Here are highlights from the articles:
- Airlines are at risk of bankruptcy as much as any other player in this field;
- Air Canada can ground its fleet and expect to resume business as soon as governments give the all clear;
- Compared to Boeing, Air Canada is a better choice;
Air Canada is the one aerospace stock to own right now
Of course, airlines are at risk of bankruptcy as much as any other player in this field. However, Air Canada is not reliant on giant contracts in the same way that the likes of Boeing are. Air Canada can ground its fleet and expect to resume business as soon as governments give the all clear. It’s far from ideal, and lost revenue is lost forever. But the stakes are arguably lower than they are for a manufacturer.
Investors should bet on a recovery. Not just a relief rally. But a sustained return to normal operations. Of course, physical-distancing measures will have to be implemented at airports and when traveling on flights. The world will likely never be exactly the way it was before the pandemic. But air travel cannot be halted forever. At some point, Canadians will begin flying again. And when they do, Air Canada will fly them.
It’s a fairly simple contrarian thesis on the face of it. Investors trying to navigate the market have been finding it next to impossible to time. Indeed, analysts and asset managers have been advising that investors do not try to time the bottom of this market. However, a broad strokes approach to the coronavirus market involves looking towards a total eventual recovery, buying in stages, and going long.
Of course, no investment comes without risk. A personal investment portfolio should therefore be diversified at every level. Just as the stock segment of a broader portfolio should be spread across sectors, such investments should be counterweighted by other asset types. Investors buying stocks should also mix in the best bonds to give a broader mix of stabilizing holdings for the long term.
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