Daily Market Reports | Feb 11 2016
This story features COMPUTERSHARE LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: CPU
By Greg Peel
The Dow closed down 99 points or 0.6% while the S&P closed flat at 1851 and the Nasdaq gained 0.4%.
Growl
Yes, it’s “official”. When the ASX200 dropped through 4800 early yesterday it was down 20% from last April’s near 6000 peak, and thus we were “officially” in a bear market. No one’s quite sure who these “officials” are, but they tend not to mention the number of times markets drop 20% before turning around and going back up again.
Perhaps it explains why the index proceeded to drop like a stone through the morning to mark another fall well in excess of a hundred points for the second day running, despite there not having been a weak lead from Wall Street as there had been on Tuesday. Sheer panic, it would seem.
Then as the index neared 4700, the buyers finally emerged from their hiding places. The ultimate 56 point drop to 4775 still leaves us amongst the bears, but if this morning’s close in the futures is any indication, we may yet be looking to leave the den.
Yesterday was also a day when some individual stories picked a bad time to emerge. Computershare’s ((CPU)) poorly received result meant info technology (-4.5%) was the worst performing sector on the day, albeit it’s a very small weighting in the index. Hints that Telstra ((TLS)) might be considering moving into electricity retailing saw the telco sector down 3.0%, while news from Woolworths ((WOW)) that you’ll soon be able to pick your groceries up from the train station ensured consumer staples fell 2.1%.
Thereafter, sector moves were more around the 1% mark, with the “outperformers” on the day being utilities, again (flat), and the banks (-0.7%), thanks to post result buying in Commonwealth Bank ((CBA)). Mind you, a 0.7% move down in the financials sector still has a big influence on the index.
A doomsday warning or a capitulation session? It remains to be seen.
Meanwhile, Australian consumer confidence rebounded 4.2% in February to its highest level since November. Go figure. Although the survey was conducted prior to this most recent bout of financial market panic.
Testimonial
Wall Street was poised last night to hear what Janet Yellen had to say to the House Financial Committee. The punters were hoping for confirmation as to whether there will or will not be a March Fed rate hike, without much confidence in such clarity. As it was Yellen provided something for everyone, which simply adds to the confusion.
US jobs growth is strong, the Fed chair noted, and inflation is still expected to reach 2%. But it will get there more slowly than previously assumed. The level of volatility in global markets at present is weighing, and the Fed will not hike rates until things calm down. But the next move is still going to be up, Yellen insisted, not down, as many in the market are beginning to predict.
The take-out is that a March rate hike now seems very unlikely. On that note, the Dow rallied almost two hundred points early in the session. But June still looms large, and that is not good for those hoping for no hikes, or even a cut, or even negative rates, despite June being a long time away.
Throw in another dip in the West Texas crude price and the Dow closed down a hundred. But here, too, we saw some big names with weak individual stories on the night. The broad market S&P500, on the other hand, closed flat. The Nasdaq bounced back 0.5%. So it was a very mixed bag last night, and more of a stock picker’s playing field.
US banks were supported by the news, as I noted yesterday, that Deutsche Bank is looking to buy back its bonds. Deutsche shares rose 6% last night and floated all global big bank boats.
It may be that the dust is about to settle on the European bank collapse story, as such banks actually fail to collapse. The market is clearly haunted by ghosts of 2008. Wall Street, on the other hand, is still very much beholden to the oil story, and it will be some time before oil prices can rebound.
Commodities
Brent crude actually rallied last night, and is up US44c at US$31.22/bbl. But West Texas is down another US67c at US$27.73/bbl and the market fears a breach of the earlier low below 27.
Choppiness continues on the London Metal Exchange. Last night nickel fell 1.7% to close below US$8000/t for the first time since…wait for it…2003. In 2003 the expression “commodities super-cycle” had yet to be coined. Copper fell a percent and zinc rose a percent.
Iron ore fell US20c to US$44.50/t.
Gold remains relatively steady at US$1193.40/oz with the US dollar index down only 0.2% at 95.96. But the Aussie is up 0.7% at US$0.7106.
Today
The SPI Overnight closed up 20 points or 0.4%.
China remains on holiday but Japan also takes a break today.
Janet Yellen’s Congressional testimony moves across to the Senate Banking Committee tonight, but there is unlikely anything new she can add.
Rio Tinto’s ((RIO)) earnings result will prove a highlight today. Other reporters in the crowd include the ASX ((ASX)), Cochlear ((COH)), Mirvac ((MGR)), Suncorp ((SUN)) and Virgin Australia ((VAH)).
Rudi will be on Sky Business twice today. First at noon, for Lunch Money, then again between 7-8pm for his first interview in 2016 by Peter Switzer.
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CHARTS
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: ASX - ASX LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: CBA - COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: COH - COCHLEAR LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: CPU - COMPUTERSHARE LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: MGR - MIRVAC GROUP
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: RIO - RIO TINTO LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: SUN - SUNCORP GROUP LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: TLS - TELSTRA GROUP LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: WOW - WOOLWORTHS GROUP LIMITED