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SHIRLEY WON
From Wednesday's Globe and Mail
FUNDS REPORTER
November 14, 2007- Hedge fund manager Hugh Cleland
expects North American markets to recover from the recent
downturn sparked by concerns about the fallout from
the U.S. subprime mortgage mess.
"We are in the middle of a retest of the August
lows," said the portfolio manager with Toronto-based
Northern Rivers Capital Management Inc. "The [U.S.]
financials have fallen through the lows, but the major
indexes so far are holding above that level."
The S&P/TSX composite index, which fell to a low
of 12,848.7 points in August, closed up yesterday at
13,705.14. The S&P 500 index, which slid to a low
of 1,406.7 points, closed up at 1,481.04.
"I am expecting a scary, but ultimately successful,
retest of the August lows in the major North American
indices between now and Christmas," and that should
set the stage for a flat or rising market in 2008, he
said in an interview.
A solid rebound depends on the U.S. Federal Reserve
Board easing rates again to avoid a major economic slowdown,
he said. "I think we will squeak by without a recession."
He expects the U.S. central bank will lower its lending
rate by at least 50 basis points to 4 per cent by the
end of March.
The effect of the subprime mortgage woes on the balance
sheets of the big banks is a question mark, he said.
"If banks are losing capital, their ability to
lend becomes constrained, and that in itself can have
effects on the economy if they have to curtail their
lending too much."
Third-quarter U.S. gross domestic product - which rose
to a seasonally adjusted 3.9-per-cent annual rate from
3.8 per cent in the second quarter - indicates that
strong exports can power the economy through the housing
slump and tighter credit conditions, he added.
Mr. Cleland, who runs three long-short hedge funds with
assets of about $125-million, invests in the technology,
health care and resource sectors.
His portfolios are built around up to 10 core holdings
in companies with a competitive advantage in rapidly
growing industries. Another 30 to 40 stocks, or the
"farm team," are actively traded.
His three hedge funds include Northern Rivers Innovation
Fund LP, which posted an average annual return of 35.3
per cent for the three years ended Oct. 31.
Mr. Cleland is 60 per cent net long in his portfolios,
saying that bias is driven by his view that North America
is not heading into a recession.
He is long:
Vendtek Systems Inc. (VSI-TSX-VEN): The developer
of software that allows the sale and distribution of
prepaid products and services such as gift cards and
prepaid cellular time is "growing rapidly worldwide,"
he said. "Within less than a year, the majority
of their cash flow should be coming from non-Canadian
sources." Vendtek is trading at less than 12 times
his estimated profit of 10 cents a share for 2008, and
about seven times his estimated profit of at least 15
cents a share for 2009. The stock yesterday closed down
5 cents at $1.12.
WebTech Wireless Inc. (WEW-TSX): He sees WebTech as
an emerging global leader in wireless tracking devices
for the transportation industry, but is a contrarian
because its stock has "one of the largest short
positions on the TSX relative to its size." He
said he believes the company will have some large wins
over the next three months. He expects WebTech to grow
at an annualized rate of more than 100 per cent for
each of the next three years, but its stock only trades
at 18 times his fiscal 2008 profit estimate of 16 cents
a share, and nine times his 2009 estimate of more than
30 cents. The stock closed yesterday unchanged at $2.97.
He is short:
SPDR Financial ETF (XLF-A): With the nexus of the global
credit crunch emanating from the U.S. financial services
sector, one of the best "market risk" hedges
is being short or owning puts on the financial service
sector exchanged-traded funds, he said. The units yesterday
closed at $31.67 (U.S.), up $1.42.
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