National Post

Canada’s stock winners and losers in U.S. vote

- Divya Balji

Canada’s main stock index is still about 10-per-cent lower than its February high. With its largest trading partner heading to the polls in 11 days, investors are bracing for more volatility — no matter who the winner is.

With just 11 days until the election, Joe biden is leading donald Trump by just under 8 points in the realclearp­olitics average of national poll. democrats are also trying to win back the Senate. For canadian traders, there’s a lot at stake on the outcome, from the oil sector to marijuana and beyond.

A new stimulus package, corporate tax rates, climate change rules, trade policy and infrastruc­ture spending are some of the big themes in play.

The S&P/TSX composite Index has produced an average gain of 10 per cent and has been positive nine out of 11 times in the year after the inaugurati­on of the u.s. president, said brooke Thackray, an analyst at Horizons etfs Management (canada) Inc., citing data going back to 1976. The two exceptions: 1982, when the North American economy was in a deep recession, and 2002, when it was reeling from 9/11 and the tech bust.

Here are stocks and sectors to watch as we near election day. year-to-date stock performanc­e follows each name.

Weed

A democratic win this November is “more favourable” to the cannabis industry, said canaccord Genuity analysts led by Matt bottomley. A task force biden formed with Senator bernie Sanders calls for legalized medical cannabis and supports states’ rights to govern the implementa­tion of adult-use programs. The presence of a pro-cannabis running mate in Kamala Harris (sponsor of the Marijuana Opportunit­y reinvestme­nt and expungemen­t Act) also points a potential win for the sector. The election presents “the most meaningful catalyst package the cannabis industry has seen since canadian legalizati­on in late 2018,” analysts at Toronto brokerage firm eight capital said, with any outcome seen as a win-win for the sector. The firm sees the reinforcem­ent of Trump as president as “arguably net positive for multi-state operators as it maintains current oligopolis­tic competitiv­e dynamics in the near and medium-term.”

Key stocks: Acreage Holdings Inc. (+12 per cent ytd), Ayr Strategies Inc. (+60 per cent), curaleaf Holdings Inc. (+56 per cent), Green Thumb Industries Inc. (+71 per cent), Harvest Health & recreation Inc. (-51 per cent), TILT Holdings Inc. (+14 per cent) and Trulieve cannabis corp. (+103 per cent).

energy

Almost one-tenth of canada’s economy comes from the energy sector. Trump’s re-election could be a boon for global heavy oil due to the potential for tighter sanctions on Venezuela, a push for Opec+ to increase production cuts and a buildout of infrastruc­ture, eight capital said. biden’s climate change mandate would be negative for pipelines but a possible gain for pure play refiners. If the democrats run the Supreme court, his administra­tion could look at shutting down key oil infrastruc­ture, causing oil differenti­als to blow out. In a biden administra­tion, independen­t producers of renewable power stand to benefit. His climate agenda, which includes plans to spend us$2 trillion over the next four years, provides “tangible, nearterm opportunit­ies for canadian equity investors,” cibc analyst Shaz Merwat said. Policy decisions on electric vehicles have the potential to impact fuel distributo­rs with operations in the u.s., canaccord Genuity said. A biden win could be a “slight negative” for those firms given his proposed measures to increase electric vehicle use, eight capital said, adding that a Trump win is seen as neutral.

Key stocks:alimentati­on couchetard Inc. (+4 per cent), canadian

Natural resources Ltd. (-46 per cent), cenovus energy Inc. (-63 per cent), MEG energy corp.(-67 per cent), Husky energy Inc. (-70 per cent), Suncor energy Inc. (-62 per cent), boralex Inc.(+65 per cent), Innergex renewable energy Inc. (+51 per cent), brookfield renewable Partners LP (+43 per cent), Algonquin Power & utilities corp. (+12 per cent), WSP Global Inc. (-0.3 per cent), Stantec Inc. (+8.1 per cent).

taxes & tech

biden’s proposal to raise corporate taxes could be a material headwind for canadian tech companies with big u.s. exposure, eight capital said. Investors should consider buying the dip on any near-term volatility based on corporate tax concerns. The firm recommends building positions in some small-cap stocks that are still considered undervalue­d and long-term winners of the digital boom.

Key stocks: docebo Inc. (+218 per cent), Kinaxis Inc. (+110 per cent), converge Technology Solutions corp. (+86 per cent), Vitalhub corp. (+83 per cent) and Shopify Inc. (+156 per cent).

gold & miners

A democratic win in the u.s. would be negative for gold’s outlook as climate change policy initiative­s may hurt extractive industries, eight capital said. A republican win could be a positive with a shift toward greater emphasis on internatio­nal political, fiscal and monetary challenges.

battery metals companies should stand to gain from either election outcome. Trump supports greater domestic production of critical minerals to compete with foreign supply and biden’s climate push includes investment in battery storage.

Key stocks: Lithium Americas corp. (+241 per cent), Jervois Mining Ltd. (+47 per cent)

 ?? SHANNON STAPLETON / reuters ?? For Canadian traders, there’s a lot at stake on the outcome of the American presidenti­al election, from the oil sector to renewables, technology, gold, marijuana and beyond.
SHANNON STAPLETON / reuters For Canadian traders, there’s a lot at stake on the outcome of the American presidenti­al election, from the oil sector to renewables, technology, gold, marijuana and beyond.

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