FidelityConnects: True North Trends: Opportunities in Canadian equities
Join portfolio manager Maxime Lemieux as he unpacks the Canadian equity landscape and provides an update on Fidelity True North® Fund. Maxime will share his insights on the current state of Canada’s markets, key sectors driving performance, and strategies for positioning portfolios in 2026. Whether you’re focused on growth opportunities or navigating volatility, this session will provide actionable ideas and a clear outlook for the year ahead.
Transcript
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Hello, and welcome to Fidelity Connects.
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I'm Pamela Ritchie. After a strong year for Canadian markets investors are
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taking a closer look at what's driving returns for this year.
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Gold and energy have moved back into focus and Canada's industrial
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base is beginning to take shape again.
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Our next guest believes this is exactly the kind of environment where
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selectivity matters more than broad exposure.
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What does he say that active management matters,
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how does it matter more now and where is he seeking opportunity.
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Joining us here today to discuss all of this further is Fidelity
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True North Fund portfolio manager, Max Lemieux.
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Great to see you, Max. Thank you for joining us from Montreal.
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How are you today?
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Good. Good morning, everyone.
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Great to have you joining us here.
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Let's begin with what a year it was, certainly, last year.
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One of the big questions is sort of is it repeatable in the Canadian markets?
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You're sitting in the midst of it. You've been doing this for years.
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What did last year mean? Has it wrapped and where are we going?
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I call it a vintage type of year.
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Over the past 30 years, well, soon coming out to 30,
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it's been impossible to predict such a
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movement. We met last year talking about the first
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grenade from Washington in terms of potential tariffs and
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so on. I would have never been able to predict such a
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strong recovery for the Canadian market, finishing up more than 30%.
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Obviously, when there's so much sentiment and
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speculation, especially in gold and metals, it's
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been a heck of a year.
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I think it's hard to repeat this but there are trends that we
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think, again, personal view, trends that might continue
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to remain in place for the next year or two.
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We'll see. As you know, True North, we have a long term view when we invest.
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It's usually over the next three years plus.
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It's not day trading.
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Last year was very special because
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everything went up at the same time.
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Reminded me a little bit 2010, 2011 where the very speculative
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companies were just going after
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returns of 20, 30%, and small-cap also.
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We've seen a bit of a broadening marketplace coming towards the end of the year
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last year. I would say gold and copper and
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all these metals, including energy, as you mentioned, was also important, not
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necessarily because the price of oil has been as positive as
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gold.
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Remember that gold last year was up 60% and Canadian gold equities were
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up 120%, so it's a double.
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Energy, remember, there's been huge improvements out
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of Calgary over the past 10,15 years, consolidation,
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better management, the cost of producing gas
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and oil has improved quite a bit.
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Lower discounts on oil and also the new pipeline,
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Trans Mountain, allows us to export internationally
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so less dependent on the US Gulf Coast.
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To top it off, as you know, LNG Canada has just started last
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year, it's going to start to export more.
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There'll be two more terminals over the next three, four years and therefore
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they'll probably consume up to 10% of natural gas production in
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Canada. Short term, not necessarily a lot of excitement for the commodity,
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the natural gas per se, but I think that given the
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ongoing geopolitics we need to continue
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to take advantage of those resources that we have.
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We have not even talked about nuclear. Nuclear was topic du jour also last
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year. I'd like to remind the audience that
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two of the three nuclear technologies in the world are controlled by
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Canadians, i.e. Brookfield and Cameco both own
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Westinghouse, which is an American technology.
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And have a huge contract with the US government.
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Yes, absolutely. Those are long term duration, right?
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We don't always have all the details short term.
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I mean, as you know, Washington keeps us on our toes every single day.
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We don't have always have full transparency but we know what's the direction
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of travel.
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That's important.
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The old SNC, which is AtkinsRéalis, that owns the CANDU technology
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which is more in Europe but they'll try to probably enter the US market as
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well. We'll see how that's going to pan out for these names, doesn't mean that
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we own it today or if we're buying or selling.
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I just want to mention that Canada on the resource front,
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there's a lot also being supported by ...
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as you know, since Carney's been elected ...
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supporting these five large major projects and one of them that was in the top
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five was foreign, which is a copper mine, which is about to
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start, I think, next year out of Saskatchewan, that's
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a name that as of the last filing was in True North.
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We were in that name at that time for a long time, actually for
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more than a year. There's more to come, and this
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narrative is not changing in the short term so it's hard
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to say what's coming up next year, over the next 12
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months, but if commodity prices just remain where they're at a
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lot of companies in Canada, if they're energy or rare earth
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or copper, if the commodity prices maintain, sustain themselves
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you have companies that generate good free cash flow and good returns to
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shareholders.
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You're right in the middle of it.
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You just used that example of the mine in Saskatchewan which has now been
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picked up for bigger and greater and better things and you've been there
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for a long, long time. You've maneuvering this market and knowing the
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intricacies of it for such a long time
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so it sounds like you're saying the moment is continuing.
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This is something that's going to run for some time.
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That's what we feel. Again, I've given up on my crystal balls,
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the past three years have been quite something.
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The definition of a cycle, I think, has changed quite a bit.
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I'm not going back to university but I think what we've seen is
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unheard of in modern history.
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Think about it, the last recession was 2009,
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COVID was a two-week recession, it's very interesting.
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Again, rare earth, there's a company based
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in Montreal, they've been involved in this whole chain.
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Again, as of the last filing we had been shareholders for many, many years in
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that company. Sometimes to wait a bit more when you see that
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incrementally these companies are improving on what they do
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and expanding, the payoff long term can be very attractive.
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That's what we're trying to do. What people don't see necessarily, the
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investors, is that we try to manage risk in absolute terms,
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so we're not a benchmark hugger.
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Sometimes we're ahead of the crowd but when it becomes really
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exciting we're not going necessarily be overweighted, especially in
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Canada where the
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index is not as diversified.
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It's a different type of marketplace in Canada.
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If we want to protect shareholders' money, especially during downturns because
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there will be shakeups at times, we've seen it over
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the past few days with AI's impact on software.
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It's nothing new but there was another breach.
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You don't know what's going to come.
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We don't know if there'll be another statement from Washington that will just
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mix up all the cards out there.
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But you know the background is, again, there's a direction
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of travel. I think Mr. Carney's trips in China and
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Europe, I think he's maneuvering, not to escape
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a potential renewable of the
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USMCA but I think we always need to have a B plan.
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It's like when I do my homework with my analysts
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we try to measure what is the absolute downside scenario and
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what is upside, that's what we do all the time on all the
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stocks. I think Mr. Carney is doing this, he needs to prepare Plan B and
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probably a Plan C because we don't know what's going to happen when July comes.
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Will there be a full renewal of the free trade or is
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that going to be just like no renewal so therefore
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it keeps going on a yearly basis for 10 years or, as you know,
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the default option is that any of the three
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country from July and on can
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exit on a six-month notice, and that would be the
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absolute downside scenario for the industrial companies.
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What I want the audience to remember, the industrial
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economy in Canada since 1987, the first free trade agreement
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between Reagan and Mulroney, sorry,
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1988, I believe, part of the industrial
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sector in Canada was about 18% of the market.
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Recently, as of last year I think, we touched a low of 8% or 8.5%.
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Because natural resources were available or
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part of that free trade agreement, unlike most of the free trade agreements in
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the world that have taken place over the past 30 years, well,
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we tend to specialize in what we're best at.
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When your largest client is just down south it's easy to ship,
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train, truck, whatever.
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That's what happened. Now because of the geopolitics we need to spend more
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on defence. Usually, spending more on defence helps a
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country or an economy to rebuild its own industrial
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base. I think that's we're going to see over the next few years.
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We've seen a lot of Canadian names that have had quite a move last
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year just based on that prediction of more
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spending.
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For sure. It's just fascinating to watch this roll out and with your expertise
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behind it being able to shepherd people through
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where there's an opportunity now and when it's perhaps a bit early to
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take a look at things. You'll know that better than almost anyone.
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When you take a Look at the geopolitics, I don't want to bring too many of them
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in here but, for instance, there's a discussion of
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whether oil is going to feel the global price.
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This is a bit of a shock.
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There are things going on in the Middle East. We don't know if it'll be a
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nothing or if it's something that goes further.
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Again, just tell us a little bit about your energy positioning within the fund
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at this point.
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Without naming specific names we've always been
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quite involved with royalties type of companies where
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the different moves in commodities are not necessarily going to have the same
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impact as a producer.
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You can think of the refiners, they can
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have a great run, especially if oil stays at a lower price because their
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margins improve by default.
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We've got some secular stories, including also some of the pipelines, some
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of the pipeline companies, especially for natural gas.
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We've always believed that natural gas is a bridge towards
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a greener world. I've not changed my personal view on this.
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Same thing as rare earth or some metals will be needed for this
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ongoing transition, but there will be hiccups.
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In terms of oil and gas, as I've mentioned earlier, a lot of these companies
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at $60, $65 oil are more
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profitable than they used to be.
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They're just better companies than they're used to.
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Now, of course, given the geopolitics, if you tell me that oil goes
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to 50 bucks some of these names will go down,
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there's no doubt about it. There's a currency also that we need to factor in.
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I cannot promise, and I don't know if there'll be another oil pipeline, it's
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not crystal clear. I think based on my readings and our discussions with
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CEOs of different companies it looks more like we might have
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a great opportunity to continue to expand on the current infrastructure that
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has already been built as opposed to building a brand new pipeline.
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That alone could increase quite a bit the overall exports [crosstalk].
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It's all about the capacity and the export piece
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so if it gets there...
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You want to diversify away from the US, right, 80% of what
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we ship used to be in the US.
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You want to play your cards well because now we don't know what's going to
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happen in Venezuela but if Venezuela were to go
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back to what they used to produce, which was like $3 million, I think, a year,
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they're at 800,000 barrels a day, I think, used to being closer to
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2, in the heydays I think it was 3 or slightly above,
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it would take years.
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It takes a long time. Remember when the US invaded Iraq
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it took them more than a decade to bring back the
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production that Iraq had back in their peak.
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It takes lot of time.
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Again, I want people to remember we have a
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diversified economy.
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As I said, uranium, nuclear, copper,
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the gold companies have a lot of byproducts as well.
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It's super interesting to see where Canada sits right now.
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I was speaking to an old friend in Boston a
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few weeks ago and he was mesmerized about why
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are investors more enthused about the Canadian marketplace
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given all the resources that we have, and if the world continues
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to go through a duplication of all the supply chains
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as a result of the geopolitics Canada sits very
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well. Remember, we talked about this when the Russians invaded Ukraine.
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Hello, investors. We'll be back to the show in just a moment.
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else you get your podcasts. Now back to today's show.
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Absolutely. That was the beginning of one piece of the gold trade,
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certainly. There's more to it perhaps now because it's a
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gathering storm to an extent.
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We saw gold fall out of bed last week, for sure,
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maybe linked to the new Fed nominee, head of the
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Fed nominee. I don't know what you think about that but where does gold
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play a role going forward.
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Maybe it was a buying opportunity for some people.
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It seems to be okay today.
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Maybe. In terms of how I perceive gold,
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I always had this soft rule since I've been a fund manager,
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gold is very much based on sentiment.
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It's not a productive asset.
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As a result, all the funds I've managed previously usually I've got this 10%
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threshold as percentage of the total assets of the fund.
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We were in gold last year, two years, five years
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ago. Now as you get more advanced
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in that cycle people go from the large cap to the
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smaller and mid-cap companies that become more speculative.
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They want a bigger bang for their bucks, right?
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It gets a bit harder for True North, which is a 7
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billion plus fund, to get involved with but we're always on the lookout
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for interesting opportunities that will have potentially a long duration,
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no matter what happens with the gold price.
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The reality is we've been on the wait over the past couple months
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just because now it's way above 10% of the TSX,
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as I've mentioned to you, and therefore more than 10% of the fund,
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a little bit more. So I'm just a little careful on short
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term but the reality is that nothing's changed.
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Central banks have increased their reserves but they're not buying as
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much as two years ago.
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Last year, we just saw the numbers, central banks bought a little less last
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year versus 2024 but there's still a trend.
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Now over the past six months it's been all retail money and institutional
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investors coming in.
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Now, the dynamic, look at Venezuela, the more
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land grab that we see or the more changes that were
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unexpected in the previous world order, this
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I think will keep people interested in gold.
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Also, I'd like to mention something. As you know, I've never been a big bull or
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a strong believer in cryptos but over the past couple
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of weeks, months, there's been articles about quantum
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computing being able to break in the codes for cryptos.
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It's very interesting that over the past month or so
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we've seen really cryptos being under pressure.
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Obviously, gold has decoupled like last year but I think that people realize
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maybe that to own something that is really tangible ...
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we've seen this queue of people going to buy silver and gold
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in the US, in the UK. I don't know how many coins now are sold out at Costco.
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It's a bit crazy. When you look at the rate of change, when gold reached
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5,000 it was, I think, something psychological which coincided
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also with the nomination of the new Fed chair who is, by the way,
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an investor. His whole career has been ...
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he was a banker, investment banker, then he went to work with Stanley
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Druckenmiller who is one of the most famous stock investors in
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the West. A bit less well known because he just runs his own
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family office since he left George Soros many years ago.
18:43.856 --> 18:48.260
Scott Bessent worked at Soros with Stanley Druckenmiller and
18:48.260 --> 18:52.331
he's in charge of the Treasury, and you've got now Mr. Warsh who
18:52.331 --> 18:54.066
will be heading the Fed.
18:54.066 --> 18:58.103
These two individuals understand the stock market inside out.
18:58.103 --> 19:02.141
That's very interesting that now you'll have two voices
19:02.141 --> 19:04.576
reporting to Mr. Trump in some ways.
19:04.576 --> 19:08.480
We'd like to believe that the Fed will remain quite independent.
19:08.480 --> 19:12.651
Mr. Warsh understands markets, we'll see if he's going to be a dove
19:12.651 --> 19:16.121
like some people pretend, or if he is going to be a bit hawkish.
19:16.121 --> 19:20.058
It's not crystal clear to me what will be the approach.
19:20.058 --> 19:23.996
I don't think, again, personal view, I would not be surprised if in the short
19:23.996 --> 19:28.400
term rates could go down a little bit more. At the same time the economy in the
19:28.400 --> 19:32.437
US, despite the fact that it's a K economy, the bottom 20
19:32.437 --> 19:36.608
percentile is still hurting, it's hard to get by, inflation is
19:36.608 --> 19:41.513
not disappearing. But the economy,
19:41.513 --> 19:45.450
CapEx, infrastructure, you know, these CapEx from the large
19:45.450 --> 19:49.421
four players for the data centres geared towards AI keeps
19:49.421 --> 19:53.125
going and represents 75% of the overall CapEx in the US.
19:53.125 --> 19:56.261
There's still on shoring.
19:56.261 --> 20:00.399
It's earning season as we speak so we see the backlog of major industrial
20:00.399 --> 20:04.536
companies starting to increase because it's been three years of complete
20:04.536 --> 20:08.807
stagnation. Those PMIs are starting to move
20:08.807 --> 20:13.178
but the stocks have already had quite a move since October already.
20:13.178 --> 20:17.282
You mentioned crypto. I want to ask you a little bit about AI and the
20:17.282 --> 20:20.085
discussions because all of the components that you've been discussing in many
20:20.085 --> 20:24.156
cases will be components of the AI build out, the commodity side
20:24.156 --> 20:27.926
of it, the energy side of it, certainly.
20:27.926 --> 20:31.163
Something that we've seen in markets has certainly been a reaction from
20:31.163 --> 20:35.300
software being displaced, essentially, by what
20:35.300 --> 20:37.402
AI can do for companies.
20:37.436 --> 20:39.538
I just want to kind of get your thoughts on that.
20:39.538 --> 20:43.575
For a long time software has been a very interesting place to invest but lots
20:43.575 --> 20:47.179
of investors are questioning that right now. What are your thoughts?
20:47.179 --> 20:51.350
It's a great question, very hard to have a
20:51.350 --> 20:55.387
clear cut answer or to have an answer on a timely manner.
20:55.387 --> 20:59.858
Again, I think there's a roadmap or a direction of travel but
20:59.858 --> 21:03.895
in terms of sequence, hard to tell you the when and
21:03.895 --> 21:07.899
the what. Here, I'd like to share a personal discussion
21:07.899 --> 21:12.137
I had with an acquaintance of mine who's been
21:12.137 --> 21:17.042
involved in enterprise software his whole life, knows AI
21:17.042 --> 21:21.046
intimately. He started a new company about a year
21:21.046 --> 21:24.383
ago which is enterprise software but based on AI.
21:24.383 --> 21:28.453
Basically, this gentleman told me recently he could bring up
21:28.453 --> 21:32.491
a product that he's been showcasing and using,
21:32.491 --> 21:36.595
there's a core client using his new solution
21:36.595 --> 21:40.565
that was all AI built and therefore he told me, I can do a
21:40.565 --> 21:44.336
lot more faster thanks to AI.
21:44.336 --> 21:47.539
He could do this with, I think, half the number of engineers.
21:47.539 --> 21:51.610
I forgot in terms of amount of time
21:51.610 --> 21:53.945
but it was much faster.
21:53.945 --> 21:57.649
Here's the hook or the pitfall.
21:57.649 --> 22:02.020
Where he was misled, his client is super happy
22:02.020 --> 22:06.024
but he cuts back on software engineering but where he
22:06.024 --> 22:10.729
had to hire a lot more people was on the design part.
22:10.729 --> 22:14.700
It's easy to bring up a new solution, what's a generic solution,
22:14.700 --> 22:19.037
and then you need to adapt and tailor it to the need of your customer
22:19.037 --> 22:21.540
who might be in a totally different industry, different sector.
22:21.540 --> 22:25.410
You need to do that work.
22:25.410 --> 22:28.513
That's more labour intensive than expected.
22:28.513 --> 22:33.452
It's just to show here that, listen,
22:33.452 --> 22:37.522
it's been a carnage year-to-date, and started last year for this
22:37.556 --> 22:41.526
software sector mostly, well, not only enterprise
22:41.526 --> 22:45.464
software but all kind of software companies including info service type
22:45.464 --> 22:49.768
of software, we've seen Thomson Reuters and RELEX in
22:49.768 --> 22:53.805
Europe, we've seen some of the stock exchange that have a business model that
22:53.805 --> 22:57.843
is more based on info service as opposed to just
22:57.843 --> 23:01.813
commissions and trading, it has a lot of ramification.
23:01.813 --> 23:05.917
The example I just shared with you is I think that this
23:05.917 --> 23:09.855
is happening a little bit too fast because we've got
23:09.855 --> 23:13.925
the proof here that there's another aspect of a
23:13.925 --> 23:17.996
software solution that is based on tailoring it and
23:17.996 --> 23:21.967
making this tangible to the users, and that has
23:21.967 --> 23:24.035
nothing to do with AI per se.
23:24.035 --> 23:28.206
No, that's the layers and the nuance and the idiosyncratic
23:28.206 --> 23:31.943
way that you would take a look at companies and the theme and obviously the
23:31.943 --> 23:36.348
sort of shock to the market that is being endured by software right
23:36.348 --> 23:40.452
now. That kind of leads me to your ability to take a look at companies
23:40.452 --> 23:44.623
that would maybe be private at this point, probably tech companies that
23:44.623 --> 23:46.691
are private. You do do that.
23:46.691 --> 23:49.094
I know that you have a wide knowledge.
23:49.094 --> 23:53.832
You actually invest in the companies as well.
23:53.832 --> 23:57.803
We still do. Not in the case that I just mentioned to you, that's way too
23:57.803 --> 24:01.206
early.
24:01.206 --> 24:04.643
If we invest in some private companies we like them to already have some kind
24:04.643 --> 24:08.046
of revenue generation.
24:08.046 --> 24:12.217
We do own three to four companies, it's probably about 1% of the
24:12.217 --> 24:14.820
portfolio so it's nothing very risky.
24:14.820 --> 24:18.857
We try to mitigate the absolute risk again but we're super enthused
24:18.857 --> 24:22.894
about ... two of these companies
24:22.894 --> 24:25.697
actually right now are very interesting.
24:25.697 --> 24:27.466
They've seen their backlog growing.
24:27.466 --> 24:29.668
One of them is related to automation.
24:29.668 --> 24:34.139
I've talked about all these backlogs for these large industrial companies where
24:34.139 --> 24:36.908
it's increasing recently.
24:36.908 --> 24:40.946
Some of these company's, they're unicorn, it's just a question of
24:40.946 --> 24:45.183
time. We saw actually just two days ago out
24:45.183 --> 24:49.921
of Quebec City there's a company that was purchased for
24:49.921 --> 24:54.125
$2 billion Canadian by ASSAB, a large
24:54.125 --> 24:56.495
US industrial company.
24:56.495 --> 25:00.799
Too bad that we lost that company but we
25:00.799 --> 25:05.403
have that. I want people to remember long term diversification
25:05.403 --> 25:09.508
will always pay off. It's one thing to chase the metals and the
25:09.508 --> 25:14.446
gold and the oil or the energy or infrastructure, we
25:14.446 --> 25:18.517
have to remind ourselves that technology despite AI, there'll
25:18.517 --> 25:22.220
be new winners out there and we have to be on the lookout for these.
25:22.220 --> 25:26.324
That's why we do that extra homework to keep an
25:26.324 --> 25:29.060
eye on some of these private companies.
25:29.060 --> 25:33.164
It's fascinating. And I think Charles Danis had a conversation with
25:33.164 --> 25:35.300
you in French just before this.
25:35.300 --> 25:39.804
This was actually a question that he was asking of you offline, we
25:39.804 --> 25:44.142
were talking about it, the idea that probably a lot of investors last
25:44.142 --> 25:48.246
year would have done very well just owning the TSX.
25:48.246 --> 25:51.016
That worked pretty well for a lot of investors.
25:51.016 --> 25:53.084
I guess the difference between ...
25:53.084 --> 25:57.589
there's a carry on of what went on last year and some of the themes
25:57.589 --> 26:01.726
but what's a bit different and nuanced and, frankly, requires a more
26:01.726 --> 26:04.596
active approach because last year you really could have owned the index,
26:04.596 --> 26:07.832
actually.
26:07.832 --> 26:11.870
Last year it's bittersweet, right?
26:11.870 --> 26:15.907
For any active fund manager like ourselves, when
26:15.907 --> 26:20.078
you're up in absolute by 24, 25% but your index
26:20.078 --> 26:25.116
is up 30, 32%, whatever it finished at,
26:25.116 --> 26:28.286
you're super happy in absolute terms.
26:28.286 --> 26:32.290
You might think that Christmas there'll be nice gifts under a tree
26:32.290 --> 26:36.494
but you still have this pressure or this sense of you're
26:36.494 --> 26:40.432
not completely fulfilled or satisfied because you
26:40.432 --> 26:43.802
could not beat the benchmark. The perfect year is when you're up in absolute in
26:43.835 --> 26:48.273
a nice way and when you beat the benchmark.
26:48.273 --> 26:51.009
That's not what happened last year, unfortunately. It was extremely hard to
26:51.009 --> 26:54.679
beat the benchmark for all the reasons I've mentioned, the Junior Gold and the
26:54.679 --> 26:56.615
metals just started to run.
26:56.615 --> 26:59.417
The Canadian banks also did better than expected.
26:59.417 --> 27:01.286
We've talked about this in the past, Pamela.
27:01.286 --> 27:05.690
I think since the financial crisis of
27:05.690 --> 27:09.894
'08, 09 the US large money centres, banks, and the Canadian banks,
27:09.894 --> 27:13.632
have really cut back on the subprime type of loans.
27:13.632 --> 27:17.902
In Canada it changes the nature of the risk profile for these
27:17.936 --> 27:22.107
Canadian banks because back in the days, previous cycles, again, that's why we
27:22.107 --> 27:26.177
always need to look at history but we need to adjust our models
27:26.177 --> 27:28.513
for the future because cycles are very different.
27:28.513 --> 27:31.916
No recession since '09.
27:31.916 --> 27:36.187
The Canadian banks cut back on subprime and now when you've got unemployment
27:36.187 --> 27:40.525
at 7%-ish, back in the day's that's when you would
27:40.525 --> 27:43.662
start to see defaults on mortgages and different loans.
27:43.662 --> 27:47.732
We've barely seen this so far.
27:47.732 --> 27:50.769
That's been a bit of a surprise and that's where we probably lacked a little
27:50.769 --> 27:53.104
bit last year.
27:53.104 --> 27:55.607
In absolute terms it was an amazing year.
27:55.607 --> 27:59.611
Again, we were positioned for some of these large moves but we
27:59.611 --> 28:03.615
choose to manage risk in absolute turns and that's, in turns, when we have a
28:03.615 --> 28:07.585
negative year when the market is down usually we tend
28:07.585 --> 28:11.222
to fare a lot better. I think that's part of the approach.
28:11.256 --> 28:15.160
We like to have our unitholders to sleep well at night.
28:15.160 --> 28:18.697
It's a fund that continues to perform well over the long term with much less
28:18.697 --> 28:20.665
volatility.
28:20.665 --> 28:24.469
Some of the in-depth knowledge that you have of the companies and often
28:24.469 --> 28:28.840
watching with the research you have at your hands
28:28.840 --> 28:32.944
of what can be overdone, that's obviously where you go hunting and
28:32.944 --> 28:35.714
looking for opportunities.
28:35.714 --> 28:39.484
The software example today, and maybe even gold, I don't know, are
28:39.484 --> 28:43.655
opportunities where there's extreme moves obviously in the market but you have
28:43.655 --> 28:47.258
a much more nimble approach to things.
28:47.258 --> 28:50.895
Listen, the research is part of our DNA.
28:50.895 --> 28:54.566
Our analysts work day and night.
28:54.566 --> 28:57.936
We've seen it during COVID, we've seen it recently.
28:57.936 --> 29:02.841
There was this threat from Washington from Mr. Trump to decertify
29:02.841 --> 29:05.844
certain planes made in Canada.
29:05.844 --> 29:10.148
Well, let me tell you, as soon as we saw the news I called my analyst.
29:10.148 --> 29:12.117
I think that was at 7:00 p.m.
29:12.117 --> 29:14.385
He was at home. We had a conversation.
29:14.385 --> 29:18.656
I could hear his kids playing in the background.
29:18.656 --> 29:22.861
You reach out to the company, had a note published the same evening
29:22.861 --> 29:24.963
before we go to bed.
29:24.963 --> 29:29.400
I knew exactly what to expect the
29:29.400 --> 29:33.238
next day, that we own it or that we don't own it, there's always an
29:33.238 --> 29:37.442
opportunity. In the morning we had another follow-up
29:37.442 --> 29:41.446
together and I double checked with the traders what was the outlook in
29:41.446 --> 29:45.350
terms of demand for the stock or not.
29:45.350 --> 29:48.219
It played out quite nicely. It was a very interesting day.
29:48.219 --> 29:52.257
Legally speaking, we found out a day later that
29:52.257 --> 29:56.795
it would be really hard for a president to decertify a plane just
29:56.795 --> 30:01.733
without having the infrastructure involved.
30:01.733 --> 30:05.904
It's really captivating to see what's going on because there's always
30:05.904 --> 30:09.974
something coming out from left field that we've not seen.
30:09.974 --> 30:14.145
It's part of the turmoil that started a year ago and we're getting used to it.
30:14.145 --> 30:18.716
I think COVID prepared us in some ways to expect the unexpected.
30:18.716 --> 30:21.753
Your experience and the steady hand, there's something to that particularly
30:21.753 --> 30:25.890
when markets drop and your fund sort of sales
30:25.890 --> 30:29.260
through with a keel that's a bit more stable.
30:29.260 --> 30:33.264
Max Lemieux, we want to thank you for joining us today, sharing your time and
30:33.264 --> 30:35.900
telling investors what you're looking at for this year.
30:35.900 --> 30:37.702
Thank you.
30:37.702 --> 30:38.703
Thank you.
30:38.703 --> 30:42.640
Thanks for watching or listening to the Fidelity Connects
30:42.640 --> 30:46.778
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We'll end today's show with a short disclaimer.
31:16.307 --> 31:20.144
The views and opinions expressed on this podcast are those of the participants,
31:20.144 --> 31:24.082
and do not necessarily reflect those of Fidelity Investments Canada ULC or
31:24.082 --> 31:28.086
its affiliates. This podcast is for informational purposes only, and should not
31:28.086 --> 31:30.622
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31:30.622 --> 31:32.924
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31:32.924 --> 31:37.262
Or an endorsement, recommendation, or sponsorship of any entity or securities
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Their values change frequently, and past performance may not be repeated.
31:45.637 --> 31:49.474
Fees, expenses, and commissions are all associated with fund investments.
31:49.474 --> 31:51.776
Thanks again. We'll see you next time.

