Home Breadcrumb caret Economy Breadcrumb caret Economic Indicators Breadcrumb caret Investments Breadcrumb caret Market Insights No good places to invest: Timmer Given global economic uncertainties, there are no good places for clients to invest. This affects all Canadian investors, especially retirees who require low-risk, long-term income from portfolio growth. By Vikram Barhat | June 12, 2012 | Last updated on June 12, 2012 3 min read Given global economic uncertainties, there are no good places for clients to invest. Boston-based Jurrien Timmer, director of global macro at Fidelity Management & Research Co., made this statement at the Toronto Morningstar Investment Conference. “If you’re in cash, your purchasing power erodes—at least in the U.S.,” he says. “If buy bonds, you’re losing the battle against inflation; high yield is risky and stocks are subject to deleveraging waves.” This is especially difficult for retirees who need low-risk, long-term income from portfolio growth. Timmer, who maintains a long-term bullish outlook, says despite a poor yield environment, some pockets of the market can generate income. “One is emerging-market debt, at least the external U.S.-dollar-based debt,” he says. “It’s a much-diversified pool, which includes solid investment-grade countries.” Read: Choose debt over equities These countries are generally receiving credit ratings upgrades, while the developed world keeps getting downgraded. This afternoon, Spanish banks were downgraded, adding to worries over the effectiveness of the country’s planned bailout. Another strong area is floating-rate bank loans with yields of 3%, compared to zero in cash. Apart from these two, however, there aren’t many assets that offer risk-adjusted returns, says Timmer. Home bias further limits options The Canadian market lacks the same level of diversity, quality of issuers and liquidity as the U.S. We simply don’t have many international brands, says Eric Bushell, chief investment officer of the signature global advisors division of CI Investments Inc. “You’d be shocked at the number of [Canadian companies] that have been taken over by global multinationals as a result of ongoing mergers and acquisitions over the past few years,” he says. Read: RIM shares fall 9%; future uncertain As a result, our asset management industry—both on the institutional and retail side—is beginning to question the TSX benchmark as a sound reference base. And while the competitive strength of the country’s corporations keep getting diluted, their U.S. counterparts continue to bounce back from the 2008 crash. The financial crisis gave U.S. corporates the single greatest opportunity to restructure and boost their competitiveness and profitability, says Bushell. “The U.S. has pushed a massive competitiveness reset button,” he says. “This represents a major threat to central Canada; we’ve got a stronger dollar, we haven’t restructured, and our wage rates haven’t had a similar adjustment.” Read: Macro concerns sap Canadian business confidence Global economic shifts have also amplified Canada’s need to improve its competitiveness. “Every time things get worse in Europe, commodity prices come down, [which is] enormously relevant to the Canadian stock market,” says Eric Lascelles, chief economist, RBC Global Asset Management. He adds, “You can’t pretend that Canada’s unaffected; the endgame for our market will depend on whether or not the Eurozone breaks up and big banks fail.” Read: Canada feeling the European heat To complicate matters, Europe is nowhere near a resolution and money is flowing into perceived safe assets, like U.S. Treasuries, often at the expense of equities. Also, a hard landing in China would greatly affect Canada, a major commodities trade partner. Read: Canada’s fortunes tied to China’s Vikram Barhat Save Stroke 1 Print Group 8 Share LI logo