Canadian stocks are attractive, given the dividend growth that the benchmark S&P/TSX Composite Index offers and the prospect of waning disinflationary pressure, says Bank of America Corp.’s Ohsung Kwon.

“Own dividends, own inflation, own Canada,” the strategist wrote in a Monday research note. “2024 could be a banner year for dividends as cash yields drop and a global recovery cycle lifts beaten-down high-dividend stocks.” 

The S&P/TSX Composite Index dividend yield of 3.2 per cent is just over two times the level offered by the S&P 500, a record spread, according to BofA.

Still, it would take higher commodity prices for Canada’s benchmark to post “meaningful outperformance” relative to its US counterpart, the S&P 500, according to Kwon.

But Kwon sees plenty of appeal in the S&P/TSX Composite, which trailed the US gauge in 2023 as disinflation took hold, but outperformed it in 2022 as inflation was a dominant theme.

Given that much of the disinflation in this cycle has already taken place and with the bank expecting Canada’s economy to close the growth gap with the US, the Canadian benchmark “offers a great entry point” at 15 times earnings per share, Kwon wrote. The multiple for the S&P 500, which has been advancing in large part led by Big Tech shares, is around 22.

The outlook for inflation and geopolitics are the two biggest risks that investors see for equities this year, and Canada could offer a hedge against both, especially given current global tensions, according to the research. 

Kwon pointed out that the TSX’s three historical upward cycles relative to the S&P 500 came during inflationary periods, and two were in wartime, including in the 1940s.