Tag Archives: trade

Tariff Tantrums: Protecting your Portfolio with Defence and Income

Image via Harvest ETFs/Shutterstock

By Ambrose O’Callaghan, Harvest ETFs

(Sponsor Blog)

In his 2024 re-election campaign, U.S. President Donald Trump vowed to pursue an aggressive trade policy that aimed to reduce or altogether eliminate what he viewed as unacceptable deficits between adversaries and allies alike. Following his January inauguration, President Trump has put Canada and Mexico into his crosshairs. Tariffs continue to be one of his favourite tools, if his rhetoric is any indication.

A tariff is a tax that is imposed by a country on the goods imported from another country. It is typically collected by a country’s customs authority. Some economists have argued that this results in a larger burden being paid by consumers, as companies will pass on tariff costs to the consumer.

In this piece, we will look at how ongoing trade tensions could impact world economies and markets. After that, we will zero in on ETFs that can potentially provide protection against the current bout of volatility.

Trade policy volatility and Canada

Last month, we looked at the impact the new GOP administration could have on the industrials space. That piece explored the trade policy volatility that existed in the first Trump administration.

Baker, Bloom & Davis
US Categorical Economic Policy Uncertainty Index – Trade Policy

Source: Baker, Bloom & Davis. Bloomberg, Harvest ETFs, as of January 21, 2025.

On Monday, February 3, 2025, U.S. and global markets suffered sharp pullbacks in the morning hours. However, markets recovered after the Trump administration announced that tariffs on Mexico and Canada would be delayed for 30 days.

Canada finds itself at a crossroads as it contends with unprecedented pressure from a long-time ally, political uncertainty on the domestic front, and muted and decelerating economic data. The Bank of Canada must weigh these pressures as it determines how much it can slash interest rates to bolster economic activity..

That aside, Canada is home to many great companies with oligopolistic qualities. We detailed their strengths in a piece in October 2024. The Harvest Canadian Equity Leaders Income ETF (HLIF:TSX) invests in 30 of Canada’s most powerful and largest companies for their traits and growth potential. It overlays an active covered call strategy, which seeks to generate high monthly cash distributions.

Combat trade volatility with defence and diversification

Defensive sectors contain businesses that are stable, possess key barriers to entry, and are relatively immune to economic fluctuations.

Healthcare falls in this defensive category and is unique in its diversity. It includes companies that manufacture medical devices and equipment, as well as those that are involved in the making of diagnostic tools and lab equipment, companies involved in the ownership of doctors’ networks, as well as facilities and companies in the Managed Care segment.

The Harvest Healthcare Leaders Income ETF (HHL:TSX) is an equally weighted portfolio of 20 large-cap global healthcare companies. HHL aims to generate an attractive monthly distribution through an active covered call writing strategy. This ETF has paid out over $500 million in total monthly distributions to unit holders since its inception.

Utilities is a space that is often targeted by investors who are looking to shore up a defensive position in their portfolios. Companies in the utilities space possess enormous scale, significant barriers to entry, and dominance in their respective markets. The Harvest Equal Weight Global Utilities ETF (HUTL:TSX) offers access to a globally diversified portfolio of utilities equities. That global diversification offers benefits like reducing interest rate and natural disaster risk with exposure to different countries and regions. Continue Reading…

Canadian Trade Relations: The wrong place at the wrong time

By Jeff Weniger, CFA, WisdomTree Investments  

Special to the Financial Independence Hub

The 24-year-old North American Free Trade Agreement (NAFTA) has never been this close to death, but a resolution could be behind the storm clouds.

Souring trade relations with the U.S. are a shame, because Canada got caught in the wrong place at the wrong time. Consider figure 1. President Donald Trump wants to make a dent in the US$388 billion annual trade deficit with China and, to a lesser extent, the yawning gaps with Mexico, Germany and Japan. But to show strength to them economically and North Korea militarily, he believes he has to treat even friendly actors such as Japan and Canada like hostile players. That became apparent when the U.S. administration imposed global steel and aluminum tariffs, and Canada wasn’t exempted.

Figure 1: Monthly U.S. Trade Deficit/Surplus (USD in Millions)

Monthly U.S. Trade Deficit/Surplus

Talks are starting to get personal, with U.S. President Donald Trump accusing Prime Minister Justin Trudeau of making false statements at a June news conference after G7 leaders met amicably. The Canadian leader then got relatively tough, responding that “Canadians … will not be pushed around.”

With the world’s two best friends in a lovers’ quarrel, the US$13 billion annual U.S.-Canadian trade gap, a rounding error, is somehow a political issue. It could have been resolved over golf.

But not all is lost. Ottawa would be wise to consider — if it is legal — scrapping NAFTA for a bilateral trade agreement with Washington.

Canada ill-advised to sit at table with Mexico

That’s because Canada is ill-advised to sit at the table with Mexico to try to strongarm the U.S. Not now, in 2018, given Mexico’s own specific troubles. Frankly, Mexico’s negotiating calculus is much weaker than Canada’s. The country went to the polls July 1, and leftist Andrés Manuel López Obrador (AMLO) won.  He won’t help Canada one bit because it isn’t politically palpable for him to shoot for a quick resolution. Hostility to the U.S. — or at least standing ground against Washington — has been a political winner for the Latin American “pink tide”1 for years. Playing the tough-talk game with Trump will be one of AMLO’s key rallying cries, and it can only cripple NAFTA. Continue Reading…