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The Overnight Report: Modestly Moderate

Daily Market Reports | Sep 08 2016

This story features SANTOS LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: STO

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 11 points while the S&P was flat at 2186 and the Nasdaq rose 0.2%.

Happy Anniversary

At 0.5% quarter on quarter and 3.3% year on year, Australia’s June quarter GDP growth was as good as in line with expectations and marked 25 years of uninterrupted growth. Bearing in mind the last recession was one we had to have.

It was an unusual start to trading on the local bourse yesterday given the futures said down 10 points and the ASX200 shot up almost 30 points from the open. Then the GDP numbers came out.

You’d think we’d all be thrilled with the sort of growth number any major developed economy would swoon over but no, like the strong Aussie, it’s a complication. Can the RBA justify cutting the cash rate further on this growth number? Low inflation justifies a cut, but the GDP would suggest otherwise.

The Commonwealth Bank economists, for one, are still tipping a November cut to 1.25% but they do make a couple of points from the breakdown of yesterday’s numbers. One is that government infrastructure spending is picking up, which despite Labor’s sad attempt to negatively politicise is just what the RBA wants to see – fiscal support to take the pressure off monetary policy.

Another is that weak wages growth, which is keeping the lid on inflation, is concentrated in the mining states. This suggests the issue is cyclical and not structural, such that as the decline in mining investment abates, so too should wages in the industry stop weakening any further.

Either way, the market didn’t like the strong result, even though it came in pretty much on the money. The index closed the session up only ten points. Funnily enough, the consumer sectors did like numbers as they were the stand-out performers on the day. Retailers like rate cuts, but then they also like economic growth. The offset was energy.

Oil prices were a little lower but the 5% fall in Santos ((STO)) was the main drag on the sector. According to the AFR, the Shanghai Stock Exchange is questioning why a Chinese company took an 11.7% equity stake this year in an Australian company booking huge losses.

Moves in other sectors were benign.

Oh Please

It was another dull old session on Wall Street last night. Supposedly everyone is now back to work after their summer vacations but while volumes have picked up from the previous week, they remain tepid at best.

The highlight, supposedly, of the day was the release of the Fed Beige Book, an anecdotal assessment of the state of the economies of each of the Fed regions. Growth in each region was deemed to be either “modest” or “moderate”, not that anybody much knows what that means or what the difference is. And growth has been M&M in every Beige Book pretty much since about the time QE started.

As I’ve said before, never has a book been so aptly named.

Wall Street scoffed at the Beige Book and scoffed again when a couple of Fedheads came out to tout the usual “it’s time for a rate hike” spiel. No one expects a September rate hike unless it has come to the point the Fed decides to man-up and actually lead the market rather than meekly follow it.

Testament to a slow news day on the Street is that all anyone could seem to talk about was the new iPhone, which everyone agrees is little different to the old one. Still, Apple shares closed higher on the day and hence the Nasdaq once again snuck quietly to a new record high.

Commodities

What Wall Street missed was the late release of a weekly oil inventory report that showed a bigger drawdown than was expected (we play this game every week), hence in electronic trading West Texas has shot up US$1.26 or 2.8% to US$46.14/bbl.

A strike in Chile provided a bit of a boost for the copper price last night but the sellers were lined up for any sign of life and thus copper closed up only 0.7% in London. Nickel rose 1% and lead fell 1.5% in yet another mixed session.

Iron ore fell US30c to US$58.30/t.

After Tuesday night’s pop, gold has fallen back US$4.40 to US$1345.00/oz as the US dollar index bounced off technical support and is up 0.1% at 94.96.

The Aussie is subsequently off 0.1% at US$0.7673, with the in-line GDP result failing to make any impression.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 18 points or 0.3%. Not sure why, unless traders expect a response to last night’s hawkish Fedspeak. If accurate we may once again test support for the ASX200 at 5400.

Otherwise we’ll see trade numbers today both locally (July) and from China (August).

Tonight the ECB will hold a policy meeting.

Quite a few ex-divs today, including Woolworths ((WOW)), while Sigma Pharmaceuticals ((SIP)) will release its earnings report.

Rudi will appear twice on Sky Business today. First from 12.30 to 2.30pm and again during Switzer TV between 7-8pm.
 

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