Title: CIFP Annual National Conference 2004
1CIFP Annual National Conference 2004
1 - Capital Markets Overview - Second Quarter
2004 2 Investing for Income 3 Asian Exposure
Tuesday June 15, 2004
2GGOF Guardian Group of Funds
- Established in 1962
- 3.9 billion in assets under management
- Global investment management expertise through 9
leading organizations
3A New Era of Single-Digit Returns
- Moderate growth and inflation looking forward
- Single-digit return expectations for most
Canadian asset classes in the next few years - Stock market leadership requires powerful
earnings momentum - Current income a much larger portion of total
returns
4 A New Era of Single-Digit Returns
- Annualized returns of 10-11 now in rear view
mirror - Expect coupon clipping returns in future
5Central Banks and Interest Rates in the U.S. and
Canada
6and the yield curve is starting to steepen again.
7Why would anyone buy government bonds today?
8Why would anyone buy government bonds today?
9Investors have received equity type returns in
bonds over the last 3 years
Start June 30, 2000 End May 19, 2004
10Reasons to Consider Non-Traditional Income
Alternatives
- Coupon returns for traditional income products
- Promising outlook for income products with
equity-like characteristics - Well-developed markets now for non-traditional
income products - Value of low or non-correlated asset classes
11Non-traditional Income Alternatives
- Preferred shares
- High yield bonds
- Income trusts
- Dividend-paying common shares
12Preferred Shares
- Exchangeable, retractable and floating rate
preferred shares provide - stable, tax-effective income
- low volatility
- 1.00 of dividend income and 1.25 - 1.30 of
interest income both produce the same after-tax
income - Dividends provide yield support, which
contributes to price stability - High quality (P1/P2) preferred share market
shrinking - Be careful Know what you are buying because
issue features vary greatly
13What are High Yield Bonds?
LONG-TERM DEBT RATING SCALES
STANDARD POORS
DBRS
Credit Quality
Highest Quality Superior Satisfactory Adequat
e Speculative Highly Speculative Very
Highly Speculative
AAA AA
AA AA-
A A
A- BBB
BBB BBB-
BB BB BB-
B B
B- CCC
CCC CCC-
CC/C D
AAA AA(high) AA
AA (low) A(high) A
A(low) BBB(high) BBB
BBB(low) BB(high) BB
BB(low) B(high) B
B(low) CCC
CC/C D
14Low or non correlation asset classes are the
answer to bear markets
Canadian Risk/Return Comparison Dec. 1988 Dec.
2003
ScotiaCapital BBB Index prior to inception of
High Yield Index December 31/1994
15Low Correlation with Other Asset Groups
Correlations of Monthly Returns
Canada 1997-2003
USA 1985-2003
High Yield Investment Grade Corps 10 Year Govt
Bonds 90-Day T Bills Large Cap. Stocks Small Cap.
Stocks Investment Trusts (Cda) U.S. REITs
1.00 0.06 -0.15 0.10 0.39 0.39 0.09
1.00 0.22 0.17 -0.01 0.50 0.38
0.31
Merrill Lynch Canadian High Yield Index, U.S.
High Yield Index Dec 1994-Dec 2003. (Morgan
Stanley REIT Index Inception Dec 31/94)
16Reduce Risk AND Increase Return
Efficient Frontier-High Yield Bonds vs. Ten-Year
Treasuries monthly, 1985 - Q1 2003
Source Merrill Lynch Co.
17High Yield Bonds
- Dual nature helps performance in all market
environments - Interest-sensitive nature causes price
appreciation when interest rates fall - Stronger economies that produce rising rates also
benefit high yield issuer companies - Low correlation with other asset classes provides
diversification benefits - Total returns driven by income, not capital gains
- Keys are credit analysis and issuer knowledge
- Fund eliminates most of the single issuer risk
18Income Trusts
- Power and Pipeline Trusts utility type income
- Real Estate Investment Trusts (REITs) produce
rental income - Royalty Trust Units (RTUs) produce resource
royalty income - Business Trust Units (BTUs) produce business
income - Return of Capital (ROC) is very tax-efficient
- Tax liability is deferred
- Ultimately paid at lower capital gains rate
- Can act as an inflation hedge
- Low correlation with other asset classes provides
diversification
19Maturing of an Institutional Asset Class
1995-1996 Now
Universe 15 billion 90 billion Diversificati
on Two asset classes Four asset
classes Governance External Management Internal
Management Business Model Leveraged balance
sheets Strong balance sheets Payout ratios
maximized Lower, sustainable payout
ratios Investor Appetite Capital Gains Current
income Installment receipts Fully paid
priority distributions Research
Minimal Widespread, quality
research Excellent investor
relations Cohesion Disarray Effective
lobbying CAIF, CIPPREC Performance No track
record Established asset class with very
credible performance Legal Theoretical
unlimited Closure imminent putting trusts
on liability for unitholder equal footing with
common shares Bill 35 Trust
Beneficiaries Liability Act
20Income trusts universe is now broadly diversified
74
27
Number of Issuers
23
13
Market Cap ( billions)
Oil Gas Trusts
Business Trusts
REITs
Power/Pipeline
- FOUNDATION OF A VERY LIQUID ASSET CLASS IS NOW
IN PLACE - 1 BILLION YELLOW PAGES IPO THE LARGEST EVER IN
CANADA
Trust Market By SectorAs of March 22, 2004
21RETURNS HAVE BEEN TOO GOOD TO IGNORE
- Four asset classes compared over 8 time frames,
or 32 data points.
Annualized Total Returns to December 31, 2003
ONE YEAR
EIGHTYEARS
SEVENYEARS
SIX YEARS
FIVE YEARS
FOUR YEARS
THREEYEARS
TWO YEARS
38.3
14.9
12.3
14.0
22.1
25.6
24.7
25.3
SCOTIA CAPITAL INCOME TRUST INDEX
6.8
8.1
7.5
7.1
6.7
9.0
8.4
8.6
SM UNIVERSE (MID TERM BOND)
26.7
9.0
6.5
5.1
6.5
1.0
-1.0
5.3
SP/TSX COMPOSITE TOTAL RETURN
5.4
8.6
6.7
2.0
-3.9
-7.9
-8.7
-9.8
SP 500 TOTAL RETURN (CDN)
- In all 32 observations, income trusts have
outperformed all other asset classes in all
time frames.
22Expensive Relative To What?
Income Trusts Produce Tax Effective Upfront
Yields 300 to 900 Basis Points Higher Than
Competing Vehicles
23Strategy And Tactics For MoHigh 2.0
Broad Diversification 50 positions Average
Position 2Maximum Position 4-5 Normal Cash
3-5
As of March 26th, 2004
24Compelling Record of Performance
RETURN
Source Ned Davis Research Inc.
25Compelling Record of Performance
Source Ned Davis Research Inc.
26Canadian Performance Equally Compelling
Dividend versus Zero-Dividend Stocks SP/TSX
1998-2003
27Dividend-paying Common Shares
- In an era of modest equity returns, dividends are
an important component of total return. - 1.00 of dividend income and 1.25 - 1.30 of
interest income both produce the same after-tax
income - Dividend yield provides greater stability than
non dividend-paying shares - Good companies with skilled management and
dominant industry positions create capital and
dividend growth
28Fund Structure
Preferred Shares GGOF Monthly Dividend Fund
High Yield Bonds GGOF Canadian High Yield Bond
Fund
GGOF Diversified Monthly Income Fund
Dividend paying common shares GGOF Dividend
Growth Fund
Income Trusts GGOF Monthly High Income Fund
29Fund Benefits
- Provides tax-advantaged monthly income of 3.5
cents - Comprised of four separate asset classes 25 in
each asset class - Asset classes show little correlation with each
other, ensuring superior diversification benefits - Provides an easy, convenient way to invest in one
product based on 4 successful GGOF funds - Managers among the best in Canada
- John Priestman/Kevin Hall (Guardian Capital)
- Steve Kearns (Guardian Capital)
- Michael Stanley (Jones Heward)
30U.S. dollar has weakened against all currencies,
whether based on commodities...
US/CDN
US/AUD
Source Bloomberg
31or based on higher interest rates.
US/EUR
US/Brit
Source Bloomberg
32Over the long-term, this is the reason for
foreign investing
CDNUSD
Source Bloomberg
33ASIA
34The Asia Pacific Region
- makes up nearly half of the worlds population
2003 Global Population
European Union
United States
6
5
Asia Pacific
47
Rest of World
42
Total 6.3 Billion
Note Asia Pacific is defined as Australia,
China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan,
Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore,
South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand. Source U.S.
Census Bureau, Goldman Sachs.
35The Asia Pacific Region
- accounts for over a quarter of the worlds
economic output
2003 Global GDP
Asia Pacific
26
European Union
28
Rest of World
11
United States
35
Total 29.3 Trillion
Note Asia Pacific is defined as Australia,
China, Hong Kong, India, Indonesia, Japan,
Malaysia, New Zealand, Philippines, Singapore,
South Korea, Taiwan, Thailand. Source U.S.
Census Bureau, Goldman Sachs.
36The Asia Pacific Region
- represents over 19 of the worlds market
capitalization
2003 Global Market Capitalization
Sources Goldman Sachs, CLSA, Standard Poors
37Asia Pacific GDP growing much faster than the
E.U. and U.S.
8
7
6
5
4
3
2
1
0
Source Goldman Sachs, HSBC MICM, 2003 and 2004
are estimates
38Witnessing rising standards of living in emerging
countries
Source World Bank
39US Imports from Asia
Source Nomura Securities
40Private Sector Development
000s
Source Bank Credit Analyst
41Chinas Growing Consumer Demand
- Number of major durable goods owned per 100
urban households
42Boom in Foreign Direct Investment
Source Bloomberg
43GGOF Asian Growth and Income Fund
- Diversified exposure to Asian Tiger countries
China, Hong Kong, Thailand, Malaysia, Taiwan,
Singapore, Indonesia, the Philippines and South
Korea. - Portfolio is concentrated among these countries,
which have a combined population of 2.9 billion. - Portfolio of 40 to 75 dividend-paying stocks and
U.S. dollar-denominated convertible bonds - Primary goal is to provide investors with
capital growth and moderate income
44Fund Performance
Fund Performance
Returns calculated in U.S. dollar terms as of
March 31, 2004 Index includes developed and
emerging Asian markets Source Morningstar.
Shading indicates periods when the Matthews fund
outperforms the Index
45Conclusion
- Single digit returns for most Canadian asset
classes over the next 12 24 months - Current income a much larger portion of total
return. - High yield bonds and more trusts good compliment
to equities and government bonds (low
correlation) - The investment for Asia remains very positive.
46Disclaimer
Sales commissions, service fees, management fees
and expenses all may be associated with mutual
fund investments. Please read the prospectus
before investing. The indicated rates of return
include changes in unit value and assume
reinvestment of all distributions, and do not
take into account sales, redemption or optional
charges or income taxes payable by any
securityholders, which would have reduced
returns. Mutual funds are not guaranteed, their
values change frequently and past performance may
not be repeated.