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Published: September 24, 2009
The U.S. stock market has run up magnificently
in the last six months. The U.S. economy has begun to recover,
but its performance has fallen short of expectations.
And with good reason. The United States has a bigger and
more-troubled financial sector than most countries. It also has
a bigger overhang from the housing bubble, has a bigger
balance-of-payments deficit and has a budget deficit that’s fat
enough to stall the recovery.
It would be nice to have an economic recovery to invest in that
didn’t have all of these problems.
Truth be told, such an investment play does exist. What’s more,
the market I have in mind is advanced enough for us to invest in
it without having to go through all the rigmarole of American
Depository Receipt (ADR) investing. Nor will you have to make a
potentially risky foray out onto some foreign stock exchange to
buy the shares, because they are almost all listed here.
The country I’m talking about is Canada. Think of it as being
like home -- but without the problems that our home market
currently suffers from.
Our Healthy Neighbor to the North
When the recession struck, Canada was hit by it quite badly,
but for different reasons from its southern neighbor. The
Canadian housing market was nowhere near as overheated as its
U.S. counterpart. So Canada’s housing downturn wasn’t as deep.
And what about the banking systems? To be sure, Canadian banks
received a bailout, but it was less than $20 billion in total.
Compare that to the veritable alphabet soup of U.S. bailout
programs ranging from “TARP” and “TALF” that have injected more
than $2 trillion into the U.S. financial system.
On the other hand, natural resource prices crashed last autumn,
which had a major effect on Canada’s resource-based economy. A
number of large projects in the Athabasca Tar Sands region were
cancelled, for example -- since this region has oil reserves
around the size of the entire Middle East, its development is
crucial to Canada’s future.
The “loonie,” Canada’s currency,
declined from around “parity” to the
U.S. dollar to an exchange ratio of
C$1.30 = US$1 U.S. In effect, this
was a “flight to safety” into the
dollar and U.S. Treasuries. And it
affected Canada as it did other
countries. In 2009, however,
Canada and the United States have traveled down totally
different paths. Canada did very little “stimulus,” so its state
budget is in much better shape. The deficit for the 2009-2010
fiscal year -- US$53 billion -- is only about 4% of gross
domestic product. For the 2010-2011 fiscal year, the deficit is
expected to be about US$42 billion, or 3.2% of GDP.
Energy Powers the Rally
The bounce in natural resource prices has really helped
power up the rebound of Canada’s market.
Investment in the tar-sands region has picked up again, with a
big merger between the two largest tar-sands-extraction
companies: Suncor Energy Inc. (NYSE: SU) and Petro-Canada. The
rising gold price hasn’t hurt either -- mines are appearing all
over the place! All this new activity has made the loonie
bounce, so it’s back to about C$1.07=$1. While interest rates
are as low as the United States, the Bank of Canada hasn’t done
much “quantitative easing,” meaning that inflation isn’t too
much of a worry.
The strong loonie helps here, too.
Canada seems to be recovering nicely. Its index of leading
indicators jumped +1.1% in August, while manufacturing sales
grew +5.5% in July. The country presently runs a modest current
account deficit, but it’s only 2% of GDP. That’s much lower than
even the current U.S. deficit, let alone that of 2007. It had a
little more public debt than the United States in 2008, but
given current U.S. deficits, those two lines almost certainly
have crossed by now.
There are two caveats. The first is an obvious one: If commodity
prices crash to earth, Canada will have some difficulty because
commodities are a large part of its economy. Personally, I don’t
see that happening. It’s notable that PetroChina Co. Ltd. (NYSE
ADR: PTR) has just invested $1.7 billion in a Canadian tar sands
project, so China must not think so, either.
The other risk is political. The current minority Conservative
government of Stephen Harper has done a good job, but the
opposition Liberals have withdrawn their parliamentary support.
That means there may be an election this autumn. A Liberal
majority government would be no disaster. They might be a bit
sticky about oil-drilling permits, but would not otherwise rock
the boat.
However, a Liberal coalition with the leftist New Democrats
could push public spending and the deficit up, and there’s no
guarantee against that. (One of the problems with multi-party
systems like Canada’s is there is an almost infinite variety of
possible governments after each election, some of which can be
fairly alarming from a business perspective.)
However, Canadian elections are a much smaller risk than you get
in most countries, and the commodity/oil price crash, if it
happened, would help the U.S. economy and, presumably, your U.S.
portfolio. So it’s worth having some Canadian exposure, perhaps
with the Canadian market exchange traded fund (ETF) iShare
MSCI Canada Index (NYSE: EWC).
For years it was almost fashionable to dismiss Canada from an
economic standpoint. Now, however, that may well be where the
smart money would like to go. As an economy, Canada is competent
and stable.
It’s the kind of country that looks to be a good place for some
of our money. -- Martin Hutchinson
Contributing Writer
Money
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