Calgary Herald

Slow, steady tack prevails in era of ‘sloppy’ growth

- KRISTINE OWRAM Bloomberg

A toymaker, a 100-year-old railway and a company that literally prints money are among the eclectic mix of stocks driving Canada’s top-performing equity fund in an era of slow, “sloppy” growth.

“We’re focused on the suspicion that slow growth and deflation is going to continue and we’ve been investing accordingl­y,” David Arpin, senior vice-president and portfolio manager of the Mackenzie Canadian Growth Fund, said in a phone interview.

The $1.1 billion fund, managed by Toronto-based Mackenzie Investment­s Corp., returned 10 per cent in the first half of the year, making it the best performing of 61 Canadian-focused equity funds with more than $1 billion in assets under management.

Its strategy is to find stocks that can consistent­ly generate 10 per cent to 12 per cent growth in free cash flow. The fund is divided about 50-50 into Canadian and U.S. equities, with the U.S. holdings providing diversific­ation from Canada’s commodity-heavy stock market.

“We’re a growth investor but we’re not hyper-growth,” said Dina DeGeer, senior vice-president and team lead of the Mackenzie Canadian Growth Team. “We don’t like deeply cyclical businesses, we don’t like commodity businesses, we don’t like capital-intensive businesses.”

Instead, Mackenzie looks for stocks with a strong leadership position in their sector. “We love duopolies because they have pricing power and if you’ve created a big strong business moat you don’t have new competitio­n coming in,” DeGeer said.

One of the fund’s top holdings is CanadianNa­tionalRail­wayCo.The Canadian rail industry is a quintessen­tial duopoly, dominated by CN and Canadian Pacific Railway Ltd., and CN gives Mackenzie exposure to natural resources while reducing the cyclicalit­y that’s typical of commoditie­s, DeGeer said.

Another top investment is toymaker Spin Master Corp., which makes up just under five per cent of the fund’s holdings. DeGeer described the Toronto-based company as “a real gem.”

Other top Canadian holdings at April 30 included Royal Bank of Canada, Telus Corp., CAE Inc., Metro Inc. and CCL Industries Inc., a labels and packaging manufactur­er that entered the moneyprint­ing business when it acquired Innovia Group for $1.13 billion in December.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada