Skip to main content
investor newsletter

Citi global strategist Chris Montagu ranks global stocks with a combination of value and momentum factors that creates an investment strategy that has consistently outperformed the benchmark. One stock that has recently jumped into the most attractive decile is a Canadian bank.

The screen of all stocks in the MSCI All Country World Index begins with an assessment of a fair value price to earnings (PE) ratio for each company where sufficient data on expected profit growth and balance sheet quality exists. The fair value PE is then compared with the actual forward PE ratio, and companies are ranked according to attractiveness relative to Mr. Montagu’s estimate of fair value.

Stocks are then scored for three types of momentum – price, trading volume and earnings.

The strategist then combines the two screening layers to find the best aspects of each investing approach. In his words, “Momentum strategies work by exploiting the investing phenomenon whereby once a trend is established it is more likely to continue … Therefore, by equally weighting the Composite Value and Composite Momentum ranks, the combination rank is used to identify winners, but at the right price.”

Mr. Montagu listed 10 stocks climbing into the top decile of attractiveness according to his criteria. These are Broadcom Ltd. (AVGO-Q), BHP Group Ltd. (BHPLF), Canadian Imperial Bank of Commerce (CM-T), Barclays PLC (BCLYF), Rio Tinto PLC (RTPPF), Fortescue Metals Group Ltd. (FSUGY), Bridgestone Corp. (BRDCY), DSM Firmenich AG (DSFIY), NEC Corp. (NIPNF) and Evolution AB (EVVTY).

This investing approach was backtested to 1996. Its success was apparent in that the most attractive decile of stocks outperformed the benchmark by 0.3 percentage points monthly, and the least attractive decile underperformed by almost 0.5 percentage points monthly. More recently, a strategy of owning all of the most attractive decile stocks and shorting the least attractive decile generated a 35 per cent return over the past year.

The historic success of Citi’s investment strategy does not, of course, guarantee strong outperformance for CIBC as its stock is now merely part of a promising group of global companies. But for holders of CIBC, it must be encouraging.

-- Scott Barlow, Globe and Mail market strategist

Read more from Scott: Is book value really an out-of-date measure for stocks?

This is the Globe Investor newsletter, published three times each week. If someone has forwarded this e-mail newsletter to you or you’re reading this on the web, you can sign up for the newsletter and others on our newsletter signup page.

Stocks to ponder

Air Canada (AC-T) The share price has slumped 29 per cent over the past 12 months, meaning Canada’s largest airline is underperforming the Canadian benchmark by a baffling 39 percentage points. That’s a considerably worse performance than most of the carrier’s North American competitors. The stock is trading not far above levels seen during COVID-19 pandemic-era lockdowns, when horrendous losses threatened Air Canada’s survival. Something is out of whack here. Does that make the stock a buying opportunity? David Berman shares his thoughts.

The Rundown

An update on our second annual stock-picking challenge

The stocks in our second annual The Globe and Mail Investing Club Challenge certainly aren’t lacking in drama. As David Berman reports, from a highly profitable takeover to AI-inspired volatility and a bullish call on slacks, there has been a lot of excitement packed into the first month of the stock-picking competition.

High rates are still hurting dividend stocks, but my cash flow keeps growing

With the first half of 2024 in the books, John Heinzl provides an update of his model dividend portfolio’s performance. He also discloses how he’s investing the more than $2,000 of “cash” that has accumulated over the past few months. (View the portfolio online at tgam.ca/dividend-portfolio).

Investors chart possible moves as pressure mounts on Biden to step aside as Democratic candidate

With doubts growing about whether President Joe Biden will remain a candidate for re-election in 2024, some investors are preparing to game out potential economic scenarios and trades if a stronger Democratic candidate emerges. Reuters surveys various views on how this may all pan out.

Others (for subscribers)

The most oversold and overbought stocks on the TSX

Monday’s analyst upgrades and downgrades for July 8, 2024

Ask Globe Investor

Question: I recently read a story in The Globe and Mail about “promising small-cap stocks.” One of the stocks mentioned was Chorus Aviation Inc. (CHR), whose dividend yield was listed at 1.8 per cent. However, when I went to my discount broker’s website, no dividend was listed for Chorus. Can you help?

Answer: I always advise readers to exercise caution with financial data on third-party websites, as the numbers aren’t always reliable. It’s better to go directly to the source.

On Chorus Aviation’s website, click on the “Investors” tab, then scroll down to “Dividend History.” You’ll see a note that Chorus suspended its monthly dividend of four cents a share following its March, 2020, payment, citing “uncertainty related to the duration and impact of the COVID-19 pandemic.” The company has not paid a dividend since, so your discount broker is correct.

--John Heinzl

What’s up in the days ahead

Which uranium stocks may be worth investing in? We’ll have a Number Cruncher that aims to answer just that.

Click here to see the Globe Investor earnings and economic news calendar.

More Globe Investor coverage

For more Globe Investor stories, follow us on Twitter @globeinvestor

Compiled by Darcy Keith of The Globe and Mail

Follow related authors and topics

Interact with The Globe