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The Overnight Report: Fedheads Or Fedtails

Daily Market Reports | Sep 13 2016

This story features CSL LIMITED. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: CSL

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 239 points or 1.3% while the S&P gained 1.5% to 2159 and the Nasdaq rose 1.7%.

Lemmings

I took an each way bet this time yesterday in suggesting maybe local investors would assume the Australian market had already seen a Fed rate hike-related sell-off and as such look to pick up some bargains, or perhaps we’d simply see “one of those panic 100 point drops we suffer every now and then”. Clearly, panic set in.

At yesterday’s close, fears of a Fed rate hike, surfacing late August, had manifested as 6.1% plunge for the ASX200. That’s 6% wiped off the Australian stock market for the sake of US rates going from 0.50% to 0.75%. At Friday night’s close, the S&P500 had fallen 2.9% for the same reason. Talk about coughs and colds.

But clearly it was a capitulation session yesterday on the local market as the resources sectors, industrials and utilities were sold down by 3%, the banks, healthcare, info tech and consumer discretionary by 2% and the staples and telcos by 1.5%. On such “outperformance”, clearly Woolies and Telstra had already suffered enough.

Yet last night we saw a rebound on Wall Street. And given the futures are up 79 points this morning which, funnily enough, is exactly what they were down yesterday morning, presumably we’ll see a rebound on the local market today as well.

However if we do rebound today, it won’t be because local investors have decided yesterday’s sell-off was indeed overdone given the selling that preceded it and nor will it be because investors have decided 25 bips on the Fed rate is really no big deal in the scheme of things. It will be because another Fedhead came out last night and this time spoke dovishly.

So if we rebound today, it will be because maybe there won’t be a Fed rate hike next week. If there is, one can only assume we’ll go down again, maybe all the way back to our old friend 5000.

And if there isn’t, who’s going to be game enough to buy the market back up ahead of the December Fed meeting, which would solidly firm as a rate hike chance?

But on the other hand…

Last night Fed governor Lael Brainard (sorry, who?) suggested “prudence” is required with regard rate hikes. The Fed governor is an official with a permanent vote on the FOMC unlike the Fed presidents of the various regions who form part of the FOMC on rotation.

Another little-known Fedhead also piped up on the dovish side while better-known Atlanta Fed president Dennis Lockhart suggested a hike would require “serious discussion”.

The good news is we have now entered a Fedspeak blackout period ahead of the Fed meeting. They will all now have to shut the hell up. The bad news is we still have over a week to wait. It has been suggested Brainard was sent out last night to “calm” the markets, following Wall Street’s big plunge on Friday night. If only these idiots could just keep their bloody mouths shut in the first place.

There is quite a lot of US data to be delivered between now and the Fed meeting so no doubt they will have the ferry swaying from side to side. Interestingly the Bank of Japan will also hold a policy meeting next week – on the day before the Fed statement is released that night.

On another interesting note, it was suggested by a Wall Street trader on US business TV this morning that Friday night’s sell-off was not just about the Fed, but also about the latest North Korean nuclear missile test vis a vis the thought of Donald Trump being the man with the US launch codes.

And on a final interesting note, Eric Rosengren’s comments on Friday night sparked the sell-off in US stock markets, a rise in the US dollar, a plunge in gold and a rally in US bond yields. Last night Brainard’s comments caused a rebound in US stocks and a dip in the US dollar, but gold and the US ten-year yield are unmoved.

Commodities

West Texas crude fell 3% on Friday night and last night rose US33c or 0.7% to US$46.06.

Base metal prices all fell bar nickel but last night only copper managed a slight bounce, while aluminium fell another 0.5% and lead and zinc fell 1.5%, and nickel copped a 2.5% hiding.

Iron ore is unchanged at US$57.50/t.

Gold is as good as unchanged at US$1327.40/oz.

The US dollar index is down 0.2% at 95.13 and following its big plunge on Friday night, the Aussie is up 0.3% at US$0.7565.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed up 79 points or 1.5%.

China will release its monthly industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investment numbers today.

NAB will release its local business confidence survey.

A handful of stocks go ex today, including CSL ((CSL)) and Healthscope ((HSO)).

Rudi will link up with Sky Business around 11.15am, through Skype, to discuss broker calls.
 

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