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The NDP-Liberal breakup and investing in a Conservative government

Finance, Market News
05 September 2024 10:42 (EDT)
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(Source: Adobe Stock, generated by AI)

On Wednesday, NDP leader Jagmeet Singh announced in a video on X that his party was ending its supply and confidence deal with the Liberals that was signed in 2022.

The deal, originally slated to end June 2025, allowed the NDP to guarantee that certain policies made their way to Canadians, including dental, pharma care and a ban on replacement workers during strikes, in exchange for supporting the Liberals on strategic elements in their agenda, including budgets.

The breakup means the NDP will now decide whether to support Liberal legislation on a case-by-case basis, creating some distance from Prime Minister Justin Trudeau and his plummeting popularity, and opening the door for a potential non-confidence vote in Parliament later this month, which would trigger a snap election.

Singh’s video, though centred on the supply and confidence deal, is by and large a campaign ad, throwing his name into the ring alongside current poll leader, the Conservatives’ Pierre Poilievre, and the out-of-favour prime minister, in the hopes of swaying voters away from what Singh describes as their corporate greed and towards the NDP’s focus on workers’ rights, affordability and community.

The most important takeaway from the NDP’s decision, given the Conservatives’ hefty lead in the polls, is that neither it nor the Liberals would benefit from an election anytime soon, creating an incentive for them to continue working together on a piecemeal basis to dim the light shining on Poilievre’s policies and what they mean for Canadians. Here’s a breakdown of five of the Conservatives’ key policy points from an investment perspective.

How would a Conservative government affect Canadian stocks?

Parting proviso

Before you invest based on actionable signals derived from this article, make sure to run any thesis through your personal due diligence process to ensure it aligns with your financial goals, risk tolerance and current financial situation.

While political sentiment can make for an exciting short-term trade, allocating your money in this way entails considerably higher risk compared with sitting back and letting long-term compound interest work its magic.

What other sectors of the Canadian market deserve a mention? Have you changed your portfolio allocation based on the Canadian political landscape?

Join the discussion: Find out what everybody’s saying about the NDP-Liberal breakup on Stockhouse’s stock forums and message boards.

The material provided in this article is for information only and should not be treated as investment advice. For full disclaimer information, please click here.

(Top image, generated by AI: Adobe Stock)


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