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The Overnight Report: A Live Possibility

Daily Market Reports | Nov 05 2015

This story features COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: CBA

By Greg Peel

The Dow fell 50 points or 0.3% while the S&P lost 0.4% to 2102 and the Nasdaq closed flat.

Drift Off

The local market behaved yesterday as if it had just had a huge day out at the races and woke up still feeling a little drunk, before the inevitable hangover set in and by the afternoon it was time for a snooze on the couch.

The ASX200 was off to a flyer, well overshooting the small rise anticipated by the overnight futures. But 5300 appears to be the level to trigger selling at the top of this rebound rally, and so it was the index mostly drifted lower as the afternoon wore on and traders just looked forward to getting home for a sleep.

The surprise winner on the day was materials with a 0.9% gain despite iron ore prices now being entrenched under US$50/t, while at present each day seems to be one in which you either buy the telco or sell it and yesterday was a sell-day, with telcos down 1.2%. Other sectors all closed mostly flat.

There was a slight recovery from the drift around midday when Caixin’s take on China’s October service sector PMI showed a rise to a healthy 52.0 from September’s 50.5, implying there may finally be some signs of Beijing’s stimulus measures having an impact. But then the drift began again.

Australia saw a mixed bag of data releases yesterday.

September retail sales saw 0.4% growth, as was forecast, but there was disappointment in a revision of August growth down to 0.4% from a previously reported 0.7%. The annual rate of sales growth in September was 3.7% — down from 4.5% in August and well below the long run average of 5.2%.

The September trade deficit was lower than expected, with exports rising 3.4% and imports rising 1.7%. Unfortunately the difference came down to higher iron ore prices in the month, and they have since fallen back again. But Queensland LNG is now beginning to contribute to the numbers, with plenty of upside ahead, and the signs are a long awaited recovery in tourism is underway thanks to the currency.

Australia’s service sector PMI fell to 48.9 in October from 52.3 in September, suggesting a flip back into contraction from expansion. Australia’ PMIs are nevertheless notoriously volatile.

All up the data did not really provide a reason to get excited, but the smaller trade deficit is probably another reason for the RBA to hold off for now.

Around the grounds, Japan’s services PMI rose to 52.2 from 51.4, the eurozone rose to 54.1 from 53.7, the UK rose to 54.9 from 53.3, and the US jumped to a surging 59.1 from 56.9.

The global service sector is alive and well, it would seem.

Going Live

The other major US data release of the day was the ADP private sector jobs report for October, which showed the addition of 182,000 jobs. The September ADP number was revised down to 190,000 from 200,000.

The result confirms a belief US jobs growth is now slowing from a more robust pace earlier in the year. Economists are forecasting 177,000 new jobs to be announced in the October non-farm payrolls release tomorrow night, up from 142,000 in September but below the 200,000 plus trend that has prevailed for the bulk of 2015.

The jobs numbers nevertheless took a back seat on Wall Street last night behind Janet Yellen’s testimony before the House Financial Services Committee. In her testimony the Fed chair reiterated that the risk to the US economy posed by slowing growth offshore had now diminished, and hence December will be a “live” meeting as far as a potential rate hike is concerned.

Once again we come down to the rift across Wall Street between those who do believe current US economic growth justifies a rate rise, those who don’t believe a rate rise is justified and thus don’t expect a rise, those who don’t believe it is justified but really hope the Fed just gets it over and done with, and those who do believe it’s justified but assume the Fed will vacillate yet again.

Take your pick. Wall Street’s response last night was to drift lower with a lack of conviction, on smaller volumes than the past two sessions which produced reasonable rallies.

There was a clearer move in the US dollar index nonetheless. Not only was Yellen sounding hawkish last night, Mario Draghi was reiterating his dovishness by defending the ECB’s willingness to extend QE. Both influences mean a lower EURUSD, hence the US dollar index is up 0.8% to 97.92.

Subsequently the Aussie is back down 0.6% to US$0.7152, post the RBA’s on-hold decision.

Commodities

A day after they were up 3.5% on global supply disruptions, oil prices were back down 3% last night on a combination of the stronger greenback and a sixth consecutive rise in weekly US crude inventories. West Texas fell US$1.33 to US$46.49/bbl and Brent fell US$1.79 to US$48.76/bbl.

Only tin managed to rally on the LME in the face of the stronger greenback, up 1%, while lead, nickel and zinc fell 1% and aluminium and copper fell 0.5%.

Iron ore fell another US40c to US$48.30/t.

Gold never stood a chance against the stronger dollar given the current mood, and it fell US$9.40 to US$1107.90/oz.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down one point.

RBA governor Glenn Stevens will deliver a speech in Melbourne today ahead of tomorrow’s release of the central bank’s quarterly Statement on Monetary Policy.

The Bank of England will hold a policy meeting tonight but nothing exciting is expected.

Commonwealth Bank ((CBA)) will today wrap up the big bank reporting season with its quarterly update and there is once more a handful of AGMs to get through.

National Bank ((NAB)) goes ex today.

Rudi will make his weekly appearance on Sky Business today, Lunch Money, noon-1pm, to return later on Switzer TV, between 7-8pm.
 

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