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The Monday Report

Daily Market Reports | Jul 25 2016

This story features NEWCREST MINING LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: NCM

By Greg Peel

Predictable

The dip overnight on Wall Street provided an excuse but realistically it was an all too predictable session on the ASX on Friday assuming no unexpected news. We had a solid run-up during the week, profits are often locked in ahead of a weekend, and next week sees critical central bank meetings that offer reason to move back to the sidelines to see what transpires.

The consumer sectors had been leaders in the rally over the week, so no great surprise they were the underperformers on Friday. Telcos also came in for some more selling, but otherwise downward moves across sectors were minimal and materials posted a sole gain with a 0.2% increase.

The pullback put the ASX200 pretty much on the 5500 level, which is rather neat, and suggests a pivot point for what happens next. The technicals remain generally bullish at this stage but we’ll still need some sort of fundamental justification to move into the next up-leg.

While markets across the globe may go quiet early this week ahead of the Fed meeting and statement release on Wednesday night, in Australia we will also see the release of June quarter CPI numbers on the Wednesday ahead of the Fed. The RBA has left the door open for an August rate cut were the June numbers to again be weak. Economists are forecasting weak numbers.

We also saw falls in commodity prices on Friday night, which should weigh on the ASX200 this morning.

Poised

The focus on Wall Street this week is clearly on the Fed, although US indices did manage slight gains on Friday night. The Dow closed up 53 points or 0.3%, the S&P gained 0.5% to 2175 and the Nasdaq rose 0.5%. The Dow and S&P both posted new highs.

On the US earnings front, the trend continues to be positive, or at least “less bad”. General Electric’s (Dow) result disappointed somewhat on Friday but with 100 of the 500 S&P stocks now having reported, the running change in earnings per share is minus 4.2% compared to a consensus forecast ahead of the season of minus 5.3%.

There are still 400 stocks to report over the next couple of weeks.

Meanwhile, the early earnings trend may be positive, thus justifying Wall Street strength, but the indices were again led by telcos and utilities on Friday night. The hunt for yield continues to override any notion of economic improvement.

US economic data have nevertheless been positive this month, and the trend continued on Friday night. A flash estimate suggested the US manufacturing PMI for July would come in at 52.9, up from 51.3 in June and well ahead of 51.5 forecasts.

It is this sudden turnaround in US data that has Wall Street assuming the Fed must now be seriously looking at a rate hike sooner rather than later, given the feared Brexit disaster did not transpire. Up until this month US data had been a bit too mixed to assure a hike, and the shockingly weak May jobs number was the cruncher. But since the June jobs number came screaming back, a string of very positive releases including retail sales, industrial production and various housing numbers has followed.

There is no hike expected on Wednesday night. But markets will be looking to see just what sort of hint the FOMC may be prepared to provide of a September move.

The Fed is under no pressure to hike this week, which is handy given Friday brings a Bank of Japan policy meeting. Strictly the Fed should not be in any way beholden to what Japan does, but given some form of shock & awe is being assumed out of Tokyo, the FOMC will no doubt be keen to see what that is before having to make its own decision.

Commodities

The issue of a Fed rate hike is one commodity markets will be concerned about. While the justification for a hike – stronger US economy – is positive for commodity prices, a consequentially stronger US dollar is not. The US dollar index rose 0.5% to 97.35 on Friday night.

An outage of a commodity trading platform during the Asian session meant many traders were cut off from base metal markets as trading shifted over to London, ensuring very light volumes were then traded on the LME. This didn’t stop nickel falling 3%, although nickel has been the outperformer of late, while other metals fell by small amounts except aluminium. It’s been the underperformer of late, and rose slightly.

Iron ore fell US40c to US$55.70/t.

West Texas crude fell US29c to US$44.25/bbl.

Gold doesn’t quite know whether it’s Arthur or Martha at the moment, as it shifts back and forward inside a 1320-40 range. Friday night’s jump in the greenback prompted a fall of US$8.60 to US$1322.10/oz.

The strong greenback ensured the Aussie was down half a percent at US$0.7455 on Saturday morning.

The SPI Overnight closed up 4 points on Saturday morning.

The Week Ahead

Fed on Wednesday night, BoJ on Friday.

Ahead of the Fed meeting, the US will see new home sales, Case-Shiller house prices, consumer confidence and the Richmond Fed index on Tuesday, and pending home sales and durable goods on Wednesday. Thereafter, Friday will bring the first estimate of US June quarter GDP.

The UK will report its GDP on Wednesday, and the eurozone on Friday, although both reflect a pre-Brexit Europe.

Along with the BoJ meeting on Friday, Japan will see a raft of June data, including inflation, retail sales, industrial production and unemployment.

On the local stock front, the last of the resource sector quarterly production reports merge this week with early movers in what is otherwise the August result season.

Among the production reporters we’ll see Newcrest Mining ((NCM)) today, Fortescue Metals ((FMG)) and Independence Group ((IGO)) on Wednesday, and Origin Energy ((ORG)) on Friday.

Thursday will bring earnings reports from CYBG Plc ((CYB)), Henderson Group ((HGG)), GUD Holdings ((GUD)) and ResMed ((RMD)).

Thursday also sees the Macquarie Group ((MQG)) AGM, at which guidance will be updated.

Rudi will appear on Sky Business via Skype-link on Tuesday to discuss broker calls, 11.15am. Then on Wednesday he'll host Your Money, Your Call, 8-9.30pm. On Thursday he'll re-appear in the studio, 12.30-2.30pm and later that day he'll join Switzer TV on the channel. On Friday he'll repeat the Skype-link up at around 11.05am.
 

For further global economic release dates and local company events please refer to the FNArena Calendar.

Find out why FNArena subscribers like the service so much: "Your Feedback (Thank You)" – Warning this story contains unashamedly positive feedback on the service provided. www.fnarena.com

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