Canadian stocks look cheap, and 4 other chart insights for 2019
Plus, will interest rates keep rising?
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Plus, will interest rates keep rising?
RELATED: As rates rise, dividend stocks could sufferThat p/e multiple has compressed all the way down to a mere 13.3 times, the lowest it has been in well over five years and the two-and-a-half percentage point discount that the S&P/TSX Composite Index trades at currently vis-à-vis the S&P 500 is the widest the valuation gap has been since June 2004 (normally, both markets trade with the same multiple). Canadian bears may want to dig into the history books because in the year that followed, the TSX rallied 16 per cent versus 4.5 per cent for the S&P 500. That was as tough a sell then as it is today, but either you believe in reversion-to-the-mean, or you don’t.”
RELATED: How should your asset allocation change over time?
READ: A nearly $40,000 TFSA all-in on Canadian dividend stocks
READ: Why Canadians invest too much at home
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