Triasima Canadian All Capitalization Equity Fund Commentary – Q1 2026

2026-04-19

The economy

Economic growth was average in advanced and emerging countries as the year 2026 began; a fair state of affairs. In the United States, the economy was supported by spending by higher-income households and infrastructure construction, buoyed by artificial intelligence-related investments. The overall narrative was managed global inflation and easing monetary cycles. 

The war in Iran, the defining event of the first quarter, upended this scenario in late February, adding a geopolitical dose of uncertainty to the outlook. Concerns about tariffs rapidly receded in the background.

So far, the main impacts of the war have been increases in the price of oil and other commodities, a rise in interest rates, and a strong American dollar due to its worldwide reserve currency status. This last effect is especially damaging to emerging countries’ economies. Oil usage per dollar of GDP is at a record low but economic activity is nonetheless bound to soften and inflation to increase with a lag. 

Canada, a net energy exporter, will see a boost to national income but household spending will be hurt, and so will it be in the United States. Europe and Asia are net energy importers and face the prospects of higher economic input costs and weaker domestic spending as well.  

The Canadian equity market

The S&P/TSX Composite Index had a 3.9% return this quarter.   

Sectoral returns were dispersed. Unsurprisingly, with the price of oil climbing by over 77%, the Energy (30%) sector led. The Materials (+11%) and Utilities (+11%) sectors were next. The Materials sector includes the important precious metals producers’ subsector, while Utilities companies produce energy, which gained in price.

Hurt by rising interest rates, the Information Technology (-23%) sector faltered badly. Real Estate (-4%) pulled back for the same reason. 

The Fund

The Triasima Canadian All Capitalization Equity Fund had a 7.9% return this quarter.
Security selection accounts for the outperformance, with positive contribution in the Energy, Materials, and Information Technology sectors. Sector selection had a slightly negative impact, mainly stemming from the Energy sector underweight. 

Main security contributors to relative performance :

  Positive impact

  Negative impact

5N Plus

Canadian Natural Resources Ltd*

Athabasca Oil Corp.

Suncor Energy Inc.*

Imperial Oil Ltd

Agnico Eagle Mines Ltd*

Constellation Software Inc.*

Enbridge Inc.*

Whitecap Resources

TC Energy Corporation*

*Securities not held or underweighted in the Fund.

The Energy sector was added to in order to decrease its underweight. Conversely, the cyclical Consumer Discretionary sector was reduced with the partial sales of BRP and Dollarama. Six securities were pared back in the Materials sector to manage individual holding risk, offset by the introduction of three new precious and base metals producers, a subcategory where an important 18% position is maintained.

The Three-Pillar Approach™

On the quantitative side, the Fund has superior profitability and expectations parameters, and higher revenue and earnings growth. Volatility and risk metrics are more elevated, however. 

The Canadian equity market uptrend has weakened considerably. New highs were set in January and February, but the upward momentum waned after the war’s onset. A sideways period may be at hand. The Momentum and Earnings Variability factors were strongest. 

Notwithstanding its large 18% Energy sector weight, the fundamental background to Canadian equities deteriorated in the quarter due to the Iran war. Fortunately, corporate profits keep on growing. 

Legal notices

The posted rate of return is a historical total rate of return compounded annually, except for periods of less than one year, which are not annualized. The rate of return shown takes into account fluctuations in unitholder value and the reinvestment of distributions. The posted rate of return does not take into account investment management fees and income taxes payable by the unitholder, which would have the effect of reducing the return. The Funds are not guaranteed, their value fluctuates, and past performance is not indicative of future results.

Data on the FTSE Canada 91 Day T-Bill, FTSE Canada Short Term Bond and FTSE Canada Universal Bond reference indices are provided by FTSE Global Debt Capital Markets Inc.  (“FTSE”). Data on the S&P/TSX Income Trust, S&P/TSX Preferred Share, S&P/TSX SmallCap, and S&P/TSX Composite reference indices are provided by TSX Inc. (“TSX”). Data on the S&P 500® Index are provided by Standard & Poor’s Financial Services LLC (“S&P”). Data on the MSCI EAFE, All Country World, and World reference indices are provided by Morgan Stanley Capital International Inc. (“MSCI”). Lastly, the classification of securities according to the Global Industry Classification Standards (“GICS”) is provided jointly by MSCI and S&P. (FTSE, TSX, S&P, and MSCI are hereafter collectively referred to as “indices and data providers”.) 

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