TORONTO, Dec. 5, 2012 /CNW/ - Scotiabank's leading market commentators today outlined their outlook on global developments that will drive the economy and capital markets in 2013 and 2014.
"While Canada may lag U.S. growth as job creation and household spending moderate, in many ways our economic fundamentals remain more favourable here," said Warren Jestin, Senior Vice President and Chief Economist, Scotiabank. "Unlike the U.S. and Europe, Canada has regained the jobs lost during the financial crisis and its real estate markets are in much better shape."
Addressing Bank clients and the media at Scotiabank's 2013-2014 Economic and Market Outlook Conference, Mr. Jestin said global economic and political uncertainty now fueling financial market volatility is likely to linger well beyond 2012. He said the European fiscal crisis will remain in the headlines, with public sector retrenchment and private deleveraging keeping a number of debt-heavy nations in recession through much of 2013.
"However Canada's relatively better fiscal position provides a strategic advantage important for longer-term growth and prosperity," added Mr. Jestin. "A world-class financial system also supports growth at a time when banking crises in many countries have impeded economic revitalization."
The outlook for the Canadian dollar in 2013 and 2014 is also strong, said Camilla Sutton, Chief FX Strategist. She expects it to close both years above parity and with an appreciating trend.
"The single most important factor driving our view is relative monetary policy," added Ms. Sutton. "Entering 2013, the U.S. Federal Reserve is expected to expand its quantitative easing program again. This balance sheet expansion juxtaposed against the Bank of Canada's neutral-to-hawkish stance is likely to prove a significant support for the Canadian dollar."
Vincent Delisle, Investment Strategist, Portfolio Strategy Group, forecasts a modest upside to corporate profits and expects equity gains to be supported by price-to-earnings ratio (P/E) expansion, as risk-appetite slowly recovers..
"Our game plan for 2013 is to be positioned for pro-growth conditions - equities over bonds, cyclicals over defensives - in the first half," said Mr. Delisle. "The Toronto Stock Exchange (TSX) could modestly outperform the Standard and Poor (S&P) 500 initially in 2013, but diverging housing trends and tepid commodity gains are likely to keep the Standard and Poor 500 ahead of the MSCI World AC (All Country) index again in 2013."
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SOURCE: Scotiabank - Economic Reports
Devinder Lamsar, Scotiabank Media Communications, (416) 933-1171, devinder.lamsar@scotiabank.com.