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Strategies & Market Trends : Dino's Bar & Grill

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To: Goose94 who wrote (69295)10/23/2019 9:52:34 AM
From: Goose94Read Replies (1) of 202442
 
TSX-Venture: Foreign investors are bailing on Canada at a pace typically reserved for times of global economic distress. Inflows into Canadian stocks from international investors have declined by about 75 per cent over the past year, as the appetite for resource investments has waned amid heightened economic anxieties.

Canaccord Genuity (CF-T) analyst Martin Roberge says: "You have to assume this is consistent with global growth concerns. Canada is in the eye of the storm." Unless the synchronized global slowdown reverses, net inflows into Canadian equities could be quickly headed to zero for the first time since 2008, which would not bode well for domestic stock performance.

Investment flows can be highly volatile from one month to the next, and a trailing 12-month sum can give a clearer picture into changes in how Canada is perceived by international investors, Mr. Roberge says. Over the year ended August, 2018, the inflow into domestic stocks totalled $27.8-billion. Since then, over the 12 months up to the end of August, that number has "shockingly" plunged to $7.2-billion, says Mr. Roberge.
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