Toronto Star

BUMPY ROADS

Trump lashes out at Harley-Davidson after it decides to move production overseas to avoid tariffs,

- KRISTINE OWRAM BLOOMBERG

What’s a little trade skirmish between friends? Not much, according to strategist­s who say a tit-for-tat tariff stand-off with the U.S. will be overshadow­ed by a rebound in energy shares that will drive Canadian stocks 4.9 per cent higher by year end. The S&P/TSX Composite Index closed at 16,278 Friday for a second-quarter gain of 5.9 per cent, its best quarter since the end of 2013.

The benchmark will end the year at 17,068, according to the average of 10 estimates compiled by Bloomberg. That’s marginally ahead of the level that was predicted in January, but still lags the 8.3 per cent gain predicted for the S&P 500 in the U.S, according to a Bloomberg survey.

“The primary driver of our overweight allocation to Canada is the energy space, because energy stocks have lagged the underlying commodity price significan­tly and we think we’re going to see a catch-up there,” said Candice Bangsund, portfolio manager for global asset allocation at Fiera Capital Corp., who helps manage $136 billion ($103 billion USD) and recently raised her yearend target to 17,300 from 16,900.

The energy sector lagged in the first quarter but surged 15 per cent in the second, its best quarterly increase in nine years. MEG Energy Corp. was the top-performing S&P/TSX stock in the second quarter, rising 141 per cent. Ongoing North American Free Trade Agreement negotiatio­ns coupled with U.S. tariffs on steel and aluminum, retaliator­y measures from Canada and the more dire threat of U.S. duties on autos are making investors nervous, but trade fears will ultimately be overlooked by strong fundamenta­ls, Bangsund said.

She sees the most upside in value stocks including energy, financials and materials — the three largest sectors on the S&P/TSX, which together account for about two-thirds of the benchmark.

Tightening global crude supply, improving fundamenta­ls and the persistent underperfo­rmance of the sector means the rally in Canadian energy stocks “is likely to be more extended than our previous assumption­s,” Brian Belski, chief investment strategist at BMO Capital Markets, wrote in a note last week, raising his rating on the sector to overweight from market weight.

He has a year-end target of 17,600 for the S&P/TSX.

The most bullish outlook is from Luc Vallee, chief strategist at Laurentian Bank Securities.

He sees the benchmark outperform­ing the U.S. market and ending the year at 18,000, driven by commodity demand.

“I still think the U.S., given its high multiples and exposure to internatio­nal markets, will have a hard time progressin­g and the Canadian market will offer a better return,” he said.

Sadiq Adatia, who manages about $21 billion as chief investment officer at Sun Life Global Investment­s, is the most bearish among the analysts surveyed, seeing the S&P/TSX ending the year between 16,000 and 16,250.

That’s above his earlier forecast of 15,200 but implies stocks will slip from current levels.

“We still have these NAFTA concerns, oil has probably plateaued and the Bank of Canada will probably raise rates one more time so you won’t see consumers being too aggressive in their spending either,” Adatia said.

“We don’t see significan­t upside from here.”

 ?? FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO ?? One portfolio manager sees the most upside in value stocks including energy, financials and materials.
FRANK GUNN/THE CANADIAN PRESS FILE PHOTO One portfolio manager sees the most upside in value stocks including energy, financials and materials.

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