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The Overnight Report: Déjà Vu

Daily Market Reports | Feb 24 2016

This story features BHP GROUP LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: BHP

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 188 points or 1.1% while the S&P fell 1.3% to 1921 and the Nasdaq lost 1.55.

Reversal

It started well – the ASX200 was up over 30 points around 11am thanks to a positive lead from Wall Street and jumps in oil and iron ore prices. BHP Billiton ((BHP)) shares had closed up 6% in London. But then the wheels fell off, and we closed the session down 21 points.

Commodity prices may have jumped overnight but it happened to be the day BHP reported a $7.8bn first half loss and, contrary to assurances from the company’s CEO, abandoned its sacred progressive dividend policy for a 50% payout ratio. The move did not come as a shock, and as it was BHP still closed up 2.6% on the session, helping the materials sector to a counter-trend 0.9% gain.

The Qantas ((QAN)) CEO waxed lyrical about just how wonderful his team was in turning the airline around from steep losses to steep profits but the company kept all the money for itself. No dividend? Qantas shares nosedived 5%.

Aside from the earnings reports on the day which had some influence in stalling the market’s attempts to head north from 5000 once more, news that the PBoC had devalued the renminbi by the most in six weeks sent Asian markets scurrying from the open and turned the tide locally.

Adding to the turnaround were falling oil prices in the Asian session. The 200 point rally in the Dow overnight and the 6% rally for BHP in London had a lot to do with a supposed big jump in the oil price overnight. But it was expiry day for WTI, everyone was short, and an ensuing short-covering scramble on the rollover was quite simply the only reason for the pop. I made note of this yesterday and suggested we wait to see what happens overnight. Well, WTI’s down 5%.

Square the two sessions and oil’s gone nowhere. The stock market has been led around on a chain.

The turnaround saw the local energy sector close down 0.5%, albeit Oil Search ((OSH)) joined the LNG loss-makers club and was hit 3%. Telstra ((TLS)) copped another hammering as the gloss continues to rub off that leviathan and a 0.7% fall for the banks after a reasonable recovery cemented a weak session.

And speaking of banks…

Oil was up on Monday night and back again last night and US stock markets have followed suit. So nothing much has changed. Admittedly, oil’s overnight fall was helped by a comment from the Saudi oil minister who suggested “there’s no sense wasting our time seeking production cuts”.

Really? So perhaps from now on you might just shut the **** up and stop playing your juvenile little games.

Last night’s weakness on Wall Street also lent itself to that other subject du jour – global banking weakness. Standard Chartered was the latest of the EU banks to report substantial losses which, while simply an echo of peer results to date, served to again highlight the impact of weak oil prices and slowing emerging market economies, particularly that of China, on the European banking industry.

On the back of Standard Chartered’s result came JP Morgan’s trading update, at which CEO Jamie Dimon admitted the March quarter to date has been a shocker, fees are down 25%, trading profits are down 20%, and hundreds of millions in provisions have been taken against loans to the energy and commodity sectors. Were oil to trade around the US$25/bbl level for some time, up to US$1.5bn would need to be taken as provisions, Dimon revealed.

It’s a bit of an eye-opener but not completely a shock, and not enough to derail the US banking industry once more. JP Morgan (Dow) shares fell 4%.

The Conference Board’s monthly measure of US consumer confidence showed a fall to a seven-month low 92.2 from January’s 97.8 when 96.9 was expected. That’s not good news for an economy that’s 70% consumption driven.

The reality is the usual correlation between US consumer confidence and actual consumption has faded of late because no matter how confident consumers feel, they’re not spending. They’re buying cars and they’re buying houses (existing home sales were up 11% year on year in January) but that’s all about cheap finance. Still rattled from the GFC, US consumers are taking the windfall gain of lower petrol prices and pocketing it.

And that’s where a big part of the problem lies. Low oil prices would not lead the world into another recession if only the rest of the global economy would provide a spending offset.

Commodities

The new April delivery contract for West Texas crude is down US$1.58 or 4.7% at US$31.81/bbl. April Brent is down US$1.41 or 4.1% at US$33.25/bbl.

Iron ore is up another US20c to US$50.50/t.

While one can never quite be sure who is following who, base metals fell back again last night having rallied on Monday night, following the same oil-stock market path. Aluminium and zinc closed down 2%, nickel and lead down 1% and copper down 0.5%.

Mention weakness in banks and you’re likely to see a pop in gold. Gold is up US$14.80 at US$1223.70/oz.

The US dollar index is a tad higher at 97.47 and the Aussie is 0.2% lower at US$0.7214.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 31 points or 0.6%.

Locally we’ll see the first of the December quarter GDP component releases today, being construction work down and wage prices.

How Bridge Street finishes its session will likely again have a lot to do with earnings reports, and today is a biggie in terms of volume. Highlights include Asciano ((AIO)) and Qube Holdings ((QUB)), which are very much in the spotlight at the moment, Fortescue Metals ((FMG)), Wesfarmers ((WES)), Westfield ((WFD)) and WorleyParsons ((WOR)).

Note also that as the reporting season builds towards its crescendo, the ex-divs are beginning to come thick and fast, acting as a natural drag on the index. Today’s ex-div highlight is Rio Tinto ((RIO)).

Rudi will be hosting Your Money, Your Call Equities on Sky Business tonight, 8-9.30pm. Rumour has it, he's invited a special guest. I think most of us know what this means…
 

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CHARTS

BHP FMG QAN QUB RIO TLS WES WOR

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: BHP - BHP GROUP LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: FMG - FORTESCUE LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: QAN - QANTAS AIRWAYS LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: QUB - QUBE HOLDINGS LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: RIO - RIO TINTO LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: TLS - TELSTRA GROUP LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: WES - WESFARMERS LIMITED

For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: WOR - WORLEY LIMITED