The Globe and Mail reported today on a JP Morgan forecast that the Canadian Dollar is expected to weaken over the next year to 82 cents (U.S.). If your portfolio is out of balance because of the surge in Canadian equities over the past few years, now might be a good time to boost exposure to U.S. and other international markets.
It is easy to forget that historically the Canadian market has under performed U.S. equities. According to Ibbotson, Canadian stocks averaged 10.3% from 1939 to 2004 compared to 11.8% for large cap U.S. equities over the same time period. If the loonie does drop as forecast (remembering that it is just a guess), currency gains will boost returns from foreign equities even higher.
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8 responses so far ↓
1 Big Cajun Man // Nov 9, 2006 at 9:40 am
It may also help companies that rely heavily on exports to the U.S. or that have split work forces over many countries. Right now Canadian Workers are expensive in comparison (which is never a good thing).
–C8j
2 tintin // Nov 9, 2006 at 12:39 pm
From the Globe article:
“The Canadian dollar is expected to slide next year as the U.S. economy slows and foreign investors lose interest in the wake of a recent decision to tax income trusts”
This is enough to devalue the CAD by 8-10% ?
The rising CAD affect manufacturers. So the CAD should fall to make jobs for this segement?
3 Canadian Capitalist // Nov 9, 2006 at 1:28 pm
A falling loonie would give a breather to the manufacturing sector. I have a high exposure to international equities, so a falling loonie would be good for my portfolios.
4 tintin // Nov 9, 2006 at 3:55 pm
A currency is a common share of a country. A falling currency indicates problems with a nation. And eventually a falling standard of living.
5 MikeB // Nov 9, 2006 at 5:47 pm
JPMorgan probably has an axe to grind with the boogie man finance minister.
6 MikeB // Nov 10, 2006 at 3:37 pm
This will likely prop up the loonie.
http://edition.cnn.com/2006/BUSINESS/11/09/china.economy.reut/
7 Phil S // Nov 10, 2006 at 11:53 pm
I currently work for a japanese automaker and they chose to expand their operations in Canada during the time when the loonie was at 90 cents! Companies which rely on cheap labour (such as in clothing and textiles) will continue to leave Canada regardless of where the loonie goes. Any manufacturer which can successfully demonstrate added value has the profit margins which are not as susceptible to currency fluctuations because customers are willing to pay more for their product.
The problem is that our tax structure here in Canada doesn’t allow companies to spend money on innovation. So, all of our R&D and innovation is done in japan and gets shipped over here and we’re mainly the grunts who just build stuff because we’re physically closer to the raw materials. I don’t know if any of you have tried to file paperwork for the R&D tax credit before, but by the time you meticulously file everything to apply for the credit, the manhours involved to file the paperwork has pretty much wiped out whatever meagre credit that corporations get back on their taxes.
Our corporate tax laws need a serious restructuring and the income trust fiasco is just a symptom of the root cause of our dilemna. We’re all over-taxed!
8 W.D. // Oct 7, 2007 at 6:57 pm
Well, the Canadian dollar has continued to climb during 2007 and Canadian Manufacturing jobs continue to decline. The manufacturing company I work for sell mostly to the U.S. because of the lower value of the U.S. $ the company’s profit margin suffers (the product still gets sold for the same U.S. $ value) So, a stronger Canadian dollar may make for more trips to the U.S. it hurts Canadian Manufacturers. Weired isn’t it!
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