Tag Archives: China and Emerging Markets

article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Tsipras Lays Down

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 217 points or 1.2% while the S&P gained 1.1% to 2099 and the Nasdaq rallied 1.7%.

Greece

The story so far…

Six months ago the Syriza party was elected in Greece on a platform of rebuffing Greece’s creditors and lifting harsh austerity measures. Yet prime minister Alexis Tsipras found himself unable to win any concessions from the EC/ECB/IMF troika. As the negotiations continued, the Greek economy sank lower into the mire.

Having hoped that by defaulting to the IMF the creditors might give ground, Tsipras offered some concessions of his own, only to be rebuffed by the creditors. He called a referendum which resulted in over 60% of Greeks saying no to further austerity.

With still no deal from the creditors, Tsipras appeared to ignore the referendum result by offering further concessions to austerity demands. On Sunday Tsipras was told he was close, but still not close enough.

While the creditors saw light at the end of the tunnel, as the Australian stock market closed yesterday afternoon it appeared a Grexit was still a threat as it was assumed Tsipras had offered his final deal. A summit meeting of EU leaders had been called off due to the ongoing stalemate. Tsipras was told to go home and try again.

But he didn’t go home. Having already held their doorstop press conferences, the eurozone leaders went back into a meeting and in the wee smalls of Monday morning Brussels time, a deal was reached. A deal which forces Greece into tighter austerity measures than were previously in place. In return, an E86bn, three-year bailout package, but no debt relief.

Despite endless hours of negotiation, protests, referendums, market turmoil, shuttered Greek banks and the near collapse of the Greek economy, those six months have been a complete waste of time.

Assuming, that is, that the Greek parliament agrees to the bailout package, which is far from a given. Then the eurozone leaders have to meet again before each of the remaining 18 member parliaments have to agree to the deal. While it is unlikely the other members would rock the boat, it is not beyond the realms either.

China

The Shanghai index shocked no one yesterday in dutifully rising another 2.4%. As for how long an orchestrated rally can continue is unknown, and there remains the question of what happens when suspensions are lifted on half the stocks on the market, which must occur at some point.

Presently the Chinese stock market is no longer a concern and yesterday the Australian market posted another choppy session, this time ending 0.3% down rather than 0.3% up as was the case on Friday, ahead of whatever the latest development was going to be in Greece. But there were also Chinese trade data to contend with.

China’s exports rose 2.8% in June and imports fell 6.1%. While these are not good numbers, they were surprisingly much better than the 0.2% rise in exports and 15% plunge in imports expected by economists. There may just be some stability returning to China’s economy, although further stimulus measures from Beijing are still likely on the numbers as they were.

On Wednesday we’ll see China’s June quarter GDP result.

China’s trade numbers were not good or bad enough to have a marked effect on Bridge Street, where Greece was still the word yesterday. Most sectors were weaker, although healthcare enjoyed solid gains and the telco offered defence. News that APRA is destined to insist on increased capital ratios for the big banks helped the financials down 0.5%, but given such requirements have been expected now since late last year, the impact was never going to be extreme.

There is talk Commonwealth Bank ((CBA)) will raise new capital as early as next month, when it releases its FY15 result. National Bank ((NAB)) has already raised, as part of its UK divestment strategy, and ANZ Bank ((ANZ)) is talking about possibly selling off some of its minority Asian stakes, which may temper its raising needs. That just leaves Westpac ((WBC)).

All will be potentially forgotten today, nevertheless, in the wake of last night’s news from Brussels. This morning the SPI Overnight closed up 91 points, or 1.7%. While such a daily move in the physical market is not unusual, particularly of late, I can’t remember the last time we saw that big a move in the overnight futures.

Wall Street

The euro dropped sharply on the Greek capitulation. The euro has proven rather enigmatic throughout the whole negotiation process, often moving in the opposite direction to that one might assume. One can argue that a resolution on Greece removes eurozone risk, and as such the euro should be higher, but one can also argue that a eurozone without Greece is a stronger net economy, thus if Greece is staying the euro should be lower.

It was lower last night, but then the other argument is that if the long running Greek saga is now finally about to end, attention returns to when the Fed will raise its interest rate. A Greek resolution, and stability in China, might just bring that date forward to September once more.

The US dollar index is up 0.8% at 96.80. The US ten-year yield made its big move on Friday night, thus last night only ticked up another one basis point to 2.43%.

Europe’s stock markets also made their big moves on Friday night, but that didn’t prevent another 1.5% rally in Germany and 2% in France.

When the bell rang in New York, the Dow shot up 200 points. And there it stayed for the rest of the session. It was a step-jump adjustment to European risk, to a new pivot level. And a very familiar pivot level it is too. Basically the Dow is back at 18,000 and the S&P is back at 2100 for about the umpteenth time this year.

Wall Street remains cognisant of the fact the story is not yet over in Greece, with Wednesday night’s vote in the Greek parliament still critical to what happens next. But traders are preparing for the possibility of being able to stop talking about Greece, and China, and simply concentrating on the raft of major corporate earnings results due over this week and beyond and the perennial debate over the Fed.

Commodities

The news from Brussels initially sparked short-covering on the LME last night but after an initial scramble, aluminium slipped back to be up only 0.6% and copper closed unchanged. Exuberance was only evident at the bell in zinc, up 2%, and lead, nickel and tin, all up 3%.

After its wild ride of the past several sessions, iron ore was unchanged last night at US$49.90/t.

Iran continues to dominate the oil markets before a backdrop of what’s going on elsewhere, and last night things appeared to be coming to a head. Intent on reaching some sort of agreement, the US has kept extending the deadline for Iran to reach a deal (sounds kinda familiar). But now the Europeans in the negotiating team have reached the ends of their tethers, and have insisted either a deal is done by next Monday or no deal will be done at all.

Last night West Texas fell US83c to US$52.01/bbl and Brent fell US73c to US$57.96/bbl.

Gold fell US$5.30 to US$1157.50/oz on the stronger greenback.

The Aussie is down 0.5% to US$0.7411 on the stronger greenback.

Today

As noted, the SPI Overnight closed up 91 points.

We now have to wait until Thursday on Bridge Street before we know the outcome of the Greek parliamentary vote, although there’ll no doubt be some indication of general feeling beforehand.

Meanwhile, today sees the release of NAB’s monthly business confidence survey.

Tonight Wall Street will be focused on June retail sales numbers.
 

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article 3 months old

The Monday Report

By Greg Peel

Greece

There is little point in reviewing the action in the local market on Friday and the offshore markets on Friday night before taking note of developments in Brussels over the weekend. Suffice to say that while markets were optimistic on Friday, we are effectively left with “no deal” this morning.

The game’s not ever yet, nonetheless.

We recall that last weekend the Greeks voted “no” in the referendum, thereby implying they were not in favour of further austerity measures and if that meant exiting the eurozone, so be it. They were told by Tsipras that a “no” vote would give him greater bargaining power.

Then Tsipras went back to Brussels with a new deal that, strangely, conceded to some of the reforms that have been demanded by the creditors all along. On Saturday the Greek parliament provided a vote of approval for the new deal. One wonders what the referendum was all about.

On Sunday the eurozone finance ministers met to discuss Tsipras’ new proposal and decided that while it was a step in the right direction, it was nevertheless not quite sufficient to ensure a new bailout would be forthcoming. Given this meant “no deal” as yet, a planned emergency meeting of all 28 EU leaders was cancelled but a meeting of the 19 eurozone leaders went ahead instead.

With the likes of France and Italy supportive of the new deal but Germany and others still not satisfied, Tsipras has been told that the Greek parliament must pass his new reforms, regarding pensions, VAT and other concessions, into law by Wednesday. He must also enact further reforms demanded by the creditors, including a step-up in privatisation.

Then the meetings held yesterday will all be held again this coming weekend, to either approve a third bailout for Greece or to plan for Greece’s “temporary” exit of the eurozone.

China

Hope of a Greek deal being reached was one driving factor on Bridge Street on Friday but realistically all eyes were on Shanghai, where ultimately the Chinese index closed up another 4.5% to mark the largest two-day gain in seven years. That is, of course, with only half of the listed stocks on the exchange open for trade.

It may be that the Chinese stock market has now found a bottom but this has not exactly brought a huge sigh of relief on Australian or other markets, given it is a bottom completely orchestrated by the Chinese communist government. As to if and where the Chinese market might have turned around eventually without intervention, we’ll never know. But at least it has made for an uneasy calm for now, reflected in a choppy session on Bridge Street which saw the ASX200 bounce around the technically significant 5500 level before settling just under it.

The index was up as much as 57 points at lunchtime but being a Friday, and knowing that Greece’s fate lay in the balance over the weekend, positions were squared through the afternoon.

Optimism

While European markets are not ignoring China, they are far more focused on the Greek drama at present as one might expect. On Friday night a deal between Greece and its creditors that would end the whole Grexit risk story appeared as close as it has ever been. Subsequently the German and French stock indices both rallied around 3%.

Once again that mood flowed into the open on Wall Street, sending the US indices soaring from the bell. But while often such influence fades late morning when European traders go home, resulting in a turnaround, this time Wall Street actually kicked a little higher to the close.

The Dow closed up 211 points or 1.2%, the S&P gained 1.2% to 2076 and the Nasdaq rallied 1.5%.

With all the rocking and rolling, it is interesting to note both the Australian and US stock markets ended the week basically where they began.

Wall Street was optimistic about Greece but also relieved about China on Friday night. The US is not an exporter of raw materials to China given the US economy consumes all it produces, but the prices of those commodities are still impacted by global trade and thus China. More significantly, China offers a vast consumer market only now beginning to suck up everything from iPhones to Cadillacs, thus China is vitally important as an export destination for US goods and services.

Thus in a similar vein as Australia but from the other end of the production line, China matters to America too.

But America’s own economy is never far from the minds of Wall Street traders and to that end there remain two pressing points at present – the endless debate about the first Fed rate rise and the June quarter corporate result season, which ramps up in earnest this week.

On the former, Friday night saw Janet Yellen reiterate her earlier suggestion that the first rate rise will most likely occur in 2015, assuming the US economy continues to improve at its current pace. While this comment seems suddenly hawkish compared to what was perceived as a more dovish last Fed policy statement, it represents no change in earlier Fed rhetoric.

The June Fed statement gave a nod to international considerations, including a plunging Chinese stock market and the growing possibility of a Grexit, but it appears now as both those issues have been or will be resolved. It may still be, nevertheless, that the Fed holds off until December rather than moving in September, but the jury is still out.

The US bond market certainly took Yellen’s comments on board but realistically moves higher in German and other European yields on Friday night also helped drive the US ten-year bond up 12 basis points to 2.42%, again a similar level to where it began the week despite having flirted with 2.20% in the interim.

The US dollar index fell back 0.5% to 86.03 on euro strength.

Commodities

The iron ore price has not yet returned from whence it came but another US$1.60 gain to US$49.90/t on Friday suggests the stock market-related selling that sent iron ore crashing during the week has now reverted to buying as the Shanghai index recovers.

Base metals quietened down ahead of the weekend’s Greek proceedings. Lead and nickel saw falls in excess of 1% but the other metals were steady.

Greece and China are also impacting on oil markets but so too are the ongoing nuclear negotiations with Iran which, like the Greek saga, seem to go on and on. The same optimism over Greece and China which lifted other markets was also evident in oil markets on Friday night, with West Texas crude up US25c to US$52.84/bbl and Brent up US22c to US$58.69/bbl, but caution over the implications of an ever-nearing lifting of Iranian sanctions are keeping oil traders cautious.

Gold rose US$3.60 to US$1162.80/oz.

The Aussie has stalled completely at US$0.7447.

The Week Ahead

The SPI Overnight closed up 35 points or 0.7% on Saturday morning given solid gains in Europe and the US, but given those gains were driven by expectations of a Greek deal been reached on the weekend such strength may be tempered when the SPI reopens at 9.30am.

Traders will continue to watch the Chinese stock market this week, although it appears now the “put option” of government intervention has limited any possibility of further downside. The focus will then swing to actual Chinese economy data (or at least, as “actual” as we can take Chinese economic data to be).

Today sees China’s June trade numbers and Wednesday brings industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investment, along with the all-important June quarter GDP result. Consensus has China’s growth slipping to an annual rate of 6.8%, down from 7.0% in the March quarter.

As the Greek drama plays out for yet another week, actual eurozone economic data will also be in focus and out of the spotlight of negotiations in Brussels, the numbers have been pretty impressive of late. This week sees industrial production, investor sentiment, inflation and trade data and on Thursday the ECB will hold a policy meeting.

Earnings results will dominate Wall Street this week but there are also plenty of economic releases due. Tomorrow night it’s retail sales and business inventories and Wednesday brings industrial production, the PPI, the Empire State activity index and the Fed Beige Book. Thursday it’s housing sentiment and the Philadelphia Fed activity index and Friday it’s the CPI, housing starts and fortnightly consumer sentiment.

Australia’s economic highlights this week will be the NAB business confidence survey on Tuesday and the Westpac consumer confidence survey on Wednesday.

On the local stock front, the resource sector quarterly production report season hots up towards the end of the week with Rio Tinto ((RIO)), Iluka Resources ((ILU)), Whitehaven Coal ((WHC)), Woodside Petroleum ((WPL)) and Santos ((STO)) all in the mix.

Rudi will not make his weekly appearances on Sky Business this week due to other commitments.
 

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article 3 months old

Next Week At A Glance

For a more comprehensive preview of next week's events, please refer to "The Monday Report", published each Monday morning. For all economic data release dates, ex-div dates and times and other relevant information, please refer to the FNArena Calendar.


By Greg Peel

The Chinese stock market will clearly be in focus again today when it opens late morning, as the market waits to see whether yesterday’s six-year record rally was just a blip or signals the beginning of the end of the Chinese rout.

Next week China will remain very much in focus as Beijing releases its June quarter GDP result. Wednesday’s release will coincide with a month of June data dump of industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investment numbers. Prior to that, Monday will see China’s June trade numbers.

Next week will also, supposedly, see Greece’s fate determined one way or the other, although I have a disquieting feeling I’ve seen this movie before. Tsipras has submitted his latest proposal for a three-year bailout which is believed to include some further concessions to Greece’s creditors, although given the referendum result surely the proposal cannot represent anything like a capitulation.

The Greek parliament will vote on the proposal pre-emptively tonight, removing that potential obstacle as European leaders and officials mull over the details ahead of a summit meeting on Sunday. It appears as though the Germans may now be prepared to offer some form of debt relief, possibly in the form of a “haircut”, although the IMF and ECB have ruled out such nonsense with regard their own specific debts.

Greece’s debt to Germany is not actually due until 2023.

While all of that’s going on, a raft of US economic data releases next week will ensure we don’t forget about the other important issue of the day – just when the Fed will make its first rate hike.

Next week the US sees numbers for retail sales, inventories, industrial production, inflation, consumer sentiment, housing sentiment and housing starts, along with the Empire State and Philly Fed activity indices and the Fed Beige Book.

Locally we’ll see NAB’s monthly business and Westpac’s monthly consumer confidence surveys.

On the local stock front, the resource sector quarterly production report season hots up towards the end of the week with reports from Iluka Resources ((ILU)), Rio Tinto ((RIO)), Whitehaven Coal ((WHC)) and Santos ((STO)).
 

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Communists Invade Shanghai

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 33 points or 0.2% while the S&P gained 0.2% to 2051 and the Nasdaq added 0.3%.

One Point

It seems like almost blessed relief that yesterday the ASX200 should close up a mere one point, evoking a longing for the days when stock markets used to just trudge along quietly with a modest upside bias over time.

Unfortunately the one point close belies the fact the ASX200 was down 86 points yesterday in the first half hour of trade, with an 11.3% overnight drop in the iron ore price front of mind, and a backdrop of a Chinese stock market that had so far failed to stop crashing despite desperate efforts from Beijing.

But there the Australian market finally bottomed, and with an hour to go before the opening of the China market began to rally back just as sharply as it had fallen, to be square as the bell rang in Shanghai. And it is remarkable to note that within that one point close for the Australian index, which didn’t move much from midday, that the biggest sector gain on the day was posted by materials. Sure, base metal prices had all staged a rebound overnight but iron ore had fallen 11% and yet the sector dominated by iron ore miners rallied 1.5% to the close.

Toto, I don’t think we’re in Kansas anymore.

Call that a market?

A couple of months ago, when Beijing finally began to take heed of screams from across the globe that China’s retail-driven casino of a stock market was in dangerous bubble territory, the government added a further block of Shanghai-listed stocks that could be short-sold. Now, after a 30% bust of that bubble, the government is arresting short-sellers.

A couple of months ago, Beijing clamped down on runaway margin lending. Now, Beijing has allowed just about any asset, including the family home, to be used as collateral for margin loans.

Before the Shanghai Exchange opened yesterday, further measures were implemented, adding to an already desperate raft of measures. When the Exchange opened, some 50% of listed stocks were suspended from trading by the government. For the 50% still available, the government had announced it would fund share purchases by fund state-owned financial institutions. At the same time, it banned investors holding a 5% or greater stake in any one company from selling shares for six months.

Of course the Shanghai index was going to stop falling yesterday. It had to stop falling, given it is not a market anymore, but an orchestration by a wannabe-capitalist government who cannot shake off its communist heritage. Yesterday was the culmination of a market equivalent of sending the tanks into Tiananmen Square.

And lo and behold, the Shanghai index rose 5.8%. Given the intraday gyrations seen these past few sessions of up to 7-8%, it’s hard to believe yesterday saw Shanghai’s biggest one-day rally, close to close, in six years.

And lo and behold, on the news of Beijing’s emphatic stock market intervention, the iron ore price, which had been hammered the day before on flow-on selling from the stock market, turned around. The futures began to predict a sharp snap-back rally, and the Australian materials index closed the session up 1.5% when, at 10am, it looked as if listed junior iron ore miners may not even see out the day.

This morning iron ore has risen 9.5% or US$4.20 to US$48.30/t.

In my opinion, the Chinese government has this week set its capitalist superpower aspirations back a decade. Earlier this year the IMF seriously contemplated adding the renminbi into its basket of globally significant currencies. It decided China’s financial market reform process had not quite reached a level of sufficient maturity, and thus did not include the renminbi, albeit hinting success might come at the next review.

Good luck with that now.

It would be of no surprise that if the selling were to resume in the Chinese stock market the Chinese government would simply shut down the market altogether, for a period. Intervention would thus be complete.

Commodity Surge

Iron ore trading is dominated by China but base metal markets are more globally influenced, which is why LME traders called “oversold” on Wednesday night after Chinese margin call flow-on had forced metal prices to tumble. A rebound which begun on Wednesday night carried on last night following confirmation the Chinese stock market had indeed managed to stage a rally.

Aluminium and zinc rose 1.5%, copper and lead rose 2% and nickel rose 5%. Only tin missed out this time.

Oil markets are still under the influence of stalled Iranian negotiations but the China effect was not lost on them either last night, helping West Texas up US77c to US$52.59/bbl and Brent up US$1.22 to US$58.47/bbl.

Gold managed to tick up slightly to US$1159.20/oz even as all commodities hit the headwind of a 0.3% rise in the US dollar index to 96.49.

The Aussie is also up 0.3% at US$0.7448.

Wall Street

The French and German stock markets also rallied strongly last night, both up around 2.5%, influenced by China but also by murmurings from Germany that some form of debt relief for Greece is not completely out of the question.

The interesting thing about the whole Greek drama is that in the background, the eurozone economy has been posting some very solid, consensus-beating data of late. QE appears to be working. It is therefore very much in the favour of Europe’s large export economies – Germany’s in particular – that Greece and all of the Club Med basket cases remain in the eurozone.

The euro is currently trading at US$1.10. Someone has calculated that were Germany the only eurozone economy, the euro, or realistically the Deutschmark, would be trading at US$1.80. That would cripple the German economy.

The “final” big meeting is on Sunday. This morning Tsipras submitted his “final” proposal. Tonight a rushed session of the Greek parliament will vote on the proposal, so as to smooth the path were the creditors to actually reach a deal.

The exuberant buying on European markets typically flowed into the morning session on Wall Street, sending the Dow up over 200 points. Then the Europeans packed it in for the day, and the Dow drifted all the way back to a close of only up 33. Wall Street is not prepared to be quite so exuberant just yet.

But it does seem that Beijing’s actions have finally proven sufficient to stem the flight to safety into US bonds. Last night the US ten-year yield jumped back 10 basis points to 2.30%, and traders went back to debating the timing of the Fed rate hike.

Today

The lack of follow-through on Wall Street is probably why the SPI Overnight closed down 21 points or 0.4%.

By the way, yesterday the ABS revised down its May unemployment rate to 5.9% from 6.0%, and then said the rate rose to 6.0% in June, not that anyone paid much attention.

Today sees housing finance numbers, which may draw some attention.

Global focus has now moved from the Greek farce to the Chinese farce. What will happen in today’s episode?
 

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article 3 months old

Bull In A China Shock

By Tim Price, PFP Wealth Management

"No warning can save people determined to grow suddenly rich."

-       Lord Overstone.

History, wrote John W. Campbell Jr., doesn't always repeat itself. Sometimes it just screams, "Why don't you listen to me ?" and lets fly with a big stick. The definitive new millennium bubble, namely the Nasdaq Composite Index, peaked on the 10th of March 2000, at a level of 5,132. Within two years that same index would be trading at just above 1,000. $5 trillion in market value ended up going to money heaven.

History's big stick is flying again. The Shanghai Composite Index peaked on the 12th of June, at the rather eerily similar level of 5,166. As things stand it has lost a quarter of its value and over $2 trillion in the space of two weeks. The April 10th edition of the Financial Times carried a helpful anecdotal warning within an article entitled ‘China investors: stock market fever'. It contained the following classic:

"Li Shengnan, a 33-year-old sales associate for a consumer goods company in Shanghai, called a friend last week seeking investment advice. Ms Li wanted to know whether to take out a mortgage on her apartment and use the funds to invest in China's red-hot equity market.

"I never played the market before, but since March it seems like all my friends and co-workers are all getting rich, so I got excited," she said.

Recent investors in the Chinese market are getting excited, but not in a good way. The Wall Street Journal reports that the 10 worst performing funds of the past month are ‘structured' funds – i.e. they're leveraged index trackers. The three worst performers, all run by fund managers with less than a year's experience, fell by an average of 77% during the month.

This being China, bull markets aren't allowed to die without a fight, and the authorities are pulling out all the stops. The People's Bank of China has already cut interest rates and eased reserve requirements. The China Securities Regulatory Commission has relaxed collateral rules on margin loans. Not to be outdone, the Asset Management Association of China has issued a statement titled ‘Beautiful sunlight always comes after wind and rain'.

Such belief in the institutionalised defence of the market rather poignantly recalls JK Galbraith's spirited account of ‘The Great Crash 1929':

"The papers agreed, and this was also the informed view on Wall Street, that the worst was over. And it was predicted that on the following day the market would begin to receive organised support. Weakness, should it appear, would be tolerated no longer.

"Never was there a phrase with more magic than "organised support". Almost immediately it was on every tongue and in every news story about the market. Organised support meant that powerful people would organise to keep prices of stock at a reasonable level. With so many people wanting to avoid a further fall, a further fall would clearly be avoided."

There are many ways of losing money in the markets, but the belief by retail investors that the authorities will always look after retail investors is probably the most certain. And retail investors account for between 80% and 90% of trading in Chinese stocks. (The month of May saw more than 14 million trading accounts opened.) A large constituency of neophyte investors is now in the process of appreciating that financial markets can go in a direction other than up.

And there are, fundamentally, only two real ways of making money in the markets, and they are mutually exclusive. One is to follow price momentum. This is typically a shorter term trading strategy, or what one might refer to technically as speculation. The other is to buy high quality assets at less than their inherent worth. This is a longer term approach which one might refer to technically as value investing.

The Chinese stock markets are a gigantic playground for momentum traders, but are something of a desert for value investors. A recent research paper (‘The real value of China's stock market' by Jennifer Carpenter and Robert Whitelaw of New York University and Fangzhou Lu of MIT) puts it as follows:

"Though it has become the second largest in the world, with a market capitalisation of $6 trillion at the end of 2014, China's stock market is still a sideshow in a financial system dominated by a massive state-controlled banking system. After a rocky first decade from 1990 to 2000, China's stock market earned a reputation as a casino manipulated by speculators and insiders."

So it is progress of sorts that it is now a casino manipulated by the State.

Happily for foreign investors, what China's stock markets lack by way of corporate governance they also lack by way of foreign sponsorship; Capital Economics reckon that foreign investors account for just 1.5% of Chinese shares. The pain of this collapse will be felt almost entirely at home. And since stock returns in China display very low correlation with those of other large economies, there is no reason to presume that this latest China crisis will embark on an international tour.

Chinese stock markets may amount to ‘here be dragons' land, but it would be unfair to tar all of Asia with the same brush. Two markets that look especially attractive to us are Japan and Vietnam. Almost half of the Japanese stock market trades on a price / book ratio of less than 1. (Only 15% of the US stock market trades at a comparable multiple.) Vietnam, separately, looks set to benefit from the removal of limits on the foreign ownership of listed businesses. As UBS point out, Vietnam's market cap-to-GDP ratio is the lowest in Asia, at only 30%. Having been the worst performing market in Asia for the last five years, Vietnam has the potential to be one of the best over the next five years. If jitters in Chinese markets happen to make other Asian investments cheaper in the short run, that clearly makes them even more compelling.

Tim Price
Director of Investment
PFP Wealth Management
3rd February 2014.

Follow me on twitter: timfprice
Weblog: http://thepriceofeverything.typepad.com

Reprinted with permission of the publisher. Content included in this article is not by association the view of FNArena (see our disclaimer).

Important Note:
PFP has made this document available for your general information. You are encouraged to seek advice before acting on the information, either from your usual adviser or ourselves. We have taken all reasonable steps to ensure the content is correct at the time of publication, but may have condensed the source material. Any views expressed or interpretations given are those of the author. Please note that PFP is not responsible for the contents or reliability of any websites or blogs and linking to them should not be considered as an endorsement of any kind. We have no control over the availability of linked pages. © PFP Group - no part of this document may be reproduced without the express permission of PFP. PFP Wealth Management is authorised and regulated by the Financial Conduct Authority, registered number 473710. Ref 1005/14/JB 310114.

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Chinese Burn

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 261 points or 1.5% while the S&P lost 1.7% to 2046 and the Nasdaq dropped 1.8%.

Reality

I suggested yesterday morning that I wouldn’t be at all surprised to see the ASX200 down a hundred points for Wednesday, having rallied a hundred on Tuesday in a rather inexplicable fashion, although I was never prepared to put the house on it.

I should have.

The only remarkable thing about yesterday’s plunge on Bridge Street was that it is so easy to explain only one day after a rally that clearly had little macro incentive, even though it appeared to be an index-wide order or orders with a little help from short-covering that sent the market surging.

The bottom line is that despite everything the Chinese government has thrown at its plunging stock market, nothing has come close to holding back the tide. What a greenhorn administration in Beijing is learning, when it comes to the realities of capitalism, is that if you encourage margin lending on the one hand you have to be prepared for the impact of margin calls on the other.

Leverage is the reason the Chinese stock market cannot find a floor. If you are margin-called on your stock market borrowing and you don’t have a pot of gold to draw upon, you must sell your stocks to cover your loan. If you are forced to sell at a lower price you risk still being underwater and getting margin called again. You must simply sell at whatever price you can get before you are completely wiped out, as presumably, many a Chinese retail investor is now, having bought on the government’s encouragement when the Shanghai index had already doubled in a heartbeat.

If you don’t want to try to sell into a vacuum on the stock market but still have to cover your margins, or if you have sold but not received enough at the price to repay your loan, then you must sell something else. The Chinese stock market is not the only market for which finance can be attained. Hence as we have watched prices fall in iron ore and copper this week for example, it is not just a matter of a read-through to a weaker Chinese economy. Big Chinese stock market investors will be selling whatever assets they have, including commodities, to cover their losses and loans.

It is probably also why we see gold having fallen around 50 bucks from its earlier rusted on price of 1200 despite the potential sovereign risk Greece throws up. What’s next? Houses in Sydney?

Snowball

I’ll leave that last thought hanging in the air as I note the iron ore price fell 11.3% last night.

The rise and fall of Chinese iron ore prices over time is typically driven by the ebb and flow of seasonal restocking and destocking of Chinese steelmaker inventories, with an underlying trend determined by the demand for steel. Steel demand has certainly weakened but now we have this flow-through effect on commodity prices from the Chinese stock market crash.

When the Shanghai Exchange opened at 11.30am Sydney time yesterday it immediately fell 8%, which was enough to accelerate the general selling on the Australian stock market. But the iron ore price was also down 4% overnight, prompting screams of OMG, for God sake get me out of my Fortescue. The losses are snowballing in Shanghai and snowballing in Sydney (if we ignore Tuesday).

Materials (-3%) and energy (-2.5%) led the ASX200 sectors lower yesterday when all other sectors lost 1-2%.

The good news, if there is any, is that Shanghai closed down 6%, not 8%, after Bridge Street had closed. But not before capitalist China reverted to what it knows best – communism – and simply halted trade in a lot of stocks.

Greece

We must not forget that the Greek drama is continuing in the background. If anyone remains in doubt whether Greece or China is the biggest issue facing global markets at present, consider that the 32% fall in the Chinese stock markets to date is equivalent, in dollar terms, to fifteen Greek economies.

Last night the news was that Tsipras has prepared a new three-year bailout proposal to take to the creditors which supposedly includes a more realistic reform agenda. This was taken on European markets to mean a sign of deal being possible, so European stock markets staged a bit of a rally and the euro found support. A short-covering rally was also triggered on the London Metals Exchange.

But presumably Tsipras’ proposal includes little of the way of concessions to the creditors’ demands, given that on the weekend his people told him to hold his ground. So, again, it can only come down to some sort of concession from the creditors if Greece is to stay in the eurozone.

Despite Tsipras' Disneyland promises made before last weekend’s referendum, Greek banks will now be closed beyond this Sunday, being the deadline for a new proposal.

Wall Street Gremlins

Usually European traders carry their closing tone into the opening of US stock markets before they all head home for the night. Not so last night, where China was the main cause of concern and US stocks dropped sharply from the open.

At least until late morning, when a software glitch, supposed triggered by an upgrade implementation gone wrong (cyber-attack has been ruled out), closed the NYSE trading floor. Electronic NYSE trading continued on the Nasdaq exchange and on the other ten or so exchanges in the US so the US stock markets were not shut down, but it was about four hours before floor trading resumed on the NYSE and minimal volume suggested brokers were very wary of returning on the day.

There may have been some element of shutdown fear that helped the Dow, for example, fall further on alternate exchanges but the US indices had already tumbled in early trade on the China story.

That story, and Greece, was not lost on the Fed’s FOMC when it met in June to discuss interest rate policy, and the implication from the minutes released last night is that the Fed may hold off on “lift off”, as it is now being popularly referred to, even if the state of the US economy suggests otherwise, given global market issues. This is exactly what Yellen’s bestie Christine Lagarde has been pleading all along. So whereas September may have been firming as the lift-off month, December is now the preferred prediction, if at all in 2015.

Last night the US ten-year yield fell 3 basis points to 2.21%.

Commodity Mix

As noted, the iron ore price fell 11.3% last night or $5.60 to US$44.10/t.

The story was nevertheless different in other commodities that have also been hammered this week. While China is often at the forefront of LME influence, London is also the hub of European base metal trading and thus developments in Europe are also influential. Base metal prices had been slammed all week so the supposed glimmer of hope for Greece and the fact many saw metals as oversold meant a price turnaround last night.

That turnaround sparked short-covering and by the close, nickel and zinc had rallied over 1%, copper close to 2% and lead and tin close to 3%. Only aluminium sat it out.

The European disconnect was also evident in oil prices last night. Weekly US inventory numbers came out showing an unexpected gain in crude and gasoline stocks, hence West Texas fell US$1.13 to US$51.83/bbl. Yet Brent was virtually unchanged at US$57.25/bbl. Having tightened into below three dollars recently, the Brent-WTI spread has eased back out to over five dollars.

Gold managed a US$3.50 rally to US$1158.00/oz, with a little help from a 0.6% fall in the US dollar index on euro strength.

The Aussie is this morning trading down 0.3% on a 24 hour basis at US$0.7426 but it did get down to around 73.70 yesterday as Bridge Street tumbled.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 34 points or 0.6%.

Alcoa reported June quarter earnings last night after the bell on Wall Street to kick off reporting season. Without looking into the details I note Alcoa shares are trading just a little higher in the aftermarket having fallen 5% in the day-session.

This report means JV partner Alumina Ltd ((ALU)) will kick off the local resource sector quarterly production report season today on Bridge Street.

The ABS will roll its local jobs numbers dice today.

Beijing will release China’s June CPI result.

All eyes will be on the Chinese stock market.

Rudi will make his weekly appearance on Sky Business' Lunch Money, noon-12.45pm.

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: A Walk On The Wild Side

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 93 points or 0.5% while the S&P gained 0.6% to 2081 and the Nasdaq rose 0.1%

Suspended Disbelief

Whatever is driving world stock markets at present, it bears little resemblance to what would normally be driving world stock markets. Try this quick quiz:

Oil is down 6%, iron ore is down 4%, copper is down 3%, the Shanghai stock market is down 5% mid-session (having already fallen 30%) and things look shaky for Greece. What’s your call for the ASX200 on the close?

Did anyone say up a hundred points? No?

It could be argued that the ASX200 didn’t collapse on Monday because it was not yet clear just what global impact the Greek “no” vote might have. The index fell heavily to begin with but then shuffled back to a midway position. Global markets didn’t collapse on Monday night, so that was the impetus to buy Australian stocks on Tuesday morning.

But that impetus soon turned into a tsunami. Short covering no doubt came into play but clearly the bulk of buy orders were market, rather than stock specific. The energy sector was down early, as one would expect, but rallied strongly to the close, and the miners were unaffected by the iron ore price. At 2.30pm the RBA left its rate on hold, as expected, and a final kick took gains over the ton.

Technically, anything under 5500 just seems to be a trigger for the buyers as long as the world is not actually falling apart.

There had been rumours floating around that Greece might be given an interim deal. But realistically the Australian market’s biggest problem (and arguably the world’s) is not Greece, it’s China. Yesterday, as further desperation saw Beijing simply suspend trading in most small stocks, the Chinese stock market just didn’t seem to matter.

Again I will say, no one wants to look a gift rally in the mouth. But right now it seems like the lunatics have taken over the asylum. We could be down a hundred points today -- not saying that’s my prediction -- and right now it would not come as much surprise. It’s a time for investors to just stand back and let the traders play their games.

Turnaround

The meetings in Brussels that broke up this morning, our time, ended with Tsipras’ latest proposal being rejected and the Greek prime minister being told to go back and try again. He has to the end of the week. An agreement on a longer term bailout plan is ever more distant, so it really comes down to whether the creditors bend to at least some sort of interim deal that would see Greece make its required payments to the IMF and ECB, and reopen its banks, before the whole tedious negotiation process begins again.

The outcome of the meetings was not known by the time Europe’s stock markets closed last night, but there was little sign of optimism when thy did. The French and German markets both fell 2%. Yet again the mood carried across the pond and as such, the Dow was down over 200 points late morning.

At that point, the oils were trading lower once more and base metals had been absolutely carted on the LME. Even gold had capitulated. The US ten-year bond yield was tumbling again. But as soon as Europe closed, the mood changed. For starters, the oil price turned around.

And there began Wall Street’s biggest turnaround rally in four years, of roughly 300 points on the Dow. What happened? Expectations of a deal in Greece? Not sufficiently certain. What traders point to was the fact the S&P500 traded under its 200-day moving average and that was enough to trigger technical buying which, like Australia yesterday, then fed on itself.

Most commentators suggest Wall Street isn’t really all that worried about Greece anyway. They should be worried about China, but didn’t seem to be last night. Tonight sees Alcoa post its June quarter result, unofficially kicking off the US earnings season. Perhaps Wall Street is suddenly looking inward, and deciding the home front is more important.

By the close, the US ten-year yield had fallen another 5 basis points to 2.23%. The US dollar index is up 0.5% at 96.77, and a stronger greenback was never going to be helpful for commodity prices right now.

Commodity Carnage

The oils, as noted, fell early in their sessions but managed to stage a turnaround. West Texas closed up US26c to US$52.95/bbl and Brent closed up US52c to US$57.33/bbl. With everything else going on in the world at present, a primary focus for the oil markets is the ongoing Iranian nuclear negotiations which will determine whether or not Iranian oil exports will flow once more.

A deal is close, it is assumed, although the deadline has once again been extended for Iran. That there has not yet been an agreement is bullish for oil, but these small deadline extensions suggest the two parties may soon be able to meet in the middle, which would be bearish.

Iran has no impact on metal prices, but uncertainties surrounding Greece, and China, and a stronger greenback, certainly do. Last night aluminium fell 1%, lead 2%, copper, tin and zinc 3% and nickel a solid 7.5%.

There goes the 50 mark for iron ore. It was down US$2.30, or 4%, to US$49.70/t.

And if gold can’t go up on the sovereign uncertainty of a teetering Greece, it must go down. Gold fell US$15.30 to US$1154.50/oz.

With some help from the greenback, the Aussie is down 0.7% to US$0.7445.

Today

If the Australian market were to turn around and fall 2% today, in the context of recent history this would not be unusual. These buying sprees, like we saw yesterday, tend to be isolated to single sessions. But who wants to try and guess?

The SPI Overnight closed down 15 points or 0.3%.

I could say all eyes will be on the Shanghai index today, but they certainly weren’t yesterday.

Standard & Poor’s now believes the odds of a Greek exit are better than 50/50. Tsipras has been told to come back with a better deal, but his people have told him not to concede. So it’s up the creditors, and to Germany, in particular. Interestingly, a French academic is currently making headlines by pointing out that in the early sixties, the US forgave Germany a WWII debt it knew could never be paid back, on the basis it was unfair to forever punish young Germans for the sins of their fathers.

Germany knows Greece could never pay back its debt either.

The minutes of the last Fed meeting are out tonight. Remember how the Fed used to be the main topic of conversation? And the US earnings season begins.

As do the Ashes.

Rudi will make his usual weekly appearance on Sky Business' Market Moves, 5.30-6pm.
 

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article 3 months old

Greece Dominates, But Could China Be the Real Problem?

By Kathleen Brooks, Research Director UK EMEA, FOREX.com

After the Greeks voted No in Sunday's referendum the focus has shifted to what happens next. Will its banks collapse?  Will it have to leave the Eurozone? These are the two most pressing questions for investors. As you have probably heard, the markets are remarkably calm. Stocks are trying to recoup earlier losses, while EURUSD volatility is lower than it was during last month's peak.

As we mentioned on Sunday evening, the market reaction has been less severe than last week when capital controls were first announced. The relative stability may be down to a few of things: 1, investors are still hopeful that a deal can be reached to save Greece, 2, if no deal is reached then the European authorities will give Greece the help it needs to leave the Eurozone gracefully, 3, intervention from global central banks to stem excess volatility in the FX market, and protect the downside for the EUR.

Are markets too optimistic?

We do not think that this calm is truly pricing in the possibility of a messy exit, which could cause a 2012-style surge in volatility in the short-term. But, in the long-term, as ex Fed President Fisher said on TV earlier today, in the end the euro could be stronger without Greece.

Greece in conciliatory mood

For now, we still have to understand the post-referendum stance of all parties. The Greeks look like they could be in conciliatory mood after the resignation of the controversial finance minister. We have heard murmurs of disapproval from the heads of some European institutions, the most threatening comments are emanating from the German finance ministry, which included comments that Bundestag approval will be needed before talks with Greece can resume, and a reiteration that Greece won't get new aid without conditions.

Merkel to take the lead, ECB in the background…

As we have mentioned in the past, we believe that German Chancellor Merkel's decision will be the deciding factor. The eerie market quiet today could be the sound of investors' waiting on the side-lines for the outcome of tomorrow's European leaders' summit when Merkel's position on Greece could be made public. Until then we are still waiting to see how the ECB will react to the Greek referendum result and what it means for the Greek banking sector.

Consensus seems to be forming around three potential paths that the ECB can take:

1, continue to maintain liquidity levels at their current rate, but not turn the taps off completely until more is known about a potential Grexit.

2, The ECB could give a final deadline for ELA funding to the Greek banking sector, regardless of what has been decided by the European authorities.

3, If the ECB wants to play good cop, then it could sit on the side-lines until Athens' future becomes clear. Once a potential Grexit is announced, the ECB could offer the Greek banking sector a period of grace - say a month or two - in which they continue to extend ELA funding giving Greece time to get its banking sector in some sort of order so that it could exit the Eurozone as gracefully as possible.

As you can see, with European officials reluctant to make any hasty decisions about the future of Greece the outcome remains extremely uncertain, however this uncertainty is being translated into inertia rather than panic in financial markets.

The moderate reaction to the latest phase in the Greek saga has implications for stock markets. As we mentioned last week, there is a positive correlation between German and peripheral bond yield spreads and the Eurostoxx index. Although spreads did fall as peripheral bond yields outpaced German yields, the fall was fairly moderate, which is reflected in the moderate decline in the Eurostoxx index (see figure 1).

Where do markets go next?

We continue to think that this situation is EUR negative, and once this potential intervention ceases we could see EURUSD grind down towards 1.05 then towards parity. However, if 1-month EURUSD volatility does not spike above the 15 level then it could be a slow, winding path for EURUSD from here.

Stocks are at a pivotal level. The Dax is currently testing the 38.2% retracement level of the October low – April high.  This is an important Fibonacci level, and if we break decisively below here then it would be a very bearish development and also suggest that Europe's main indices may have seen their highs for the year in April. This is not all down to Greece, volatility in Chinese stocks, which have seen huge price swings in recent days. If the Chinese authorities can't get the Shanghai Composite index under control then risk sentiment could suffer across the Asia region and further afield.
 



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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Commodities Cop The Bulk Of It

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 46 points or 0.3% while the S&P lost 0.4% to 2068 and the Nasdaq fell 0.3%.

Rock’n’Roll

The ASX200 fell 100 points from the opening bell yesterday, which we can blame on Greek “no” vote fear. But it quickly found sufficient support to rebound to be around 70 points down by mid-morning. We might suggest (a), the Australian market has already taken a good hit on Greek fear, and Greece is not really a major influence on the Australian economy and (b), measures undertaken over the weekend suggested the more important market to Australia – China’s – just might find a bottom.

Sure enough, when the Shanghai Exchange opened late morning Sydney time, the Chinese index rallied close to 8%. Yet while one might expect this to provoke some more buying on Bridge Street, instead the ASX200 simply hung in space. It continued to hang in space as the Chinese rally quickly retreated, all the way to unchanged by the time the Australian market closed. Yet a little kick at the death saw the ASX200 finish 63 points down.

A kick at the death saw the Shanghai index finally close up 2.4%. Interestingly, despite the 30% drop the index has suffered, its prior exponential rally means the 30% odd correction has only taken the index back to its 200-day moving average.

Yesterday’s local sector moves featured a 2.5% drop for energy, compounded by a lower oil price, and 1.7% for materials, ditto iron ore. Otherwise, cyclicals copped it more than yielders, with the telco falling the least (-0.3%) and the banks holding up (-0.8%) as all other sectors fell over 1%.

While yesterday’s overall session was clearly “volatile”, the fact the index barely moved for the greater part of day, once having adjusted, suggests that at levels under 5500, investors are prepared to weigh up the balances and remain poised for whatever happens next.

From the “for what it’s worth” department, yesterday’s data releases included a 1.3% pop in job ads in June, according to ANZ, after a flat May, to an annual growth rate of 10.8%. This looks very positive, and the recent trend goes a long way to explaining why Australia’s unemployment rate has behaved itself when many expected it not too, but ANZ’s own economists warn against complacency.

What we’re seeing, notes ANZ, is a promising shift to growth in service sector employment, but this will prove fleeting on a net basis as the reduction in mining employment gives way to a big reduction in energy sector employment as the big LNG projects reach completion.

TD Securities’ inflation gauge showed a 0.1% increase in June to a headline annual rate of 1.5%. The core rate of 1.4%, which is the RBA’s benchmark, is in no way preventative of another rate cut.

Greece

The bad news for the Greeks is that the banks will not reopen tonight, as the finance minister had promised. His resignation came out of the blue but is no great surprise given he’d already been benched by Tsipras in negotiations with the creditors for being too much of a hot head, and clearly there’s little value in him hanging around now those negotiations have reached a critical point.

The good news is the ECB will continue to extend emergency funds to Greek banks, albeit with two caveats. The first is no increase on daily funding from last week’s level, meaning the banks are still at risk of running out of physical cash given long lines at ATMs. The second is a haircut on collateral, such that the assets the ECB requires to be put up against emergency loans, for example mortgages, will be valued less highly than they were last week, implying less bang for the collateral buck.

There is good news in that the German and French leaders, following a hasty phone hook-up, have told Greece “the door is still open”, but while Hollande is seemingly a little more sympathetic, Merkel remains insistent there will be no debt relief provided.

If the creditors wrote down the money owed by Greece, they’d have to do it for all eurozone members who would quickly put up their hands.

Eurozone officials are meeting tonight, so yet again it’s a case of waiting and watching.

Commodity Crash

The West Texas crude price and the iron ore spot price have been tracing out very similar price paths, down to the dollar, despite having little connection other than being vital global commodities. Following both falling into the forties, and then rebounding into the sixties, both had started to look wobbly even before Grexit fears intensified and China’ stock market tanked in earnest.

Thus it wasn’t going to take much to tip those prices over, and last night West Texas crude fell US$2.81 or 5.1% to US$52.69/bbl and iron ore fell US$2.10 or 3.9% to US$52.00/t. Brent crude was even harder hit, falling US$3.52, or 5.8%, to US$56.81/bbl.

Brent is the global benchmark oil price, and its fall reflects a switch in focus from supply-side issues – OPEC stubbornly pumping furiously and the US rig count now growing again – to demand-side issues – weaker demand from Europe and China. Falling Chinese steel production has been the red flag for the iron ore price, and China’s stock market correction, with a bit of Greece thrown in, has also directed focus towards demand.

Copper is the base metal benchmark, and last night it fell 3.2% on the LME on a similar basis. But other than a 2.5% fall for typically more volatile nickel, moves for other markets were not too severe.

Wall Street

European stock markets have already pulled back a long way thanks to Greece, so while the German DAX fell 1.5% last night and the French CAC 2.0%, it could have been a lot worse. That mood flowed over to New York from the open, and the Dow promptly fell 166 points.

But an hour and a half later, the Dow was back to square on the session. It only started to tip over again when someone pointed out what was happening on the Nymex. The big drop in oil prices impacted on the US energy sector, and Wall Street closed marginally weaker as a result. But all things being equal, Wall Street largely took Greece, and China, in its stride.

This was not so much the case in the US bond market, where a flight to safety saw the ten-year yield drop 12 basis points to 2.28%. The other supposed safe haven, gold, put on a typical rabbit in the headlights impression and is little changed at US$1169.80/oz.

The US dollar index is stronger, as might also be expected on a safe haven basis, although given similar attraction to the pound, yen and Swissy, the index is up only 0.3% to 96.27, with the euro the main victim.

The Aussie is down 0.3% to US$0.7496.

Today

The RBA board might otherwise be pleased the Aussie is now lower, when it meets today, except for the drivers responsible. China is the big worry, and falling commodity prices only enhance the problem. Australia’s March quarter GDP result may have surprised to the upside, but the first two months of the June quarter have seen a worrying trade deficit blow-out and if oil and iron ore tumble back down again, it won’t get any better.

Still, no one is calling a rate cut today.

The futures market is calling some relief on Bridge Street today, given global stock market falls were not as severe as feared. The SPI Overnight closed up 19 points or 0.4%.

Tonight sees the Greek saga continue.
 

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article 3 months old

The Monday Report

By Greg Peel

Reality

We can only assume that rallies on Bridge Street on Wednesday and Thursday last week, to take us back to the same 5600 level of a week ago, lent themselves to some level of expectation Greece would vote “yes” in its referendum, as the pools seemed to indicate, thus making a deal between Greece and its creditors finally achievable, and that Beijing would do whatever it had to to stem the tide of its crashing stock market.

For there really is no other explanation, and by Friday uncertainty was again prevalent. The polls in Greece had shifted to become inconclusive, and the Chinese stock market continued to fall, down another 5.8% on Friday to take its fall from the peak to almost 30%. The ASX200 fell again towards the critical 5500 mark.

Of little consequence on Friday was the potentially good news that Australia’s service sector PMI crept back into expansion territory in June with a 1.6 point rise to 51.2. I say “potentially” given Australia’s PMI results seem to be inexplicably volatile compared to the rest of the world, although not so much in the significantly larger service sector, more so in the small and ever diminishing manufacturing sector. Perhaps size is the simple reason, but given Australia’s economy is now very much service-driven, the PMI should at least be heartening.

Not so heartening was May retail sales, which at 0.3% growth missed forecasts of 0.5%.

And not so heartening was HSBC’s read on China’s service sector PMI, which fell to 51.8 in June from 53.5 in May.

No

Economic data are nevertheless but a sideshow this morning given the Greeks have voted with a resounding “oxi”. Uncertainty is now king.

Tsipras arguably whipped Greece into a frenzy of hatred towards the evil empire of Germany, the “terrorists” at the ECB and the general attack on Greek sovereignty with his desperate pleas on national television leading into Sunday. He also promised that were the “no” vote to prevail, he would jump straight on a plane to Brussels and have a new and less austere deal negotiated within 48 hours. The banks, he said, would then reopen on Tuesday.

All pure politics, of course, but unless Tsipras actually is a few olives short of a tapenade even he must appreciate that what he has said is very much detached from reality.

The eurozone and ECB are now hastily convening meetings to decide just what to do now, and presumably conceding to the will of the Greek people is not one of the options. If the Greeks are assuming the banks will open on Tuesday they could be in for a rude shock. It’s difficult to see why the ECB would extend any further emergency credit to Greek banks, whether or not Tsipras had called ECB officials “terrorists”.

It is difficult to see any path from here that does not involve Greece’s exit from the eurozone, despite there being no clause in the eurozone constitution outlining such a process. It is not clear whether the citizens of other peripheral nations will see Greece as the poster child and decide to follow suit. Presumably when Greece falls into abject poverty immediately following the reintroduction of the drachma, they may think twice.

Although the reintroduction of the drachma, and its significant devaluation to the euro, may just be what Greece needs to see its economy restored in two or three years from now.

One can speculate till the goats come home, but quite simply, nobody knows what happens now. Uncertainty is the enemy of markets, so we can only presume it could get ugly today and tonight as risk is quickly taken off the table.

In theory a Grexit is positive for the euro, given the remaining 18 member economies are stronger without the drag of Greece. But on immediate uncertainty, the euro has tumbled this morning in early trade. As a possible precursor of things to come, we note the Aussie was down 1.5% on Friday to US$0.7517 on Saturday morning and as I write is trading at US$0.7477.

China

But then there’s China.

There are still those who suggest that given the Chinese stock market has doubled in a year, even a 30% correction is not too concerning. But when 20% quickly became 30% last week, Beijing stopped being alert and started to be alarmed. The interest rate and RRR cuts it enacted over the prior weekend had had absolutely no impact.

Hence Beijing has now pulled out the kitchen sink. Hastily convened meetings this weekend have resulted in the government planning to provide direct assistance to investors looking to access margin lending to buy Chinese shares. IPOs have been banned for the time being, such that investors can only buy existing listed stocks. And the PBoC will look to establish what is known in the US as the Plunge Protection Team – a Fed special ops unit that works under a cloak of secrecy and steps into to buy US stocks at times of free-fall, using Fed funds, in order to stabilise the stock market.

Will these new measures have an impact? Well once more, nobody knows. We’ll only know later today when the Shanghai Exchange opens.

So we have what may well prove to be a Chinese stock market’s saving grace in action this morning, with the dark cloud of Greek uncertainty hanging low. There’s a bit of a gap from the world’s second biggest economy down to an economy half the size of that of NSW, when it comes to global financial markets, and thus in reality the Australian market should be more concerned today about what happens in Shanghai than what might happen in Brussels.

It’s all very well to say that, however.

The SPI Overnight closed down 7 points on Saturday morning, but that means nothing this morning.

Wall Street was closed on Friday night. European stock markets closed slightly weaker, but would have been squaring up ahead of the vote.

Commodity Crunch

With US markets closed, volumes were thinner than usual on the London Metals Exchange on Friday night. Fears about what might happen in Greece were sufficient to encourage selling, resulting in half to two percent falls for all base metals bar zinc, which fell only slightly.

Iron ore fell another US$1.70, or 3%, to US$54.10/t. The iron ore price fell almost 11% over the week.

For the oil markets, Greece has not been as much of a focus as global supply-demand issues, thus lower oil prices on Friday night were more about a US rig count which has started rising again. West Texas crude fell US$1.01 to US$55.50/bbl and Brent fell US$1.52 to US$60.33/bbl.

Gold was a tad higher on Friday night at US$1168.30/oz. One might assume the “no” vote would encourage gold buying this week but you just never know with the shiny metal these days. The US dollar index was slightly weaker on Saturday morning at 95.95 but that will be different this morning once trading ramps up.

The sovereign bonds of the likes of Germany, the US and UK will likely be sought after in the wake of the “no” vote while the US dollar, pound and yen will see safe haven buying. Risk assets will be sold.

The Week Ahead

There’s no use speculating. We’ll just have to wait and see.

The Fed will release the minutes of its last meeting on Wednesday which at least for a moment will refocus markets on Fed rate rise timing. The US will see its services sector PMI release today, trade balance on Tuesday, chain store sales on Thursday and wholesale trade on Friday.

Beijing will release China’s inflation numbers for June on Thursday.

The RBA will hold a policy meeting tomorrow. While no rate cut is anticipated, the very weak trade numbers prevailing in April and May will have given the board pause for thought.

Today sees the ANZ job ads series and the TD Securities inflation gauge. Tomorrow it’s the construction PMI and on Thursday the June jobs numbers are due. Friday sees housing finance – the other topic du jour.

On the local stock front, the first of the resource sector June quarter production reports will begin to trickle out later in the week.

Strap in.

Rudi will appear on Sky Business on Wednesday at 5.30pm and on Thursday at noon.
 

For further global economic release dates and local company events please refer to the FNArena Calendar.

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