Title: What Happened
1What Happened What Now?
2Agenda
- What Happened?
- Credit Crunch
- The Response
- Where Are We Now?
- Recession timeline
- Investment Cycle
- What Do We Do Now?
- Asset Class Review
- Security Review
3The Credit Crunch in a Nutshell
- Over Investment in U.S. Housing (1997-2006)
- Cheap credit and aggressive lending practices led
to the largest housing boom in U.S. history - U.S. Sub-Prime Mortgage Crisis Begins (2007)
- Rising mortgage rates and falling housing prices
led to defaults on the highest risk mortgages - Complex Financial Instruments Implode
- Values of financial instruments linked to the
sub-prime mortgages such as ABCPs, CDOs, MBSs,
etc. and derivatives tied to these securities
plummet - Write-Downs
- U.S. financial institutions began to report
massive losses and write-downs as the value of
mortgage-related assets fell. (IMFs most recent
estimate of losses US1.4 trillion) - Freeze-Up of the Credit Markets
- With the balance sheets of financial giants
compromised, access to credit began to shut down.
A global freeze in the credit markets followed.
Banks were afraid to lend to each other. - Crisis of Confidence, Panic Selling, and
Spreading to the Real Economy - Lack of credit hurt real businesses, investors
just wanted out of everything and we are going
through a nasty economic slowdown and
experiencing negative wealth effect. The U.S.
consumer is tapped.
4What a Bubble Looks Like .
U.S. Housing Prices Adjusted for Inflation Since
1890
Examples of bubbles Not a new
phenomena 1630s Tulipmania 1720s South Sea
Bubble ______ Mississippi
Scheme Recent Examples 1970s Nifty
Fifty 1980s Japan Inc. 1990s Tech
Bubble 2000s U.S. Housing
Source Lotsoff Capital Management
5When the Bubble Burst,Global Banks Felt the Pain
6Investors Hit Panic Button Following Lehman
Failure
Bloomberg Financial Conditions Stress Index
Bear Stearns Hedge fund collapse
Northern Rock nationalized by Britain
Bear Stearns acquired by JP Morgan Chase
Lehman Brother collapses
Source Bloomberg
7Volatility Spikes
Source Bloomberg, Lotsoff
8Equity Markets Plunge
9Corporate Spreads Explode
2096 basis points on Dec 31
Source ML U.S. High Yield Master II Index
U.S. Treasuries 5 -10 Years Index, Marrett Asset
Mgt
10Global Growth Estimates Sink
11Commodity Prices Collapse
Commodity prices continue to tumble on plunging
global growth expectations but gold has bounced
12The Canadian Dollar Sinks with Oil
13How Bad Was It?
14Nowhere To Hide
Source Bloomberg
15 16Strong Policy ResponseU.S. Govt Throws in the
Kitchen Sink
- U.S. Pledges top 8.5 Trillion
- TARP other Congressional Funding 1.15
Trillion - Federal Deposit Insurance Corp guarantees of
bank-to-bank loans 1.8 Trillion - Term Auction Facility others 3.45 Trillion
- Commercial Paper Funding Facilities 1.8
Trillion - Federal Housing Administration 300 Million
- Other
- Obama Stimulus plan (500-700 billion)
- Oil moves from tax to stimulant
17Adding up The Global Bailout
Benelux Countries44bn, 2 GDP
Britain450bn, 21 GDP
Germany151bn, 7 GDP
IrelandLoan guarantees only
Russia209bn, 12 GDP
Spain111bn, 8 GDP
US 850bn, 5 GDP
Switzerland66bn, 15 GDP
France50bn, 2 GDP
South Korea80bn, 9 GDP
China586bn, 16 GDP
Japan68bn, 1 GDP
India41bn, 5 GDP
Source Business Week Dec 1, 2008
18Strong Policy ResponseGlobal Central Banks
Co-ordinate Cuts
Central banks cut rates to record lows with
expectations for additional cuts in the near
future
19 20U.S. RecessionIts Official. It started in
December 2007
Source DundeeWealth Economics
21U.S. RecessionsRecessions Are Bad for Cdn
Equities
December -35.03
Source DundeeWealth Economics
22U.S. Recession But This One Should Last Longer
Than Most
Source National Bureau of Economic Research
(www.nber.org/cycles), Dundee Securities
23U.S. RecessionWhy It Should End In Late Summer
2009
Reasons why Dr. Murenbeeld expects the recession
to end late summer 2009
- House prices should stop declining by mid-2009
- Government programs already announced i.e.
TARP, CPFF, TALF (7.76 trillion) will begin to
have an impact in 2009-Q1 and beyond - Significant infrastructural spending, minimum
700bn, should start around mid-year 2009 maybe
sooner - If the recession started in Dec 07, it will be
of 18-20 months duration (economic surveys
suggest April 08 Jun 09, or 14 months!) - Oil prices now stimulative not taxing!
24U.S. RecessionEquity markets are forward looking
SP/TSX Index tends to bottom 5 months before the
end of a recession
25The Emotional RolleroasterWhere are we in the
Cycle?
Source Westcore Funds / Denver Investment
Advisers LLC, 1998
26 27Asset Class ReviewCash is Dear
Near 0 means Return OF Capital with no Return ON
Capital
Source Bloomberg
28Asset Class ReviewGovt Bonds and GIC rates are
Low
Historically low interest rates means Return of
Capital plus inflation and not much more
Source Bloomberg
29Asset ReviewCorporate Bonds Spreads are
Attractive
Riskier corporate bonds are pricing in plenty of
risk. Spreads are twice previous peaks.
Source ML U.S. High Yield Master II Index
U.S. Treasuries 5 -10 Years Index, Marrett Asset
Mgt
30U.S. EquitiesSeriously Undervalued
Source DundeeWealth Economics
31Canadian EquitiesSeriously Undervalued
Source DundeeWealth Economics
32What Stocks should do well
- Focus on stocks with
- Strong balance sheets
- High profitability
- Low valuations
- Plenty of companies trading at levels below
10-Year ago levels
33What Funds Perform Best Following a Market
Bottom?
Source Morningstar, DundeeWealth
34U.S. Equity MarketsMarkets Can Go Sideways for a
While
CAGR Compound Annual Growth Rate
Pause in Order? An economy post bubble needs time
to heal
8 years 24 CAGR
16 years -1 CAGR
18 years 16 CAGR
8 years 0 CAGR
13 years -10 CAGR
24 years 10 CAGR
Source Bloomberg, Dundee Private Client Research
35Investing Implications
- Passives Strategies Should be Less Effective
- Index closet index strategies
- Buy hold strategies
- Need Active Managers
- Willing to buying on weakness and sell into
strength - Willing to find leadership stocks
- Time to be Proactive
- Make sure you are comfortable with your asset
allocation and fund selection
36Asset Class Review
-
- Investors should have diversified portfolio with
all asset classes. But here are some observations
regarding the traditional three. - Cash may be suitable for nervous investors, but
with zero percent interest, investors should
expect no returns - Longer-term government bonds are safe but
investors should expect no returns after
inflation. Corporate bonds yields are at
attractive levels vs govt bonds. Investors
should focus on highest quality corp bonds first. - Equities are priced at attractive levels, but how
much bad news is discounted in the market?
Remember equities tend to bottom before the end
of the recession - Larger core equities are historically the first
to recover. Expect those companies with strong
balance sheets, good profitability and low
valuations to do best. - Small and mid-cap companies do better later in
the cycle. - If the equity markets are in a longer-term
trading range, then investors need to be more
active rather than passive
37What to Do?
- Investors should
- Review your goals
- Review your asset mix (stocks vs bonds vs cash)
- Review your portfolio (ensure you are positioned
with the right securities for the recovery stage) - Need to be pro-active, need to take an active
approach to investing - Dollar Cost Averaging Good way of rebuilding
positions
38Conclusion
- We now know what happened
- We know what caused the bubble why it burst
- We know there has been a strong response to the
crisis - We know that a lot of bad news has been
discounted by the riskier asset classes and
safe asset classes - We also know historically which assets classes
have performed best coming out of market bottoms - Investors need to review their portfolios to
ensure they have the right mix for 2009.
39Important Information
- Commissions, trailing commissions, management
fees and expenses all may be associated with
mutual fund investments. Please read the
prospectus before investing. Mutual funds are not
guaranteed, their values change frequently and
past performance may not be repeated. - Views expressed regarding a particular company,
security, industry or market sector should not be
considered an indication of trading intent of any
funds managed by Goodman Company, Investment
Counsel Ltd. These views are not to be
considered as investment advice nor should they
be considered a recommendation to buy or sell. - This document is for advisor use only and is not
to be distributed or reproduced without the
consent of Goodman Company, Investment Counsel.
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