On
a average to low risk adjusted basis my 60/40 (60 % equity, 40% cash) portfolio
grew 12% in the 2014 calendar year. Positioning the portfolio to be underweight
the two poorest-performing sectors (Energy and Materials) and overweight some
of the best-performing sectors (Consumer Staples, Utilities)
and U.S. Equity all worked to my advantage.
Canadian equity markets were mired
in negative territory given their relatively large exposure to the besieged
Energy sector. In 2014, the S&P
Global Energy Sector decline 11% and recent data by RBC Global Energy suggests
continued challenging energy market conditions well into 2015.
· The oil
market is roughly 800,000 Bopd oversupplied.
· The
overwhelming issue is continued hyper US production growth.
· There
has been steady growth out of Canada
as well and this is likely to be a little sticky as oil sands projects have a
longer-term horizon.
· OPEC is
currently producing roughly 30.5 MMBopd. There may be modest upside to this over
time due to potential growth in Iraq
and the potential resumption of offline barrels.
· For the
last 16 years, OPEC has defended price as opposed to market share. This changed
on November 27.
· If and
when oil prices move a fair bit higher, we will start to see a production
response from the US ,
which could re-accelerate global production.
· The
last six bear markets for oil have averaged 141 days with oil dropping 39% over
that time (139 days, 32% ex. global financial crisis).
· The current
bear market has persisted for 172 days with oil dropping 36% since June 13. If
recent patterns hold, we could be nearing the bottom for oil.
Over
the past 16 years (1998-2014), the global oil market has witnessed three major
episodes of pricing collapse, each of which coincided with a dramatic macro
economic or political event which either caused or was associated with
a severe drop in oil demand growth. These include;
- 1997-98 (Asian Currency Crisis),
- 2001-02 (9/11 Terrorist Attacks), and
- 2008-09 (Global Financial Crisis).
On average, the aforementioned episodes displayed depressed or
negative global oil demand growth for 2–4 quarters before staging a sustained
demand growth recovery, which supported an oil price rebound. The
Brent price pullback of late has not been associated with a major financial
crisis at this juncture, but Saudi
Arabia ’s policy uncertainty has exacerbated
the situation.
Canadian
benchmark oil prices have fared relatively well by comparison to US oil prices,
in part due to the insulation afforded by a softening Canadian dollar. Indeed,
Canadian benchmark oil prices are based not only upon US benchmarks,
but also the foreign exchange rate. As such, a softer Canadian dollar is
favourable for Canadian oil prices. This stabilizer is often overlooked, but
important in our eyes because an investor is buying a cash flow stream. As a
simple illustration – holding all other factors constant, a US$0.01 depreciation
in the Canadian dollar would largely off-set a US$1/b fall in WTI as it relates
to Canadian light and heavy oil prices.
But you still need to be careful when looking at Canadian Oil & E&P, my Least Favourite Stock –
is Canadian
Oil Sands because it is;
- Oil Sands Pure Play - 100% light sweet un-hedged crude oil production
(Syncrude)
- Operating Performance
Challenged - Recurring unplanned maintenance = lower
volumes + higher operating costs
- Dividend Cutter - Dividend recently cut by 43%, Further cut possible given low oil
prices
Keep
in mind that in most countries, the fall in oil prices is generally seen as a
positive development as it relates to future GDP growth. Moreover, most central
bankers have been quick to emphasize that they will look through the “one-off”
effect of lower oil prices and, instead, focus on movement in core consumer
prices as they set policy. The
IMF looked at a supply-side exercise in last October’s World Economic Outlook— albeit
in reverse—using its own macro model. They examined the likely impact of a reduction
in Iraqi oil supply that would increase the price of crude by roughly 20%.
Their work suggests the net GDP impact from a 20% decline in oil prices could
be in the range of +0.4% to +0.7% after two years for countries such as the US , Japan
and China
as well as the Eurozone.
Portfolio Update - Alaris Royalty Corp.
Alaris
Royalty Corp is a Calgary-based provider of capital to well managed and profitable
private companies seeking alternative avenues of financing. Its strategy is unique in the sense that unlike
most private-equity firms, it provides alternative financing to private companies
without seeking a controlling stake. Alaris’s long-term goal as a company is to
create the optimal dividend stream available for its investors. With that goal
in mind, it seeks private companies that generate predictable, low volatility,
and low cyclicality cash flows for monthly cash
returns.
Early
in 2014 I began accumulating shares in Alaris Royalty, over the past 12 months,
Alaris Royalty shares returned 36% in total returns, and they hit
52-week highs, grossly outpacing the 6% from the TSX. Alaris Royalty generates 40% of revenues from
the US .
I forecast this should rise well above 50% in the next two years as Alaris
capitalizes on its US-focused investment pipeline. Given the rise in the USD, I
expect positive tailwinds to revenues and earnings including sizeable
unrealized gains on its US holdings. Alaris continues to benefit from having
little to no exposure to oil and the Western Canadian economy.
(CLICK HERE) Passive Income earning with CB and all eproduct Available Here
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(CLICK HERE) Passive Income earning with CB and all eproduct Available Here
(CLICK HERE) Passive Income earning with CB and all eproduct Available Here