key deliverables:

  • A financial plan that gives you a roadmap, financial peace of mind to do more with your wealth and smart tax planning.
  • An investment plan that fits within your larger financial plan. An investment plan that will help you to achieve the long term life goals that you have set out.
  • An investment approach that lowers volatility, delivers increasing income, and uses proven financial discipline and mathematics to underscore buy and sell decisions.

Our past year has been a great example of achieving above average risk adjusted returns. In a world of low interest rates and low growth, we strongly believe our investment approach and philosophy is well suited to outperform.

We look forward to a great year ahead.

TriDelta Investment Management Committee
 

Cameron Winser

VP, Equities

Edward Jong

VP, Fixed Income

 

Ted Rechtshaffen

President and CEO

Anton Tucker

VP, Business Development

 

TriDelta 3rd Q 2012 Market Outlook

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What Happened in the Quarter

The third quarter can be summarized by two major government announcements:

  1. The European Central Bank announced the Outright Monetary Transactions programme aimed at providing significant monetary support to ensure that the “Euro Will Not Fail”. The new bond-buying plan is aimed at easing the eurozone’s debt crisis. The ECB aims to cut the borrowing costs of debt-burdened eurozone members by buying their bonds.
  2. Later in September, the US Federal Reserve Bank headed by Ben Bernanke announced Quantitative Easing 3. This included a commitment to buy $40 billion in mortgage backed securities each month from Fannie Mae and Freddie Mac (the US version of the Canadian Mortgage and Housing Corporation – CMHC). This is in addition to the $2 trillion in Treasury bonds that it bought in QE1 an QE2.

Both of these actions and the expectations of these actions drove markets higher during the quarter. Among the biggest beneficiaries were precious metals, energy, and other commodities – sectors of the market that lagged for much of the year.

The Toronto market was up 6% on the quarter after having fallen over 6% in the previous quarter.

The bond universe market was up 1.2% on the quarter.

How did you do?

At TriDelta Investment Counsel we have two main types of clients. The first group seeks conservative growth and income and are invested in our ‘Pension’ model. The second group is looking for growth, which is delivered via our ‘Core’ model.

Pension Clients:

This group is typically in retirement or close to it and looking for less volatility, higher income and steadier 5% to 10% gain, especially while interest rates and GIC rates are so low.

Most pension clients grew by 1.5% this quarter (after fees).

Our Pension model (based on 60% stocks and 40% bonds) returned 5.5% year to date (after fees). So far on the year we are very pleased to see that our Pension portfolios are delivering the type of returns that they were designed to deliver.

While the performance this quarter was not as strong as the super charged stock markets, it is important to remember why. Our approach is based on finding a mix of bonds, preferred shares and dividend paying stocks that will provide a steady level of income. The capital gains growth from the portfolio will usually come from companies that are rarely flashy in the short term (like the precious metals index) but act more like the tortoise than the hare. Companies like Trans Canada Pipelines, Philip Morris, and Colgate Palmolive.

These are the type of companies that will not jump meaningfully upon hearing about the latest round of quantitative easing.

Dividend Changes in Q3 – Pension

One area of Pension focus for us is to hold companies with stable and growing dividends. In terms of dividend changes this quarter we saw 7 dividend increases and no decreases:

  • Microsoft boost its quarterly dividend by 15%
  • Phillip Morris boost its quarterly dividend by 10.4%
  • Norfolk Southern boost its quarterly dividend by 6.4%
  • BCE boost its quarterly dividend by 4.6%
  • CIBC boost its quarterly dividend by 4.4%
  • Emera boost its quarterly dividend by 3.7%
  • Verizon boost its quarterly dividend by 3.0%

 

Core Performance Clients:

This group of clients is looking for greater growth, less concerned about income, and want to beat the market over time. Ideally for peace of mind, these portfolios will still have less volatility than the market overall. We call this group Core Performance portfolios.

Most Core Performance clients grew by 2% this quarter (after fees).

Our Core Performance model (based on 60% stocks and 40% bonds) returned 9.7% year to date (after fees), with a healthy part of the gains coming in the first quarter.

The numbers are quite positive although we saw a little portfolio drag of higher cash balances in the Q3 performance in our Core Performance portfolios. We look forward to adding some more momentum to the portfolio over the next few months as opportunities present themselves.

Some of the trades we made this quarter and why?

In Pension Portfolios:

  • We sold a Manulife bond that had a coupon of 4.08% and came due in 2015.
  • We bought a Manulife bond that has a coupon of 5.06% and comes due in 2041.

Rationale – The short term Manulife bond had a yield to maturity of 2.57%, and we replaced it with a bond from the same company that has a yield to maturity of 6.02%. The 2041 bond also has a current yield (the coupon payment of 5.06 divided by the purchase price of $86.50) of 5.85%.

We will not likely hold this bond to maturity, but feel that the significant increase in yield (while holding the same company), will benefit investors in the short to medium term, while we remain confident that long term interest rates will remain low (or lower) over that time.

  • We sold Barrick Gold

Rationale – This was a difficult decision. The stock was purchased for most clients around $40, dropped to $31, and came back to $37 when we sold it for Pension clients. The volatility is what made us sell the stock. It remains in our Core portfolios as it passes the financial hurdles of the Core model and the speculative nature and volatility of the stock is more appropriate for that mandate.

In Core Portfolios:

  • We did the same Manulife bond trade as noted above in the Pension portfolios.
  • We bought Tesoro Corporation. It is up 16% since our purchase.

Rationale – Tesoro is an independent petroleum refiner and marketer in the United States with two operating segments: refining crude oil and selling refined products in bulk and wholesale markets and selling motor fuels in the retail market. They had a great earnings report this quarter and continue to prove themselves as one of the best operators in the refining space. Growth wise they have two expansions that should contribute positively to earnings shortly and help accelerate growth. The stock ranks very well and is breaking out of a 11/2 year range that should provide substantial support.

  • We sold Discover Financial Services.

Rationale – The stock had a really good run and was up 45% YTD when we sold it. There was some concern about high valuations and their entry into new market segments such as student loans. So far the stock has continued to do well in August and September.

Our Investment Outlook and how it will impact your portfolio

We believe that some of the market gains in Q3 have been driven by ‘hot air’. By this we mean that it is relatively easy for governments to print and throw money at a major economic problem. What is difficult is seeing fundamental economic improvements on the ground and in the economy.

On the positive side there continues to be signs that the US housing market is stabilizing, with price gains in many markets. Housing market changes tend to move slowly, and a turn from one direction to another can be a significant signal. We are hopeful that this slow shift in US housing will provide one of the foundations for an improving economy.

The other big positive is that historically when the government provides economic stimulus and provides lower than average borrowing costs for consumers and companies, the markets tend to benefit. We have certainly seen some of this benefit in the U.S. market, and think that in the medium term that will continue.

On the negative side, there are a few items:

  1. The China Purchasing Managers Index is at 47.8. This is very low and suggests weak growth in China.
  2. Eurozone Purchasing Managers Index is at 46.0, historically a very low level, and one that indicates a continuing high unemployment and low (if any) growth in the region.
  3. Spain, Greece and Italy have been out of the news for a while, and markets have seen solid increases. At some point, they will make negative economic headlines again and the market will see a pullback.
  4. The U.S. “Fiscal cliff” is the popular shorthand term used to describe the conundrum that the U.S. government will face at the end of 2012, when the terms of the Budget Control Act of 2011 are scheduled to go into effect.

Among the laws set to change at midnight on December 31, 2012, are the end of last year’s temporary payroll tax cuts (resulting in a 2% tax increase for workers), the end of certain tax breaks for businesses, shifts in the alternative minimum tax that would take a larger bite, the end of the tax cuts from 2001-2003, and the beginning of taxes related to President Obama’s health care law. At the same time, the spending cuts agreed upon as part of the debt ceiling deal of 2011 will begin to go into effect.

TriDelta’s defensive stance (with higher than average cash balances) will remain until we see a meaningful 5%+ pullback in markets, so that we can find some better entry points. An example might be outside of Canada. We currently have a meaningful position in the U.S. markets. We will likely be expanding our non-Canadian positions for two reasons. The first is that the Canadian dollar is currently very strong, and we believe it is at the high end of the range making it a good time to invest outside of Canada. Also, we continue to look for greater diversification from the core energy and materials that Canada has in abundance.

When we look at the movements of the markets in the last quarter, through the list of positive and negative items that we are facing, we believe that one of the list of four negative items will be the focus of markets’ attention at some point this quarter, and will lead to a pullback that we can take advantage of.

In the meantime, our portfolios (while a little conservative) are well positioned to continue to see some growth in most market situations.

TriDelta Investment Counsel Investment Committee – October 2012
Cam Winser, CFA, VP Equities
Edward Jong, VP Fixed Income
Ted Rechtshaffen, MBA, CFP, President and CEO
Anton Tucker, CFP, FMA, FCSI, VP, TriDelta Financial Partners

 

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