Good afternoon, ladies and gentlemen. Thank you.
As a proud Quebecker and Canadian, I'm honoured to speak with you today and I want to express my gratitude to the committee members for the opportunity to provide testimony.
First, I'll tell you a little bit about myself. I graduated from McGill in finance and economics. I am a CFA charter holder, with over 18 years of experience as a global macro strategist. In this capacity, I've worked for large institutional asset managers and hedge funds in the city of London, United Kingdom. I'm now back in Canada as a portfolio manager, helping families preserve and grow their wealth.
I'm one of the co-hosts of The Loonie Hour, Canada's most popular economic and financial market podcast, which is committed to demystifying capital markets for Canadians. I love what I do, and I'm committed to a dispassionate analysis of macroeconomic phenomena. I've earned my reputation as someone who can articulate cogent and pressing analysis without fear or favour.
In my role as a global macro strategist, I've researched more topics than I can remember—productivity, housing, monetary policy, energy, etc. Having worked for a large financial institution, I've also been exposed to green finance, ESG and other sustainable investment initiatives, as well as the corporate apparatus that has mushroomed to exploit society's concerns over the environment.
Having reviewed some of the witness testimony in preparation for today, I want to highlight that several speakers are engaged by firms that would stand to directly benefit financially from the types of regulations that are likely to result from the study in question. As loyal employees, they are responsible for telling this committee that green finance, sustainable investing and the regulations proposed will benefit Canada and the environment writ large. However, their firms' revenues are tied not to lowering global emissions or hitting Canada's Paris Agreement commitments but rather to the billable hours or extra fees they can amass to help navigate the increasing regulatory burden that these regulations would necessarily result in.
I bring this up to cast a spotlight on something that is a critical pillar in the investment world, which is fiduciary duty—the obligation to act in the best interests of clients or employers. Put simply, who do you ultimately work for? Investment managers, for example, have the solemn duty to maximize financial returns for investors or pensioners. It is not to use their position of incredible power to prioritize one social or environmental goal over another, no matter how noble that goal is. Using regulations to coerce financial institutions to subordinate their clients' interests in favour of political goals is on its face unethical, as it would be for a bank manager to direct a bank's considerable financial power to achieve a political aim rather than to act as a sober custodian for its shareholders.
Furthermore, it is not even clear that this would work, resulting in both unethical action and a net loss of returns to its clients and profits to its shareholders—and there are plenty of examples. The consultants, however, will get very rich.
In effect, this is legislation through the back door. Given that reporting of this nature is onerous and the negative impact on a country suffering—and I quote the Bank of Canada here—a productivity emergency, it is clearly ill-advised.
Another angle for your consideration is the law of unintended consequences. On this I submit the following testimony. Green energy policy, as it is constituted, is the greatest thing to happen to fossil-fuel companies since the transatlantic flight. I'll repeat that: Green energy policy has been a gift for the industry you're trying to neuter.
Humans consume 101 million barrels of oil a day. This number is rising; it is not falling. Even in a world of hyper EV adoption, it is likely to stay well above 100 million barrels for at least a generation or two. The issue with this is that recent green energy policy has been focused on starving public oil companies of capital in order to constrain or constrict the supply of oil, but that is doing nothing for demand. This situation has, predictably, lifted the floor on oil prices. As a result, normally spendthrift oil companies are now reluctant to deploy capital to procure fresh reserves.
Cash flows, on the other hand, are at record levels because demand is rising and prices are high. This has lifted cash flows, along with the falling capex. There has been an explosion of free cash flow yields. Profits are at a record level, and cash is being returned to shareholders by dividends and share buybacks, and these companies are paying down debt. Green energy policy has instilled a fiscal discipline in the CEOs of these oil companies for which shareholders have been begging for 40 years. The industry has never been healthier.
Surely—