Tag Archives: Iron Ore

article 3 months old

The Monday Report

By Greg Peel

Breather

The local stock market took a breather on Friday, following two weeks of Brexit volatility and election uncertainty and ahead of Friday night’s US jobs report. Nothing new is known about potential Brexit fallout, but by Friday it at least looked like the Coalition would be able to form some sort of government.

By this morning it looks quite possible the Coalition will be able to form a majority government. This reduces the risk of a possible credit rating downgrade. On Friday night the Aussie went soaring, up 1.2% by Saturday morning to US$0.7564 despite the US dollar index being little changed.

But during Friday’s local session, it seems everyone went to lunch. The only movement of any note was a further 0.6% drop for the utilities sector, as “overbought” calls continues to hit home.

Yer Kidding

The US added 287,000 jobs in June, trashing estimates of 170,000. Mind you, estimates have been none too flash of late, given 170,000 was about the assumption for May as well, minus the 35,000 striking Verizon workers. May’s number came in at 38,000.

It was assumed the May result would be revised up with the June result, being such an anomaly, but instead it was revised down, to 11,000. We now have two consecutive anomalies, so economists prefer to average out to provide a three-month running indicator, which after the June result is 147,000 per month. Late in 2015, when the Fed decided to hike, that average was running at 200,000 plus.

Not only were more jobs created in June, but more hopeful workers re-entered the market, meaning the unemployment rate rose to 4.9% from 4.7%. Average wages rose 0.1% for a 2.6% annual rate.

Under normal circumstances, Wall Street would take the June jobs numbers as reason to expect a Fed rate hike in July. The response in the stock market would then be torn between good jobs result means economic growth, which is good, and good jobs result means higher borrowing rates, which is bad. But no one expects the Fed to hike in July because despite stock markets rallying across the globe, Brexit still provides for uncertainty.

So the Fed won’t hike this month. Maybe September, if the data continue to look positive in the meantime, but even then, probably not. So what does this mean? It means you can have your cake, being strong jobs growth, and eat it too, because the Fed will keep rates low. There is no reason not to buy stocks.

The Dow closed up 250 points or 1.4%, rising back over the 18,000 mark. The S&P rose 1.5% to 2129. The all-time closing high is 2130. The Nasdaq gained 1.6%.

But was this a “risk on” rally? No. Not only did investors buy stocks on Friday night, they also bought bonds and gold – the safe havens. The US ten-year yield fell 2 basis points to 1.37% and gold rose US$5.60 to US$1365.40/oz. Typically on a positive jobs number, and thus increased Fed rate hike expectations, investors would sell bonds and gold and buy stocks. In this case, stocks were bought because there is no alternative.

It’s hard to find any commentator that doesn’t believe US stocks can continue to rally under such circumstances. It is even more difficult to find anyone who is not nervous, given the lack of any fundamental drivers. The VIX volatility index fell back to 13 on Friday night, suggesting abject complacency.

Fundamentals will come home to roost from this week, however, as we enter the US June quarter reporting season. Alcoa reports tonight, and then there’s a gap to week’s end when the first of the big banks report.

As has become the trend, earnings forecasts are weak going into the season, offering up the opportunity of a “beat”, but a bit of a hollow one. Net S&P500 earnings are forecast to fall 5%.

Commodities

The US dollar index was steady on Friday night at 96.28, which is again not what one would expect from such a stellar jobs number. Base metal traders were therefore able to see the result as economically positive, hence we saw copper up 0.5%, aluminium and nickel up 1.5%, and zinc 2.5%.

For the oil market it’s a case of being torn between good economic data and the risk of further oversupply as US rigs kick back into gear above US$50/bbl. So oil prices did nothing, with West Texas steady on US$45.16/bbl.

Iron ore was unchanged at US$55.20/t.

The Week Ahead

After a flat close to last week, the SPI Overnight closed up 61 points or 1.2% on Saturday morning.

The Bank of England will hold a scheduled policy meeting on Thursday night. Given post-Brexit indications from Mark Carney, the market will be very surprised if there is no rate cut from 0.5%. Zero is a possibility.

This week will bring China back into focus.

Over the weekend we saw the release of China’s June CPI, which fell to a five-month low 1.9% from 2.0% in May. On Wednesday we’ll see June trade numbers and on Friday, industrial production, retail sales and fixed asset investment numbers.

And we’ll see the June quarter GDP result. The market is forecasting 6.6%, down from 6.7% in May.

In the US, the Fed Beige Book will be released on Wednesday ahead of CPI, retail sales, business inventories and consumer sentiment numbers on Friday.

In Australia we’ll see the NAB business confidence survey tomorrow and Westpac consumer confidence survey on Wednesday, followed by the June jobs numbers on Thursday.

On the local stocks front, this week heralds the beginning of the quarterly reporting season, which includes resource sector production reports and many a trading update from non-resource companies.

This week’s highlights include production reports from Alumina Ltd ((AWC)) tomorrow and Iluka Resources ((ILU)) and Whitehaven Coal ((WHC)) on Thursday. Transurban ((TCL)) will also report on Thursday.

Rudi will not make any appearances on Sky Business this week as he'll be presenting to investors on Gold Coast and in Brisbane.
 

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

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Fed Focus

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 22 points or 0.1% while the S&P lost 0.1% to 2097 and the Nasdaq rose 0.4%.

Inevitable

There is much talk at present on US business television of the runaway performance of the S&P500 utilities sector over the past two years, in which downstream energy companies for example can offer, heavens above, yields in excess of 4%! And inevitably there is also much talk of this sector, and to a lesser extent the similar telco sector, being overpriced and a dangerous space to be buying into right now.

The Australian utilities sector can offer yields of 7% or more, particularly from infrastructure funds, when the differential on the US-Australian cash rate is only 1.5%. Thus it is no surprise the local utilities sector has also outperformed, and very much outperformed in the latest round of plummeting global interest rates post Brexit.

Yesterday saw a choppy session in the local market but ultimately every sector finished in the green. Except, that is, for utilities, which fell 0.9%. Telcos rose 0.5% but unlike the S&P500, in which telcos are not a big market cap, the gorilla that is Telstra is a must-have for any index fund and any offshore “Buy Australia” trade.

It was a good day for the banks, resource sectors and consumer sectors yesterday. Unfortunately it may not be so today. Late yesterday, ratings agency S&P put the country and the big four banks on negative watch implying, in the case of the country, the possible loss of a coveted AAA rating.

S&P has banks across the globe in the spotlight post-Brexit so no surprise there. These fools are geniuses when it comes to telling companies the risks have increased after the risks have increased. Pre-GFC, a brown envelope would have sorted the issue. In the case of the country, it’s all about political uncertainty post-election. There was likely some influence in yesterday’s rally from the ongoing improvement in the Coalition’s seat-count, and the increasing possibility of a majority government.

So not that much to worry about. The Aussie took a dive on the news but has since recovered to only be down 0.5% over 24 hours at US$0.7478, with the US dollar index up 0.2% at 96.24.

As to how investors respond to the banks today is another matter, if capital raising fears return. Meanwhile, a near 6% plunge in the oil price overnight does not bode well for energy today, which was yesterday’s outperformer with a 1.6% gain. Metals prices are also lower this morning, including that of gold.

Wall Street may have closed a little weaker but a 0.4% drop in the futures hints of greater weakness locally.

All About Jobs

With the pound now trading below 1.30 to the US dollar, the FTSE 100 continues to rally. It was up another 1.1% last night. It is also hoped that the weaker euro can help overcome both Brexit-inspired risk in the EU and last night’s news German industrial production took a dive in May, pre-Brexit. The German market still managed at 0.5% rally.

Wall Street opened to the upside last night, sending the S&P500 clearly through the 2100 resistance level. But then the weekly US oil inventory numbers came out.

US oil inventory numbers are a strange thing. Every week, early in the week, the American Petroleum Institute publishes its assumption on inventory changes from the week before. Then later in the week, the Energy Information Agency publishes what are considered to be the official numbers. And rarely, if ever, do the two correlate. Indeed often the results are wildly different.

On Thursday night the WTI price rallied on the expectation of a bigger than expected drawdown last week, which makes sense at the height of the summer driving season. Last night the EIA numbers indicated that the drawdown was only about average – in other words, a lot less than the market had priced in. Thus WTI plunged, it is currently down US$2.72 or 5.7% at US$45.19/bbl.

Week on week numbers may be influential but the reality the oil market is facing is that when WTI trades up to 50, some of those rigs that were shut down over the past year are fired up again.

On the back of the oil price, the Dow fell from being up 66 to being down a hundred. But then it quietly made its way back.

The ADP private sector jobs number for June came in at 172,000 when 158,000 was expected. The forecast for tonight’s non-farm payrolls number is 210,000, which is a big step up from May’s shock 38,000. Not only will the June number be very much in focus tonight, but so too will be the inevitable revision to the May number. Revisions of US data can often be very substantial given the rush to get some sort of early guesstimate out as quickly as possible.

If it is a big number, and big revision, tonight, do we go back to expecting a September Fed rate rise? Or has Brexit put the kybosh on that concept now for the foreseeable future?

That is the question no one can answer right now. Tonight’s market response will indeed be interesting.

Commodities

As noted, West Texas crude is down US$2.72 or 5.7% at US$45.19/bbl.

Base metal prices were all weaker in London, with copper leading the way down 1.6%.

Iron ore fell US60c to US$55.20/t.

Gold finally had a down day, but only by US$3.40 to US$1359.80/oz.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 21 points or 0.4%.

The world once again awaits the US jobs numbers.

Beijing will publish Chinese inflation data on the weekend.
 

All overnight and intraday prices, average prices, currency conversions and charts for stock indices, currencies, commodities, bonds, VIX and more available in the FNArena Cockpit.  Click here. (Subscribers can access prices in the Cockpit.)

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article 3 months old

Material Matters: Drivers Of Commodity Outlook For FY17

-Gold main beneficiary from Brexit
-Zinc and tin stand out in base metals
-Demand growing but not strongly
-Supply being rationed
-But not enough to push up prices

 

By Eva Brocklehurst

Strategy and Outlook

Commonwealth Bank analysts suggest, as another disappointing year passes for mining and energy companies, that FY17 is shaping up for further falls in commodity prices, albeit not as severe. The analysts expect the slowing of China's commodity-intensive sectors will continue as government stimulus fades.

Construction, which accounts for 40% of China's steel demand, is the most important end-user demand segment and late last year, the analysts observe, property construction volumes were falling materially in year-on-year terms.

Lower production costs and rising US interest rates should also apply downward pressure to commodity prices. Some miners view the recovery in commodity prices as sustainable and this suggests supply will be more reluctant to exit the industry. Yet if the recovery is not sustainable, which the CBA analysts believe is the case, this behaviour will weigh on prices.

The analysts anticipate oil prices will lift modestly as the market appears to be re-balancing. Gold and other precious metals also look more promising. Among the base metals the analysts consider zinc to be the stand-out commodity, given mounting concerns about a deficit as London Metal Exchange inventories head lower.

The decision by the UK to leave the EU has created all sorts of fears, the analysts maintain. Commodity demand waxes and wanes with economic growth so the impact will be about the extent to which global economic growth slows.

Metals generally feel the affect of swings because their demand is most elastic, with energy somewhat less so and agriculture less so again. At this stage investors and currencies have felt the most impact, the analysts maintain.

They also suggest, for the most part, fundamentals will remain foremost in commodity markets. In terms of Brexit, the primary impact should be felt through a stronger US dollar, safe haven demand and falling commodity consumption in Europe. One effect that may be material is any disruption to global trade flows of goods and commodities.

The depth, maturity and liquidity of different commodity markets are also relevant. Copper, gold and oil may be prone to volatility. Equally, developing markets for coking and thermal coal and iron ore may be relatively immune, the analysts believe.

In aggregate, this suggests gold will perform the best. While other commodities are less appealing the analysts believe coal and oil are likely to outperform and nickel and aluminium to underperform. Iron ore could fare worse because of its strong inverse relationship with the US dollar.

In essence, the analysts believe the consequences of Brexit will emerge slowly and caution itself, as much as sentiment delays spending decisions, may be the biggest issue for commodity market for the rest of 2016.

Macquarie observes, overall, commodities have performed better than feared at the start of 2016. Much of the sequential price increases can be attributed to changes in China but the broker believes the industrial recovery is a global phenomenon. While the recovery remains modest, especially in comparison to how the sector was performing before the GFC, this is a positive development for commodity demand.

The broker notes headwinds for both metals and bulk commodities, such as US dollar strength and oil prices, have eased in the year to date and this will help to stall the multi-year cost deflation cycle moving into the second half of the year.

Macquarie agrees zinc has been the most conspicuous performer among the base metals this year but, half on half, tin was actually stronger and remains the only base metal up year on year in terms of its June average price. The broker struggles to find catalysts to move copper out of its current range but agrees the long-awaited deficit for nickel is finally emerging.

The main surprise in the six months to June has been stronger bulk prices. Macquarie has raised its 2016 demand forecasts across most commodities but does not expect this to be strong enough to create bottlenecks.

Given excess capacity in all markets, and with interest rates set to stay lower for longer, pricing is expected to be at a level where supply is suitably rationed. The broker expects gains in price are most likely to be a result of a cost-push from rising oil prices, with the exception of zinc.

One of the big themes in 2015 was the rebalancing of markets via a reduction in production, Morgan Stanley observes. These announcements declined sharply in the first quarter of 2016 and improved demand growth has meant some markets have tightened sufficiently to support prices. The broker cites zinc, iron ore and coal in this regard.

Nickel appears to be an exception as its supply-side response to the price fall in 2015 was quite modest, Morgan Stanley observes. The broker believes, with the nickel price still below half of the cost curve and inventories high at exchanges, more production closures are likely.

Recovering prices pose a new risk too, the broker maintains. This is the risk of operations restarting. This is most acute for alumina/aluminium where large operations which were closed late last year and early this year in China are now being re-opened. Estimates suggest around 500,000 tonnes per annum of aluminium smelting capacity was re-started in the first half and should lift in the second half.

The broker also notes the price upside for zinc is capped by the potential of a full return of Glencore's 500,000tpa, apparently removed from the market in October 2015. Re-starts elsewhere are considered unlikely as a seasonally quieter season looms for iron ore, copper and nickel.
 

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Turnaround

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 78 points or 0.4% while the S&P rose 0.5% to 2099 and the Nasdaq gained 0.8%.

Finding Support

The local market traded down from the opening bell yesterday in line with offshore markets. Banks are in the frame once more – both globally as a result of Italian bank fears and domestically through ongoing talk of a Royal Commission – while dips in commodity prices saw pullbacks for both the materials and energies sector.

At midday the ASX200 was down 80 points and it looked like we may be in for another nasty capitulation session but at the support level on the charts of 5150, the buyers decided to move in.

Large caps were in favour as falls in the banks and resource sectors were pared, leaving financials down 0.8% on the day, materials down 1.1% and energy down 1.8%. But it was otherwise clear what investors were looking for.

In a world of record low interest rates, including negative ten-year bond rates in Japan and Germany, a new record low ten-year yield in the US, and in Switzerland, a fifty-year bond rate that has dipped into negative, the search for yield has become ever more inspired.

Yesterday saw only three sectors finish in the green on the local bourse – utilities, telcos and consumer staples.

There was also a growing indication, as the afternoon wore on yesterday, that the coalition is clearly leading the count to determine the undecided seats and there is a slim chance it may even get over the line for an actual majority. If it doesn’t quite make it, there may only be the need to bring a couple of cross-benchers onside and thus avoid having to deal with the left-leaning members. The Kat in the Hat is one candidate, and Mr X is a reasonable man. The chance of an unworkable government and ongoing uncertainty has reduced.

And that’s a relief for the stock market, even if it were Labor in the same position.

The buyers were confident to take the index back to the 5200 level yesterday, and with Wall Street turning around for a positive close last night, the futures are pointing up 35 points this morning.

Don’t Panic

The bank story and Brexit flow-on story was not getting any less alarming last night as the London stock market fell 1.2%, Germany 1.7% and France 1.9%. As is typically the case, such selling carried over the Pond.

The Dow was duly down 127 points around 11am. But at that point a Dutch EU official suggested that there should not be any problem in Italy citing exemption rules in order for the Italian government/central bank to bail out troubled Italian banks with liquidity injections. Interestingly, the Netherlands is one EU member that has already seen the prosecution of new “bail-in” rules with regard Dutch entities.

We recall from yesterday that Germany had suggested Italy cannot call an exemption and Italian banks would be forced into “bail-in” measures to avoid going under, which would have left mum & dad investors with haircuts on the bond holdings and fire up more EU unrest. Brexit, Germany believes, is not a “systemic event”. It seems not all agree.

At the point at which the Dow was down 127 points the US ten-year yield hit another new record low, down 5 more basis points at 1.32%. But the Italy news turned the US stock market around in a flash – driven by the banks – and at the same time the ten-year yield rebounded to close up 2bps on the session at 1.38%.

Not long ago it was oil, now it’s bond yields.

Oil actually did have a solid session nonetheless, recovering 2% on weekly data showing a bigger inventory drawdown than forecast, and on a slightly weaker greenback. The greenback also reversed on the Italy news and as such is down 0.2% over 24 hours at 96.00.

The other news of the day was the release of the minutes of the June Fed meeting. They revealed a split committee, but at the end of day the doves won over the hawks by suggesting it was not the time to raise US rates when rates across the rest of the world were heading the other way. And we recall that the June meeting was held pre-Brexit vote, when the US ten-year traded as high as 1.75%.

So if low global rates were a reason not to move higher in June, lower global rates surely prevent any hike late this month or perhaps in 2016 altogether. But tomorrow night sees non-farm payrolls, which could well throw the cat amongst the pigeons once more with regard the strength or lack thereof of the US economy.

On that note, Wall Street was heartened by the June services PMI number, which showed a much bigger than expected jump to 56.5, reversing apparent weakness in May.

We note the S&P500 is back at its favourite pivot level of 2100.

Commodities

West Texas crude is up US$1.05 or 2.2% at US$47.91/bbl.

The nickel price has been flying all over the shop of late, with volatility centred on whether the new Philippines government will force the closure of some smelters. Last night saw nickel jump 3% in an otherwise mildly weaker session for base metals.

Iron ore is unchanged at US$55.80/t.

The pressure may have eased on Italian banks but the incremental climb in the gold price continues. It’s up US$7.00 at US$1363.20/oz.

The Australian stock market bounced off its lows yesterday and the Aussie also began a rebound from the previous session’s falls which carried on offshore. It’s up 0.8% over 24 hours at US$0.7518.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed up 35 points or 0.7%.

The local construction sector PMI is out today and in the US, the ADP private sector jobs report for June will provide a precursor for Friday night’s non-farm payrolls.
 

All overnight and intraday prices, average prices, currency conversions and charts for stock indices, currencies, commodities, bonds, VIX and more available in the FNArena Cockpit.  Click here. (Subscribers can access prices in the Cockpit.)

(Readers should note that all commentary, observations, names and calculations are provided for informative and educational purposes only. Investors should always consult with their licensed investment advisor first, before making any decisions. All views expressed are the author's and not by association FNArena's - see disclaimer on the website)

All paying members at FNArena are being reminded they can set an email alert specifically for The Overnight Report. Go to Portfolio and Alerts in the Cockpit and tick the box in front of The Overnight Report. You will receive an email alert every time a new Overnight Report has been published on the website.

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Italeave?

By Greg Peel

Hitting Home

The concluding paragraph of the RBA’s monetary policy statement last month read:

“Taking account of the available information, and having eased monetary policy at its May meeting, the Board judged that holding the stance of policy unchanged at this meeting would be consistent with sustainable growth in the economy and inflation returning to target over time.”

Yesterday’s new statement made the following statement with regard Brexit…

“Any effects of the referendum outcome on global economic activity remain to be seen and, outside the effects on the UK economy itself, may be hard to discern.”

…and then concluded as such:

“Taking account of the available information, the Board judged that holding monetary policy steady would be prudent at this meeting. Over the period ahead, further information should allow the Board to refine its assessment of the outlook for growth and inflation and to make any adjustment to the stance of policy that may be appropriate.”

This conclusion points more to the possibility of an August rate cut than the June statement did. Glenn Stevens, like everyone else, has no idea how Brexit will play out but the central bank is ready to respond. The RBA statement did not, however, offer any joy to the local market yesterday.

On Monday the local market appeared to shrug off the possibility of a hung parliament and focus more on stronger commodity prices. Yesterday saw a sharp reversal however, which may reflect the possibility of fiscal stalemate hitting home in a delayed reaction, but I’d hazard a guess and suggest what we saw was foreign selling following the US long weekend.

Selling was relatively even across sectors, with the banks understandably among the leaders with a 1.3% fall while 0.5% for materials reflected an offset from stronger iron ore and gold prices. Utilities was the only sector not to fall, given its attraction as a bond proxy, while the leading 1.9% fall for consumer discretionary had an additional local feel to it.

The ASX200 fell steadily in the morning and had basically reached its closing level by midday, with no late cavalry appearing. No RBA rate cut had been expected, so there was no response to the statement release in the afternoon. The Aussie saw a choppy session before offshore movements took over last night.

There is little doubt the Australian economy is facing a new source of uncertainty in the form of a non-government, but that’s nothing compared to ongoing uncertainty in Europe.

Banking Crisis

The Bank of England last night relaxed regulatory requirements on the UK banking sector and thus effectively released 150bn pounds of new lending to businesses and households. But this did nothing to stem the ongoing fall in UK bank shares. The FTSE 100 actually closed 0.4% higher last night but as is now oft noted, the 100 contains big multinationals such as mining & energy and pharma stocks, as well as banks, and these benefit from the lower pound.

Bank shares fell again on news overwhelming cash outflows from UK commercial property REITs had forced the suspension of redemptions from some funds. But the focus was not just on the UK, but on Italy.

Big falls in EU banks stocks post Brexit have brought into focus the parlous state of the Italian banking system, where non-performing loans are running at some 17% -- ten times more than in the US. The world’s oldest bank, Monte dei Paschi, has stuck its hand up for a bail-out but there is a problem.

As of this year, new “bail-in” rules have been in place in the EU. These prevent any direct EU injection of bail-out funds ahead of bank bondholders taking a haircut on the value of their holdings, thus reducing the bank’s interest cost as an inside form of bail-out, or “bail-in”. But the issue here is that most of the bondholders of the likes of Monte dei Paschi are mum & dad investors, not global hedge funds or sovereign wealth funds.

Italy is thus calling for exemption rules to be triggered with regard bail-in, as is allowed in the case of a “systemic event”. Is the Brexit vote a “systemic event? Germany says no. Forget about the Netherlands being the next in line. Talk is now of “Italeave”. No doubt freelance exit consultant Nigel Farage will stick his hand up as an advisor.

The Italian bank sector is down 50% post-Brexit. Last night the French stock market fell 1.7% and Germany 1.8%.

European selling flowed into Wall Street as US traders also dealt with a 4% drop in the oil price. If Brexit jitters are not alone sufficient to spook the oil market, ongoing falls in the pound and euro had the US dollar index up last night by 0.8% to 96.22, and there is renewed concern of US supply ramping up again now WTI has seen US50/bbl once more.

Wall Street has seen a complete Brexit rebound, so last night traders were suggesting a hundred point drop for the Dow is hardly surprising given uncertainty still reigns and is there is little reason to suggest this won’t impact on the US, albeit the US looks ever more like a safer place to invest.

On that note, last night the US ten-year bond yield fell 9 basis points last night to a new record low of 1.37%.

Commodities

West Texas crude is down US$1.87 or 3.8% at US$46.86/bbl.

Uncertainty and the stronger greenback hit base metal prices, with copper and lead down 1% and nickel plunging 5%.

Iron ore fell US10c to US$55.80/t.

Gold is up US$5.60 at US$1356.20/oz. While few disagree gold is the safe haven du jour, in US dollar terms it is fighting a very strong headwind.

The good news is the Aussie is down 1% at US$0.7462.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 19 points or 0.4%. There is likely some consideration here that yesterday’s trade on Bridge Street was ahead of last night’s trade offshore.

The minutes of the June Fed meeting are out tonight, which will include a nod to Brexit risk being a reason not to raise. But as the meeting was held pre-Brexit, relevance will be limited.

Rudi will be presenting in Melbourne today, plus participating in the first Evening With Rudi with local FNArena subscribers.
 

All overnight and intraday prices, average prices, currency conversions and charts for stock indices, currencies, commodities, bonds, VIX and more available in the FNArena Cockpit.  Click here. (Subscribers can access prices in the Cockpit.)

(Readers should note that all commentary, observations, names and calculations are provided for informative and educational purposes only. Investors should always consult with their licensed investment advisor first, before making any decisions. All views expressed are the author's and not by association FNArena's - see disclaimer on the website)

All paying members at FNArena are being reminded they can set an email alert specifically for The Overnight Report. Go to Portfolio and Alerts in the Cockpit and tick the box in front of The Overnight Report. You will receive an email alert every time a new Overnight Report has been published on the website.

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: Uncertainty Home And Abroad

By Greg Peel

Groan

On Saturday morning futures traders had pushed the SPI Overnight up 32 points by the close, one hour before the first polling booths opened. Sure enough, the ASX200 closed up 35 points yesterday.

But it wasn’t cut and dried. The rise in the futures would largely have been driven by big gains on Friday night for metals prices and ongoing strength in gold. There was something new for the market to consider on the weekend nevertheless, when the election provided a no-result and a big win collectively for minor parties. The risk of either a Labor government being formed or a Coalition government being forced to bow to cross-bench wishes lifted the risk of an oft called for Royal Commission into the Australian banks.

So down went the banks from the opening bell yesterday, and down went the index, by 28 points. The selling did not last long, however, and fortunately for the banks APRA made a timely announcement in declaring it was satisfied Australia’s Big Four were carrying capital ratios that put them in the top 25% globally.

By day’s end the financials sector only lost 0.1% while the materials sector led the gain to the close with a 2.6% rally, backed up by energy on 1.4%.

While APRA’s announcement may take the pressure off the banks in the short term, vis a vis feared capital raisings, the banks are still awaiting the finalisation of international capital rules for banks deemed “too big to fail” domestically and APRA has yet to quantify its “unquestionably strong” requirement. The banks are not out of the woods just yet.

The Aussie dollar also took a tumble in early trade yesterday thanks to the election, given the ratings agencies wasted no time in warning Australia’s AAA rating will be under threat if the job of budget repair is undermined by whatever new multi-headed beast emerges as the country’s parliament. But the Aussie, too, turned around. Having traded as low as 74.6 the currency is currently up 0.5% over 24 hours at 75.3.

Helping the Aussie rebound, aside from commodity price strength, was the Melbourne Institute’s inflation gauge for June, which showed a larger than expected 0.6% gain following a 0.2% decline in May. Would this threaten an RBA rate cut in August?

Not likely. The annual headline pace on the MI’s measure is 1.5% and the core rate of inflation, which excludes a recent rise in petrol prices, rose only 0.2% to be up 1.2% annually, well below the RBA’s 2-3% target band.

More of an issue, therefore, is the local labour market.

ANZ reported a 0.5% rise in job ads in June for an annualised rate of 8.0%. June’s gain was down on May’s 2.2% surge but ANZ’s chief economist suggested: “The strength in labour demand over the past two months is consistent with robust business conditions and solid momentum in the domestic economy. This should support a healthy pace of employment growth in the near term”.

So inflation is still weak but jobs growth looks solid. How’s the housing market faring?

Building approvals fell 5.2% in May when 3.5% was expected, to be 9.1% lower than a year ago. This looks ominous, but the approvals are falling from quite a peak and we do have this big dichotomy in place between the states. The May RBA rate cut is yet to influence the numbers, thus economists are not sounding the warning bells just yet.

So how will the election turn out? Why do I get the feeling we’ve just been through all this? The bookies had the “stay” vote in Britain comfortably ahead and the bookies had decided the Coalition would cross the line locally. Let’s hope the bookies don’t have Clinton in front, or we’re all in trouble.

Stock markets do not like such uncertainty but ultimately just get on with it. When 2011 produced the hung parliament and eventual Gillard minority government the local index fell over 2% initially before rallying back fairly soon after. Yesterday we saw a dip and rebound all in one day.

Frustration is the more likely response to the mess rather than fear.

Commodities

After their big surges on Friday night, base metal prices pulled back a bit last night despite a 0.2% dip in the US dollar index to 95.48. Zinc fell 2% and copper 1%.

However, iron ore jumped US$1.90 to US$55.90/t. Helping iron ore was the announcement from BHP Billiton ((BHP)) it would shelve its African project that threatened to add to global oversupply, and concentrate on squeezing the most out of the Pilbara instead.

For an oil market missing US traders, we had Saudi Arabia on the one hand reiterating its forecast that the global market will return to demand-supply balance by year’s end, and Morgan Stanley on the other warning oil prices are set to take another dip.

In the end, West Texas crude has fallen US57c to US$48.73/bbl.

As uncertainty continues to reign across the globe – and we can throw in a major Italian bank that is in trouble – gold continues to find favour. It’s up another US$8.60 to US$1350.50/oz.

The Aussie is up 0.5% at US$0.7534.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 13 points.

Locally we’ll see retail sales numbers and the services PMI today before the RBA meets and decides to leave its rate on hold.

Caixin will publish its take on China’s services PMI as other countries around the globe follow suit.

Counting will recommence locally, but it’s going to be a long wait.
 

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article 3 months old

The Monday Report

By Greg Peel

Playing to Script

Friday on Bridge Street played out as expected, despite it being the first day of the new year. The market opened higher in line with global momentum post-Brexit, traded sideways for a while and then at 2pm, the square-up bell was rung.

The index came most of the way back as traders took profits on a very solid week, ahead of a weekend, a long weekend in the US, and the local election, just in case something disturbing like a hung parliament should transpire.

On that note, we are reminded stock markets are usually ambivalent with regard which party is in power, but do not like uncertainty. And that’s exactly what we have this morning.

We also, of course, have a more elevated case of uncertainty over in the UK/EU. But whatever happens now, markets are convinced another wave of central bank easing is afoot. Central bank easing helps support stock markets but also directly supports commodity markets, and as such we saw some big moves up in commodity prices through Friday.

It it thus no surprise the materials sector was the stand-out performer locally on Friday with a 2% gain when every other sector closed as good as flat.

Investors were not fazed by the latest data out of China, which were far from encouraging. Beijing’s official manufacturing PMI fell to 50.0 in June from 50.1 in May, right on the cusp between expansion and contraction. Caixin’s independent equivalent showed a fall to 48.6 from 49.2 – the fastest decline in four months and the sixteenth consecutive month of contraction.

We can perhaps take some heart in the fact Beijing is trying to steer China away from reliance on manufacturing and export, and note the official service sector PMI rose to 53.7 from 53.1, although that doesn’t much help the sellers of rocks. What will help is government stimulus in the form of infrastructure investment, which is expected to be beefed up as China looks to its own favoured means of easing, beyond renminbi devaluations.

Who’d have thought?

Who’d have thought a week ago that Wall Street would post its best week since 2014? Both the Dow and S&P500 gained 3.2%. Friday’s trading nevertheless played to script as well, given both the week’s rally and the long weekend.

Afternoon selling wiped out initial gains, such that the Dow closed up 19 points or 0.1%, the S&P gained 0.2% to 2012 and the Nasdaq added 0.4%. Interestingly, the indices were back at the flat line just after 3pm before a late burst ensured the S&P closed above the psychological 2100 mark.

The US manufacturing PMI posted a much more encouraging rise to 53.2 from 51.2, beating expectations.

Traders have always been keen not to take positions home over weekends but weekends have become even more scary in this post-GFC world. Beijing likes to pull little tricks on a weekend and as we learned from the whole Grexit saga, weekends can often bring meetings between relevant parties that have particular ramifications the following week.

Nothing happened this weekend beyond the no-result Australian election, but the fact gold was up US$20.20 to US$1341.90/oz and the US ten-year bond yield fell back 3 basis points to 1.46% suggests investors were happy to top up their safe haven positions as a hedge against the “no alternative” equity rally.

Commodities

The UK has signalled monetary easing ahead, the EU is ready to do whatever it takes, Japan will probably be forced to do something and Beijing has already slipped in another renminbi devaluation. And on that basis, many do not see the Fed raising anytime soon. Put it all together and global stimulus is supportive of commodity prices.

The US dollar index fell a mere 0.3% to 95.64 on Friday but in London, aluminium rose 0.7%, copper 1.5%, zinc 2.5%, lead 3.5% and nickel 6%.

West Texas crude rose US90c to US$49.30/bbl.

Only iron ore bucked the trend, falling US20c to US$54.00/t.

The Aussie dollar was up 0.8% on Saturday morning at US$0.7499 as the sausages sizzled and the vanilla slices flew out the door, but in the cold hard light of Monday morning, has slipped to US$0.7465.

It was also Saturday morning when the SPI Overnight closed up 32 points or 0.6%.

The Week Ahead

Wall Street is closed tonight but there follows a big week for US releases, including the minutes of the June Fed meeting on Wednesday and the non-farm payrolls report for June on Friday.

Tuesday it’s the services PMI and factory orders, Wednesday the trade balance, and Thursday chain store sales and the ADP private sector jobs report.

In a rudderless, which unfortunately is not as positive as Rudd-less, Australia we’ll see ANZ job ads, the Melbourne Institute inflation gauge and building approvals today and retail sales and the services PMI tomorrow ahead of the RBA meeting. No rate change is expected, but the market will be interested to hear the board’s take on Brexit.

Thursday it’s the construction PMI.

Tuesday is services PMI day across the globe including Caixin’s take on China.

There is very little in the way of local corporate events or releases this first week on the new year but as of next week we start to see the first quarterly reports.

Rudi will be traveling to and presenting in Melbourne this week. Hence no live appearances from the Sky News studios in Macquarie Park.
 

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

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: As You Were

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 235 points or 1.3% while the S&P rose 1.4% to 2098 and the Nasdaq gained 1.3%.

Wet Sail

The US broad market index last night traded back almost to 2100 last night which is roughly where it was before the Brexit vote. The FTSE rose yet another 2.3% to put it well above its pre-Brexit level. Yesterday the ASX200 made it back to 5233 which is still short of the 5280 close on the Thursday before Brexit.

The futures are indicating up 49 this morning which would imply a complete recovery, but there are other factors to consider.

Firstly, a big chunk of dividends went out on Wednesday, so add that back and we’re close anyway. But secondly, yesterday was end of financial year so we have to consider just how much of the 91 point rally was genuine buying and how much was fund manager window-dressing. Today might be the tell-tale, but then today is a Friday, and Fridays will often bring profit-taking after solid gains for the week. Monday is July 4, meaning no Wall Street, just to provide more reason to square up and enjoy the weekend.

Healthcare was the biggest mover yesterday with a 3.4% gain. Healthcare was initially hit hard by Brexit given UK/EU exposure so it makes sense some ground might be recovered, but a 28% jump by Mayne Pharma ((MYX)) following an announced US drug deal and capital raising also helped.

Elsewhere the moves were more even but what did catch my eye is the 1.4% gain for telcos and 2.3% gain for utilities. These two sectors mostly held their ground as defensives during the brief Brexit panic, so why do they need to come surging back? This is where window-dressing may be apparent.

It is also possible the market was further assisted by the latest election polls, which suggest the coalition is fairly safe. Stock markets are not particularly biased towards either party but do prefer status quo over uncertainty.

There is also an Australian economy actually still ticking along in the background, which we now perhaps can refocus on.

Private sector credit rose by 0.4% in May to be 6.5% higher year on year. Housing credit rose 0.5% for 6.9%, down from 7.0% in April and below last year’s 7.5% peak. Within that figure, investment housing credit rose 0.4% for 6.0%, down from 6.5% in April and 11.5% a year ago. Business credit rose 0.3% for 7.1%.

The numbers indicate overall credit is rising modestly, and housing credit is slowly losing pace. Business credit growth is not yet outperforming to offset this decline. There is nothing here to prevent another RBA rate cut.

Back to the Fed

The London stock market rose another 2.3% last night while France gained 1.0% and Germany 0.7%. The continental markets are still well below their pre-Brexit peaks but the FTSE 100 is now above its peak. The explanation is as straightforward as the much lower pound. Britain’s GDP is roughly 80% weighted to the export of goods and services.

But London’s broader market FTSE 250 has not found its way back. This index encompasses more of the smaller companies that will be hit by a slower UK economy, if that is to be the case. The BoE thinks it will be the case, hence last night guvna Mark Carney all but confirmed monetary easing sooner rather than later, which provided another boost for stocks.

So, we’re back to being under the spell of central banks. And that brings the focus back on the Fed. Brexit, so far, has not resulted in global meltdown. As to whether it might ultimately set in train total EU disintegration will be a longer term story. Is the Fed now comfortable enough to raise in the Brexit wake?

Despite many on Wall Street assuming no further hikes this year or next, it will still come down to next Friday’s June US jobs number. If that shows a big reversal from the May shocker, talk of a possible September hike will reignite. However if the Fed decides it needs to wait for the actual Brexit lever to be pulled by whoever is the new British prime minister -- and it won’t be Boris -- and assess what transpires, then December is more likely, if at all.

It was also end of quarter/half on Wall Street last night and as such commentators were suggesting the rally back to the pre-Brexit level also no doubt involved an element of window-dressing. And because it’s a Friday before a long weekend tonight, the chances of profit-taking are high.

Commodities

There was certainly end of quarter profit-taking in oil last night, according to oil traders. West Texas crude suddenly took a dip just ahead of the day’s official close and is currently down US$1.14 at US$48.40/bbl.

Base metals were all higher in London, but none by as much as 1%.

Iron ore rose US80c to US$54.20/t.

Stock markets continue to rally but gold is hanging in there, up US$3.40 to US$1321.70/oz despite the US dollar index being up 0.25 at 95.88.

The Aussie is steady at US$0.7442.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed up 49 points or 1.0%.

Remember China? Today sees June manufacturing and service sector PMIs from Beijing, and manufacturing PMIs from across the globe.

Locally we’ll also see June house prices today, and tomorrow all the pain and suffering will finally come to an end with a sausage sizzle.

Happy New Year.

Rudi will Skype-link with Sky Business around 11.05am to discuss broker calls.


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(Readers should note that all commentary, observations, names and calculations are provided for informative and educational purposes only. Investors should always consult with their licensed investment advisor first, before making any decisions. All views expressed are the author's and not by association FNArena's - see disclaimer on the website)

All paying members at FNArena are being reminded they can set an email alert specifically for The Overnight Report. Go to Portfolio and Alerts in the Cockpit and tick the box in front of The Overnight Report. You will receive an email alert every time a new Overnight Report has been published on the website.

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article 3 months old

Material Matters: Coal, Iron Ore And Contractors

-Supply cuts support coking coal
-But further reductions unlikely
-Iron ore pricing steadies
-Soft contractor revenue likely

 

By Eva Brocklehurst

Coal

Coal prices have been increasing because of production cuts in China, supported by the numerous policies of the central government. One policy Macquarie believes has had the greatest impact is the 276 days policy. The move to 276 days from 330 days for re-identification of approved coal mining capacities has resulted in the reduction of 686mt to approved capacity, accounting for 13% of last year's national total capacity.

Macquarie suspects, if this policy is implemented 100%, coal production will be cut by the equivalent of 13% of 2015 annual production. Questions centre on how long the policy will exist and whether prices go up, as well as whether there are any violations of the policy. The broker finds it hard to envisage policy-driven production cuts will go deeper and, if prices do rise, there should be more recovery in coal output.

Thermal (energy) coal appears to be in a better position than coking (metallurgical) coal in terms of near-term changes to demand. Thermal coal usage is coming into peak season with summer, while steel production is set for its seasonal downturn.

Yet, while Macquarie envisages near-term momentum for thermal coal, prices are expected to ease after the summer re-stocking finishes. Meanwhile, coking coal prices are firm but coke producers are pushing for lower prices, given their deteriorating profit margins. The broker finds it hard to believe supply will fall further but demand should ease, and coking coal prices will have to follow coke prices with some time lag.

Metallurgical coal contracts have settled for the third quarter, with hard coking coal increases of 10% to US$92.50/t, semi soft up 5.7% to US$74/t and low volume PCI coal up 3% to US$75/t. These settlements are above UBS estimates.

UBS believes the stronger steel prices and margins and near-record steel output in the second quarter in China have driven the better demand and prices for coking coal. The broker notes Chinese domestic supply cuts are re-balancing the coking coal markets.

The broker remains cautious about the sustainability of the strong demand, prices and margins in steel and suspects, if demand slows in the second half, that coking coal demand will ease. At the same time new supply in Australia and Mozambique, plus under-utilised capacity in China, could easily pressure prices lower.

All up, the contract outcome is a handy boost for miners but UBS does not expect prices to rally aggressively. Settlements put upward pressure on the broker's 2016 coal price forecast of US$84/t but are not expected to affect 2017 estimates of US$88.50/t.

Iron Ore

Prices for iron ore on the spot market have steadied since late May at around US$49-53/t CFR China, Macquarie observes. The broker believes the risk of a near-term fall below US$50/t has abated, because of a gradual de-stocking at steel mills. The disappearance of a measure of higher-cost supply that emerged early in the second quarter is also a factor.

While some higher-cost supply has eased quickly, India's supply to China has continued to rise, reaching 1.64mt in May, its highest since July 2012. Yet Indian volumes are expected to fall soon because of the impending monsoon. In general, Macquarie also does not expect a substantial lift in near-term export volumes from the big three suppliers.

The broker envisages limited room for steel mills to aggressively cut their purchases of iron ore, with inventory at mills already being drawn back below average levels. With no rise in supply pressures, Macquarie maintains a US$50/t CFR China price remains fundamentally justifiable as an average for 2016.

Contractors

Ord Minnett suspects the contractor sector has run too hard, too early. The sector has rallied 35% since February 12 while the value of contract wins announced in the second half of FY16 is more than 50% below the five-year average per half. This signals revenue is likely to be soft in FY17.

There is potential for guidance at the FY16 results to fail to live up to the 6.6% earnings growth that consensus estimates are factoring in for the sector, the broker suggests. Exceptions exist and Ord Minnett prefers stocks with recurring revenue streams while NBN and solar power construction appear to be the strongest areas of growth in FY17.

Stocks considered likely to outperform include Service Stream ((SSM)) and Mineral Resources ((MIN)). Service Stream has had the best contract win rate in FY16 and is leveraged to growth markets, with the recent pullback in the price seen as a buying opportunity. Mineral Resources has a near-term catalyst in the update on its lithium resource and should post a stand-out result in FY16, the broker contends.

Stocks with potential to disappoint include UGL ((UGL)), Decmil ((DCG)) and RCR Tomlinson ((RCR)). Ord Minnett downgrades RCR to Hold as the share price has rallied hard on the back of recent contract wins. Decmil is also downgraded, to Lighten, with a lack of contract wins likely to be a feature of FY17.
 

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article 3 months old

The Overnight Report: What Brexit?

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 284 points or 1.6% while the S&P rose 1.7% to 2070 and the Nasdaq gained 1.9%.

Solid

When the ASX200 rose 53 points on the opening rotation yesterday morning, it looked for all the world like the 84 point jump priced in the by the futures  beforehand may prove accurate. But as now is becoming more the rule rather than the exception, the market completely reversed the opening rotation move in the second half hour, which in this case took the index back to only up 20.

We’ve reached the stage at which it is probably advisable for investors, rather than intra-day traders, to stay out of the market before 11am lest they be whiplashed. From 11am yesterday the market resumed its rally, in a slightly more measured fashion. And if a close of up 39 still looks disappointing against the futures’ 84 point call, we must acknowledge that some 60 stocks went ex-dividend yesterday.

Virtually all of those stocks are in the property/infra fund or utility space, ie, big dividend payers. We note that the only sector to post a fall yesterday was utilities, by 0.8%, which would all be dividends. Industrials was the second worst performer, with a 0.2% gain, and that’s where infra funds sit. Financials managed a 0.6% gain despite being where REITs sit.

Otherwise the bigger movers were materials, energy and telcos, with a solid gain also seen in consumer discretionary.

So realistically yesterday saw a bigger move up for the ASX200 than it would appear. With offshore markets posting a second night of solid rallies, the futures this morning are up 73 points. Only a couple of stocks go ex-div today.

But it is the last day of the financial year, so anything could happen, from last minute tax selling to rampant window-dressing. We really need to get today out of the way to see where the local market really stands.

Had a love affair with Tina

There was nothing new to report on the Brexit front last night, other than the fact the London market rallied back another 3.6%, France 2.6% and Germany 1.9%. Hands up those who predicted last Friday that the FTSE would be back where it was by the Wednesday.

The individual sectors within the FTSE are nevertheless looking a bit different compared to Friday. The banks are still shattered, as are any sectors impacted by the lower pound. The resource sectors have helped make up the difference, as have any sectors benefitting from the lower pound.

The pound has come back a-ways, but at 1.34 to the USD is still well below the 1.50 peak of last Thursday. Last night gold, which one might have expected to continue to pull back as panic subsides, rose US$6.80 to US$1318.30/oz. The US ten-year bond yield rose 2 basis points, but at 1.48% is still a long way down from the pre-Brexit 1.75% level.

In other words, the safe havens are still retaining their safe haven status, yet the risk assets that are stocks have wiped out a lot of the Brexit fall. Europe still has some catching up to do, but the UK is back and the S&P500, having fallen from 2100 to 2000, is back at 2070. And having fallen another 11% last night, the VIX volatility index is back below where it was on Thursday, suggesting investors in US stocks no longer feel they need downside protection.

So why is one asset class suggesting risk is now back off but others imply risk is still very much on?

Well firstly, risk must still be elevated because we still don’t know what’s going to transpire vis a vis Brexit, so uncertainty still prevails. Opinions on that matter range from perfect storm to storm in a tea cup. Secondly, central banks across the globe have vowed to provide whatever liquidity injections are required to prevent calamity. It is expected the Bank of England will be forced to ease, it is expected the Bank of Japan will have no choice but to ease, it is expected Mario Draghi’s “whatever it takes” may need further beefing up, and it is now expected the Fed will remain on the sidelines for months, if not years.

If we are to enter a new round of global central bank stimulus, then all of gold, bonds and stocks are places to be. For stocks, central bank support is the “free put”, or safety net. And when yields are even lower now than they were, where else can anyone make a return than in the stock market, particularly the dividend-paying stock market?

There is no alternative. TINA.

And as an aside, one presumes a fresh round of global easing only strengthens the case for another RBA rate cut. Or two.

On the subject of the Fed, last night’s US personal income & spending data for May showed a 0.4% rise in consumption on only a 0.2% rise in income. This is a positive for the US GDP, which is currently forecast to have risen 3% in the June quarter following March’s 1.1%. But the personal consumption & expenditure (PCE) measure of inflation rose 0.2% to take core PCE inflation to 0.9% over 12 months, down from 1.1% in April.

In other words, the US economy may have a healthier quarter but there is no incentive in the Fed’s preferred measure of inflation to raise rates.

Commodities

The drawdown on weekly US crude inventories was indeed substantial last week, while so far the rig count has not risen much at all. This is helping to support oil, West Texas is up US$1.43 or 3% to US$49.54/bbl.

The US dollar index continued to pull back last night, down 0.2% to 95.71. Base metal prices again moved up, slightly, except for lead which jumped 2%.

Iron ore was unchanged at US$53.40/t.

The Aussie is following up commodity prices, rising 1.3% to US$0.7447.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed up 73 points or 1.4%.

Australian private sector credit numbers are due today.

The final revision of the UK’s March quarter GDP is due tonight, over which, presumably, the Poms will ultimately reminisce.

Rudi will make his weekly appearance on Sky Business today, 12.30-2.30pm, and again between 7-8pm on Switzer TV, same channel.
 

All overnight and intraday prices, average prices, currency conversions and charts for stock indices, currencies, commodities, bonds, VIX and more available in the FNArena Cockpit.  Click here. (Subscribers can access prices in the Cockpit.)

(Readers should note that all commentary, observations, names and calculations are provided for informative and educational purposes only. Investors should always consult with their licensed investment advisor first, before making any decisions. All views expressed are the author's and not by association FNArena's - see disclaimer on the website)

All paying members at FNArena are being reminded they can set an email alert specifically for The Overnight Report. Go to Portfolio and Alerts in the Cockpit and tick the box in front of The Overnight Report. You will receive an email alert every time a new Overnight Report has been published on the website.

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