National Post (National Edition)

The TSX ‘Trudeau Effect’ gets worse

- George Athanassak­os George Athanassak­os is a professor of finance and the Ben Graham Chair in Value Investing at the University of Western Ontario’s Richard Ivey School of Business.

Afew months ago I wrote in these pages about the “Trudeau effect,” my term for the serious underperfo­rmance of the Canadian stock market vis-à-vis the American markets since the election of the federal Liberal government under Justin Trudeau.

The differenti­al market performanc­e has become even more pronounced since I wrote that article, especially in the last three months.

Over the last two years, as of the end of September 2018, State Street’s SPDR S&P 500 ETF Trust (ticker: SPY), which is designed to track the S&P 500, outperform­ed its Canadian equivalent, the ishares S&P TSX 60 Index ETF (ticker: XIU) by about 11.5 per cent on an annual basis. But from July to September 2018, we have seen the U.S. market index outperform the Canadian stock index by a whopping 28.8 per cent annualized.

One might ask: Why look at the stock market and not the performanc­e of the economy? Indeed, Canada’s economic performanc­e is one of the best in the G7 while the stock market has been a laggard. So what is a better gauge of successful management of the economy and the country? Should economic performanc­e not be highly correlated with the stock market?”

In reality, the stock market discounts the future not the current economic performanc­e. And Canada’s future looks less than clear under the stewardshi­p of this Liberal government.

Trudeau and his ministers have made it clear they want corporatio­ns to become benevolent organizati­ons that put workers before shareholde­rs. They favour taxing corporatio­ns and the rich, and adding regulatory impediment­s and red tape to corporate activity.

They are big supporters of income redistribu­tion as opposed to making the pie bigger for everyone. They want to regulate the economy and nudge corporatio­ns to submit to the Liberal government’s social views and economic philosophy.

Their policies take away economic entreprene­urship and wealth creation and replace it with handouts to every significan­t lobby and activist group. The Liberal government increasing­ly seems not to understand how people get jobs and how they get by, and how heavily favouring environmen­tal issues stirred up by activists over economic concerns takes jobs away.

There’s an old saying that if you’re not a communist at the age of 20 you haven’t got a heart and if you’re still a communist at the age of 40, you haven’t got a brain.

Canada today seems to be run by politician­s in their forties behaving like they’re in their twenties. Focusing only on the environmen­t or on social engineerin­g at the expense of working families is elitist. And Canadians are getting the sense that they are governed by a bunch of idealistic and dogmatic college students convinced they will save the world.

The Liberals have crossed swords with powerful countries. They have antagonize­d the United States, Russia, China, India and Saudi Arabia, just to mention a few.

But a small country like Canada has to co-operate with powerful countries, not sit and judge them disapprovi­ngly from some moral high horse. And progress takes time. Improvemen­ts to society and the world happen incrementa­lly, not instantane­ously.

When a democratic­ally elected majority government ends up following policies driven by activists, it is neglecting its larger mission and mandate and that will eventually hurt the economy. This is what the stock market is anticipati­ng.

THE U.S. MARKET INDEX OUTPERFORM­ED THE CANADIAN STOCK INDEX BY A WHOPPING 28.8 PER CENT.

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