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What Stocks Poised to Profit From Pokemon Go?


The Pokemon Go app is believed to be generating a million dollars US a day, which puts it on par with top mobile games, such as Candy Crush and Clash of Clans. It's probably too late to buy Nintendo's (JP:7974, US:NTDOY) stock, which trades on the pink sheets in the US and the main exchange in Tokyo, with its significant climb this month, but there are still opportunities to make profits on this craze.

The release of the game occurred in the the third quarter (or second half for European readers) of the calendar in the US and Australia first, which means most earnings reports due this season will not include revenue related to the game. In fact, the game has not yet released in Japan, strangely. With that said, there are at least three industries that may see a pop in Q3 earnings and here's your chance to take advantage.

Telecommunication
Telecom stocks are poised for an earnings surprise in October and probably the biggest beneficiary. Data and roaming revenue will undoubtedly be fractionally higher. Most national carriers refrain from offering unlimited data and summer typically brings new contracts. Customers and parents dishing out the bill may be asked to offer or bundle better data plans. Canadian dollar investors may want to look at Rogers Communications (CA:RCI.B, US:RCI), Telus (CA:T), and BCE (CA:BCE, US:BCE) on the Toronto Stock Exchange. An added benefit: these companies offer attractive dividend yields and have a history of raising dividends every four to six quarters. Even if you end up stuck with these trades, they may turn into great investments for one's portfolio. If you want to stick with American telecommunication companies, consider Dow components Verizon (US:VZ) and AT&T (US:T). Both companies also offer generous dividends.

Historically, telecommunications also outperform the broader market during times of low or negative economic growth as investors seek safety and yield. Sales of battery charging units and portable kits are also expected to rise which boosts profit for companies like Best Buy (US:BBY) and many other electronic companies.

Cellphone Manufacturers
The second industry that will be a beneficiary of this Pokemon craze would have to be phone companies. Software updates on older phones typically stop after a while. The Samsung S3, for example, is unable to play the game, although there are ways around that do allow tech savvy users to catch em all. However, for thr general population, this game may be the catalyst that pushes customers to upgrade their phones which may also offer better battery life and faster game play. Apple (US:AAPL), Google/Alphabet (US:GOOGL), and Samsung (KR:005930) should see some sales boost in the third quarter. These companies also offer phone charging units as sales for these products have seen a jump.

Utilities
Thirdly, one could argue utility stocks could see a boost in demand for power. Charging phones three times or more should provide a small revenue boost. This is also another industry that outperforms during periods of slow economic growth; any boost in power consumption could offer yield hunters some capital appreciation. Transalta (CA:TA) in Canada is a major player and there are nearly a dozen US companies worth over $10 billion in market cap. The top three American stocks in market cap as of 2016 are Duke Energy (US:DUK), NextEra Energy (US:NEE), and Southern Co. (US:SO). If you're looking for a boarder based play, the iShares US Utility Index (US:IDU) offers exposure to an abundance of energy stocks in America.

It must be noted that these companies have not yet released second quarter earnings and if guidance for the third quarter is provided which discusses increased revenue from Pokemon Go, the trade may yield smaller returns. The US stock market is currently at a record high and it is important to be aware that most analysts are bearish at this point. If you are looking for an inexpensive way to play these trades, call option spreads may be a more efficient alternative. Good luck and happy trading.

Disclaimer: At the time of this article, I did not own any stocks or derivatives on the companies mentioned. Household owns BCE.

Happy Canada Day from America



For the first time in my life, I will be celebrating Canada Day outside of my beloved nation. Do not worry fellow Canadians, I am not abandoning us on our day of independence. I assure you, it was purely coincidental. My love for Canada runs deeper than hockey and maple syrup and beavers. It's about waking up every morning with the inhalation of freedom and safety that exists never having to live in war and oppression. I am proud that we have Syrian refugees plotted across Canada to be as far as possible from war, but with a silver lining, also as far as possible away from their home. I like knowing that I was provided with an education that has given me an advantage, skills, and knowledge to fulfill my dreams. I have faith that our healthcare system, which is essentially free and imperfect, will give me doctors and nurses that will do the best they can to fix me. I like that my government actually cares, even if many disagree, because they are formed of Canadians whose intentions are to grow and move this country forward on many social issues, including LGBT rights, minority rights, and environmental protection. I proudly call Canada home.

For the first time in my life, I will be celebrating Independence Day in the United States of America. USA, our biggest ally. I'm sorry, as Canadian as an apology may be, for never attending your birthday until now. I hope you put on a wonderful show for me and my boys. But there are some things that upset me about your country and it's deeper than football and apple pie and bald eagles. I don't like waking up here knowing that there could be a mall in lock-down a few blocks away. I don't like your inability to realize that Syrian refugees are people looking to be plotted across your country in shelter as far as possible from war. I don't like knowing that your country, the richest nation in the world, cannot provide its children with top-notch education and as a result, it has put your people without an advantage over cheap labour, with a lack of skills, and with a lack of knowledge to pursue their own dreams. I do not have faith that if I am injured while on vacation that your healthcare has my interest at heart because I am in a position where it will cost me an arm and a leg to fix my arm and my leg. I don't like that your government has no energy to focus on social issues, including LGBT rights, minority rights, and environmental protection, because you spend most of the debates arguing about gun control. I proudly call Canada home.

To put this into perspective, in Canada, we're currently arguing about the carbon tax issue and why Parliament is wasting time and resources debating over a gender neutral national anthem which was the dying wish of a Member of Parliament. But in America, you continue to have a decade-long argument about gun control which is brought up every time there is a mass shooting, which is literally everyday. Yet, you continue to make little strides in protecting your own citizens. It makes my nation's squabbles and political debates seem so petty. And all Canadians should feel so grateful that our nation is peaceful enough that our debates at all levels of governments are so "meaningless."

Nobody I know talks about going to America to be a doctor or a movie star anymore. Nobody wants to deal with a country that makes people contemplate if they should go to a hospital or save a few thousand dollars. In Canada, I drive to work knowing that the school behind my house won't go into lock-down and the only guns at the gym are the biceps on those buff guys.

And to my American friends that are against gun control, it works. It has worked in your country and it works everywhere else. Ask us, Japan, Australia, Sweden, Norway, England, France, Italy, Hong Kong, China, Germany, Switzerland, Iceland, Cyprus, Finland, and Czech Republic, just to name a few. Because here's the thing, by the end of today, whatever day you have chosen to read this, there probably has been more mass shootings in America than the combined amount of mass shootings in all of the nations I listed above.

I come to visit America because your nation has great cities and monuments, but these are all symbols from your rich past. Those skyscrapers, those cities, those statues were all made decades ago. When I walked into America, I didn't get that same 20th century feel that once existed in the streets. People's eyes do no light up with fire and passion and wanderlust. They walk with sorrow because they have no job and they cannot afford to cure their ailments and their child has just died in a school shooting. This is what has happened to America and it's a complete shame.

Canada, you have continued to rise in my heart and I am grateful for everyone and everything that makes our country so wonderful and the envy of so many. It is not a perfect country and it never will be through the eyes of thirty some odd million, but it's my home. Happy Canada Day, and yes, to our neighbours, with a "u", Happy Independence Day. I truly hope as our biggest friend that you can be the country that once was because it will make the world a whole lot better.


Central Banks Have Made a Mess

Photo from CNBC.

Central banks around the world have been unable to advance economic growth and raise inflation in the last five years despite declining interest rates and added stimulus to their national economies. Their egos fail to recognize that their monetary policies and actions have a smaller impact on real-world economics. Individuals still cannot get loans because poor economic conditions disallow many to qualify. And housing inflation skyrockets as speculators re-enter the market. This has created an environment not unlike 2008 that could lead to another stock market crash in the very near future.

Continued pessimism with regards to the economy is justified by falling corporate earnings and low GDP growth. The US market has now had four consecutive quarters of falling earnings - termed an earnings recession. Just this month, we have seen three behemoth technology stocks that rule the world, Apple, Microsoft, and Google disappoint followed by significant reductions to their market capitalization. Yet, the stock market maintains its current valuations propelled by low interest rates.

Low interest rates has been the culprit for the extension of the bull market. With no other assets to invest in that can yield significant returns, investors are forced to turn to the equity markets where dividend yields are relatively higher than bonds. During a time of significant pessimism, this can be dangerous when smart money pulls the trigger and starts selling the moment the Fed raises rates as it will have to do if inflation starts to rise. This rate hike is predicted for June 2016 unless conditions worsen, a truly lose-lose situations for main street.

In December, the market fell 8 per cent when the US Federal Reserve moved to raise rates a quarter basis points. It was the first rate hike in a decade. It was concluded that the stock market was in a fragile state for a rate hike because of its significant correction, but four months later, the stock market is right back where it was. With little options, as discussed, the flow of money continues to drive the market higher while the Fed remains hesitant on its second move.

The second component of this rally may be corporations buying back stock. Large names like Apple, Starbucks, etc. are borrowing billions of dollars, instead of using their cash deposits, to buy back stock. An interest payment on a bond would be less than the dividend payment owed to investors because yields on the safer bonds are often lower than equities. This creates a situation that may be arbitrage and allows corporations to boost earnings per share without having to increase revenue and net income.

The conditions created by low interest rates will only cause another fallout. A housing bubble is being created by the few speculators that have access to low-cost money. The UK posted in December 2015 that housing inflation was at 7 per cent, exceeding both inflation and wage inflation. Housing now costs 10 times the earnings of first-time buyers versus 2.5 in the 1990's. As of March 2016, the Canadian housing index is up 7 per cent year-over-year as well, also exceeding the consumer price index average of 1.5-2.0 per cent.

Sweden, one nation with negative interest rates, recently posted a significant growth in its GDP. It is heavily debated whether it is a direct result of negative interest rates, but the main concern now is the significant amount of consumer debt that has been created. Housing has risen 11 per cent as more people take on mortgages fueled by low interest rates and this may be an unhealthy as it creates a bubble.

Central banks do not get it. They have pumped trillions of dollars in international economies over the last half-decade and lowered interest rates to record lows, some nations at negative interest rates, with very little to show. This is because the average individual has not prospered through some trickle down economics. Jobs are still as scarce as ever and housing prices are beyond the affordability of most people. Stability in the market is uncertain and GDP growth in first world nations will not reach 2 per cent for another decade. The law of big numbers, an idea that as a company or entity gets bigger its rate of growth slows down, has now hit world economies. Japan went through a decade of tepid growth and our world is near its peak, but it is still a shining example of innovation and the envy of many.

Perhaps we have entered a new economic environment that does not prosper as it once did, but maintains small growth equal to inflation. All I know is this. Economics and business analysts are concerned. Central banks continue to believe their stimuli will work. They will continue to delay and prolong an interest rate hike and it will allow the stock market to soar, but when they realize it has failed and its decisions are less effective, it will pull the carpet from under investors in the stock market and the average person will see another crash. It is only a matter of time.

Read:Bank of America believes not investing equal to investing in 2016

Stock Markets Decoupled From the Economy?

The stock market wants to crash, or at least correct, but there is something that has not allowed this event to take place. The stock market is supposed to be a barometer for the health of a nation's economy. Its value derives from the expected future earnings of all companies it is comprised, and when we examine the US economy, there has been a major decoupling from wall street and main street; regular folks have not seen the same prosperity.

The bull market rally is now seven years old and has seen equities triple in value. Over the last three quarters, we have seen an earnings recession, that is, year over year returns in the negative. The upcoming earnings season expects companies to see earnings fall 8 per cent from last year's first quarter, but the stock market maintains its valuation. The reason: low interest rates.

We have now entered a global economy where many nations are at zero or negative interest rates, which has never happened in history. And as a result, trillions of dollars invested in low-yielding assets seek better returns in the stock market. This massive demand for higher yielding assets outpaces the selling pressure that traditionally occurs in an earnings recession. Money needs to grow and it needs to grow more than inflation, but dozens of top-tier nations have bond yields that can barely match inflation ten years out. The 10-year Canadian bond rate is 1.23 per cent. The 2015 inflation, according to the CPI, was 1.13 per cent. The Bank of Canada targets inflation of 2 to 3 per cent. In the US, the 10-year bond is yielding 1.69 per cent and its last inflation rate was calculated at 1.00 per cent. The US Fed also aims for about 2-2.5 per cent inflation.

We are days away from Alcoa (AA) earnings, which is traditionally the first day of earnings seasons, but we are just a few short weeks away from the April Fed meeting. Which set of events will impact the stock market more? On days with an FOMC meeting or the release of minutes, the stock market has major volatility in every case. Whether it be dovish or hawkish, the markets rise and fall according to what Yellen and her colleagues do. That is a cause for concern. Whether it be computer traders or money managers, their reactions set a significant tone for the remainder of the week or month. And it also re-affirms the impact an interest rate decision has. The trillions of dollars that have entered the stock market because they cannot make money outside will leave when interest rates rise. And how much of the stock market's value is at a premium because of low interest rates?

The historical price-to-earnings ratio of the S&P 500 is around 17. It is currently estimated at 22.8. If the market were to head to its historical valuation, that would see a market reduction of almost one-quarter. Startling and not unrealistic. We have already seen two corrections in the last 9 months, and unsurprisingly, both corrections recovered within weeks, but if there is a third correction and it is triggered by an interest rate rise, it could be the start of the end of the bull market rally.

Other reasons to support the theory that the market will fail in 2016 comes from its technical patterns. Weakness in many indicators, such as the MACD and OBV, and overbought conditions measured by the RSI, as well as failed attempts at ceilings, could signal the start of another leg down. Cheap option prices have created a great opportunity for investors to protect their necks. The implied volatility of an option rarely favours the long straddler, but we have seen consistently oscillations that make option sellers reluctant to take positions.

On April 6, 2016, an analyst for Bank of America-Merrill Lynch was on CNBC's "Fast Money" and said that the S&P 500 would outperform other benchmarks, which we believe included the STOXX 600, NIKKEI, and other international indices. That's great news for North American investors, however, she also mentioned that their firm believes there is an equal chance that being in cash will outperform the S&P 500.

Let that sink in for a moment. BAC believes that not investing for 2016 could be more profitable than investing. That is not often a phrase said by a firm, especially when firms only make money on transactions. When a firm backs that capital preservation is equal to owning stocks, that raises some red flags. It might just be one rogue analyst whose views don't add up to much when the rest of the industry says otherwise, but it could also be the one rogue analyst who decides it is time to make bolder predictions that do not profit the firm and help the investor.

The truth: we could be wrong. Every trader and doomsday predictor could be wrong. But the idea of selling your stocks if you have owned it through any or all of this extended rally is not wrong. And taking profits is always a good idea when analysts, professionals, money managers, historical trends are all uncertain as to what investment decisions are best for 2016.

Breaking Down the Oilers Last Playoff Push


The return of Connor McDavid and the sudden surge of the Edmonton Oilers since the trade deadline day has re-ignited the dreams of playoff hockey for many fans. Talbot is playing like a man possessed by Broduer and Roy, Eberle has found his scoring touch, Yakupov has paired well with McDavid as expected, and Hall has rediscovered his game as well. Their confidence levels have risen with the acquisitions of strong, role players such as Kassian, Maroon, and Pardy. Sitting in the basement of the West, a playoff game is still mathematically attainable going into tonight's game.

A miraculous winning streak of 15 to finish the season would give the team 87 points in the standings, a huge improvement from years (10 to be exact) past. It was predicted that it would require 95 points to make the playoffs at the start of the year, but with a handful of Western Conference teams failing to meet expectations, it appears that the wild west playoffs may be easier to reach. How much easier?

The Wild currently have collected 72 points in the standings, which is 13 points more than the Oilers lowly 59. The Oilers, as mentioned, can max out at 87 points. It appears that the only other real team in this race, barring a sudden surge by another team near the Oilers in the standings, are the Colorado Avalanche. It can be assumed that one of these two teams will make the playoffs and they hold a .537 point percentage. If their play of hockey remains consistent, one of these two teams will enter the playoffs with 88 points, 1 point more than the Oilers can max out.

There are some key match ups that could help the Oilers. The Wild and Avalanche have one game versus each other on Saturday March 26. Only one team can win, and if the Oilers have made some progress getting out of the basement, that could be a crucial game. The Wild have 15 games remaining with 8 at home. They will host the Oilers on Thursday March 10 before embarking on a four-game eastern road trip against weak teams, which bodes well for the Wild.

Meanwhile, the Avalanche will play against the Oilers on Sunday March 20 in Edmonton. They also have a very difficult schedule as they will be finishing the season with 7 straight games against playoff bound teams and one against the Wild. They face the Blues twice, the Predators twice, the Stars, the Capitals, and the Ducks to finish their campaign. If MacKinnon and company want to make the playoffs, they will need to play like it is a playoff series as they will most likely face one of these teams in the first round, but to be frank, that is a tough hill to climb.

So, can they make the playoffs? It requires a 15-game winning streak, which has not been done this season by any team, but if they can make it happen, I believe they will make the playoffs. It will only take 85 points to make the playoffs for the west this year. And let's not forget that the Wild fired their coach recently because they had only won 3 games in 19 contests. Maybe, just maybe, there's a little light for a Christmas in April after all.

Go Oilers go.

 
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