Daily Market Reports | Jul 27 2016
This story features WOOLWORTHS GROUP LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: WOW
By Greg Peel
The Dow closed down 19 points or 0.1% while the S&P was flat at 2169 and the Nasdaq rose 0.2%.
Resilient
It was back to a familiar pattern on the local market yesterday as the ASX200 plunged 35 points on the opening rotation before bouncing sharply to ultimately stumble its way back into the positive. Any attempts to send this market into reverse appear ill-fated at present.
The sector to watch yesterday was always going to be energy, given the oil price fell out of its technical range overnight. In the end a 1.5% drop on the day was a modest response compared to the sort of volatility we were seeing earlier in the year.
With the short-coverers licking their wounds, Woolworths ((WOW)) was able to fall back 3% yesterday to a more sensible level after Monday’s 8% pop. Analysts have applauded the tough stance being taken by the embattled supermarket, but do not foresee any great turnaround for some time yet.
Consumer staples thus closed down 0.8% in what was otherwise a mixed session across the sectors. Investors were no doubt positioning ahead of today’s local CPI release, and RBA implications, and tonight’s Fed statement release. The banks had a good day, healthcare didn’t, the telcos are being dominated by a down-playing of expectations from Telstra ((TLS)) and would you know it, utilities was up again.
Materials was flat yesterday but may not be today following a big jump in the iron ore price overnight.
Today’s June quarter CPI numbers could be interesting. The March numbers shocked with a 0.2% drop in quarterly headline inflation and despite a 0.2% rise in the RBA’s core inflation measure, the central bank wasted no time in acting.
Economists are forecasting a turnaround in June to 0.4% headline growth but for annual headline inflation to fall to 1.1% from 1.3%. If the RBA acted at 1.3%, why would it not act again at 1.1%? Except for the fact economists expect core inflation to rise to 1.7% from 1.5%.
That’s still outside the RBA’s 2-3% comfort zone, but is it enough to ensure an August rate cut?
Looks like we’ll have to wait for the actual results.
Hamburgled
McDonalds (Dow) posted a shocker last night. The 4.5% fall for this otherwise defensive consumer staple (Yes – in America fast food is considered staple) was its biggest one day drop since the GFC, and worth 40 Dow points.
It was enough to sour the early mood on Wall Street, along with another dip in the oil price, and the Dow was consequently down over a hundred points in early trade. But as was the case on the local market yesterday, Wall Street fought its way back to a flat close.
In other Dow earnings news, new Yahoo owner Verizon posted a beat but its share price fell, while share price gains were booked for DuPont and United Technologies following positive reports.
After the bell this morning, Twitter disappointed and its shares are down 10% as I write, while Apple (Dow) did the opposite and its shares are up 7%. This bodes well for the Dow tonight, although we will likely see the usual quiet market ahead of the Fed.
The Fed keeps telling us it’s data dependent. Last night saw US new home sales up 3.5% in June to the highest level in seven years. Case-Shiller house prices were slightly higher in May, while the latest Conference Board monthly consumer survey showed confidence steady this month from the last.
Overall the data continue to improve, prompting many on Wall Street to point out that in any other era, the Fed would be hiking steadily. Brexit is now past us in terms of an immediate threat but no one expects the Fed to raise tonight, and there are still plenty of pundits believing the Fed will not move ahead of the election.
Any excuse, it seems. While history shows the Fed is not always kept at bay by an election, the long-running and often hysterical sitcom that is the US election process has arguably “jumped the shark” this year in terms of sheer ludicrousness.
Commodities
West Texas crude is down US41c at US$42.64/bbl.
The US dollar index is steady at 97.16 and all base metals moved 0.5-1% last night in London – copper up and the others down.
Iron ore jumped US$1.60 to US$57.40/t.
Gold is US$4.40 higher at US$1319.70/oz.
The Aussie is up 0.5% over 24 hours at US$0.7504 despite the flat greenback. This occurred in the local session yesterday and suggests there may be some concern amongst those short the currency that today’s CPI numbers won’t be as weak as many assume.
Today
The SPI Overnight closed up 12 points. We can probably attribute most of that to the iron ore price.
The CPI numbers will be out late this morning.
Tonight sees the UK post its first estimate of June quarter GDP, but being pre-Brexit it won’t mean much.
The US sees durable goods ahead of the 2pm release of the Fed statement.
On the local stock front, Fortescue Metals ((FMG)), Independence Group ((IGO)), Sandfire Resources ((SFR)) and Senex Energy ((SXY)) will post production reports today, although Independence has already pre-released some numbers.
Rudi will host Your Money, Your Call Equities tonight on Sky Business, 8-9.30pm.
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