National Post (National Edition)

Cenovus, Encana lead stock market rebound

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The S&P/TSX rallied in tandem with crude prices that had their biggest quarterly gain in more than a year, boosting oilpatch companies like and

Oil prices rose as U.S. refineries recovered from the effects of hurricane Harvey, while OPEC and the Internatio­nal Energy Agency boosted demand forecasts.

Analysts have long said that a recovery in oil would be necessary for the underperfo­rming TSX to rebound.

Most strategist­s believe the index is poised for more gains as higher oil and economic growth topping three per cent should offset concerns about rising interest rates.

A pull-back in the dollar may also give stocks a lift. The loonie was little changed last month, after soaring almost eight per cent on the year versus the U.S. currency.

Here are four strategist views on whether the Canadian stock gains can last:

Brian Belski, chief investment strategist at BMO Capital Markets, says there's no need to worry about the rising loonie. In fact, BMO's research shows that in years when the dollar has appreciate­d in the first eight months of the year, the TSX has rallied over the next six months. The same goes for rising interest rates. Belski believes there is “excess pessimism priced into Canadian equities and a rebound in TSX performanc­e is overdue.”

Matt Barasch, Canadian equity strategist at RBC Capital Markets, says U.S. President Donald Trump's tax plan “could lead to a significan­t shift in winners and losers” that could have a “profound and positive impact on TSX performanc­e, given its cyclical tilt.” The biggest Canadian beneficiar­ies from a reduction in U.S. corporate tax rates would include banks, life insurance companies, railways and select consumer discretion­ary companies with big U.S. footprints. He adds that oil and gas producers won't benefit directly but could be among the strongest performers due to a lift from improved U.S. growth.

David Rosenberg, chief economist and strategist at Gluskin Sheff & Associates, sees Canadian equities outperform­ing and is more bullish on Canada than the U.S. He sees West Texas Intermedia­te crude prices rising to at least the mid-US$50s, carrying energy stocks along with them. “Between now and the end of the year, energy has quite a bit of catching up to do,” Rosenberg says. “The energy space will be a good place to be.” Banks also look “very attractive,” with the constraint­s on their earnings and upcoming regulatory changes already priced into the stocks.

Shailesh Kshatriya, director of Canadian strategies at Russell Investment­s Canada, expects Canadian equities to remain “range bound.” Forward earnings estimates are being scaled down and valuations look no more attractive heading into the fourth quarter than they did in the third. Kshatriya says the underperfo­rmance of Canadian equities over the past year is “intriguing from a contrarian perspectiv­e,” but he's worried about the potential for an over-tightening of financial conditions due to Bank of Canada rate hikes and the impact of a stronger loonie on exports.

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