Overnight: A Little Wobbly

World Overnight
SPI Overnight (Sep) 6719.00 – 34.00 – 0.50%
S&P ASX 200 6818.00 + 41.30 0.61%
S&P500 3003.67 – 15.89 – 0.53%
Nasdaq Comp 8238.54 – 82.96 – 1.00%
DJIA 27140.98 – 128.99 – 0.47%
S&P500 VIX 12.74 + 0.67 5.55%
US 10-year yield 2.07 + 0.02 1.17%
USD Index 97.79 + 0.11 0.11%
FTSE100 7489.05 – 12.41 – 0.17%
DAX30 12362.10 – 160.79 – 1.28%

By Greg Peel

All the Way?

More momo/fomo on display again yesterday in the local market as a positive lead from Wall Street was further boosted by comments from the RBA governor.

“It is highly unlikely that we will be contemplating higher interest rates until we are confident that inflation will return to around the midpoint of the target range.”

Mastermind subject: stating the bleeding obvious.

“On current projections, it will be some time before inflation is comfortably back within the target range.”

Yes, but do we get another cut in August?

“It remains to be seen if future growth in demand will be sufficient to put pressure on the economy’s supply capacity and lift inflation in reasonable timeframe”.

Probably not. It is well understood central bank rate cuts take a good six months or more to make their impact on the economy, even if the stock market prices in their impact immediately. We’ve had two cuts in two months – likely because the board thought one of cut of -50 points might be a bit alarming – but now it looks like the RBA will hold off a bit to see what transpires.

But another rate cut is still expected, if not August then at least by year’s end, and yet another earlier next year. Where does one put one’s money? TINA.

Materials was the only sector not to surge higher once more on the ASX yesterday, indeed mirroring the general market with a -1.5% fall. The iron ore price fell overnight on news Vale may be able to restart some of its production, sending the biggies lower. Fortescue ((FMG)) doubled-down with a disappointing production report, and fell -5.5%.

Rio Tinto ((RIO)) made the top five losers with a -4.2% gain in an otherwise positive market, while Iluka Resources ((ILU)) again took the gold with a -7.0% fall, kicking on from Wednesday.

But the rest of the market went the other way. Healthcare (+1.7%), industrials (+1.6%), staples (+1.4%) and financials (+1.1%) led the charge. Telcos (+0.8%) and discretionary (+1.0%) provided back-up. The momentum trade continued to feed on itself, seeming targeting a new all-time high come what may, and “fear of missing out” chased behind.

Can we get there?

Not today. The all-time closing high is still a bit over 30 points away for the ASX200 and this morning our futures are down -34 following a weaker session on Wall Street, largely driven by disappointing earnings reports.

And out futures have fallen sharply despite Google jumping 9% in the US aftermarket post-report, which is a mega-move for a mega-cap.

Draghi Vacillates

I rattled off a few US stocks in yesterday’s report that had posted earnings after the bell on Wednesday night. This is how they ended the session last night:

Tesla down -13%, Ford (Dow) down -7.5%, PayPal down -5% and Facebook down -2%. We can throw in, from reports early in last night session, Dow Inc (not of Jones fame, but of former DuPont fame, and in the Dow Jones just to make things confusing) down -3.8% and 3M (Dow), which was slaughtered after an earlier profit warning, down -0.7%, failing to regain any ground.

And Boeing (Dow) fell another -3.7%.

The gloss suddenly came off US earnings season last night, prompting a bit of profit-taking across all sectors. While it was cyclicals mostly being sold off, with defensives back in favour, all S&P sectors closed in the red.

Amazon reported after the bell last night and is barely lower as I write, but as noted, Google (Alphabet) is up an extraordinary 9%. So there might be a slightly different mood tonight.

But as much as it was about earnings last night on Wall Street, it was also about the Fed.

US durable goods orders rose by 2.0% in June when 0.7% was expected. Even without the lumpy cars/planes segment, orders rose 1.2%.

Every time there’s a strong US data release, Wall Street takes a sharp breath. But it seems lately that for every positive data point there is an equally weak one to match it. Such as Wednesday night’s PMI showing zero growth in manufacturing.

But more importantly, Mario Draghi left the ECB cash rate on hold last night. The ECB intends to leave rates at “present or lower levels” at least through the first half of 2020. While “no cut” was largely expected, with September shorter in the odds, there was still an element of disappointment on Wall Street. For one, Draghi was vague. There was no talk of timeframe, or of any QE plans.

This plays into the Fed’s decision next week, for if the Fed does cut, the reason behind the cut will be more about slowing global growth and subsequent central bank easing outside the US than a need to cut for the sake of the US economy in isolation. If the ECB hasn’t cut, does the Fed hold off?

Most likely not, but with Wall Street hitting all-time highs yet again this week, there are some nervous punters out there.

Commodities

Spot Metals,Minerals & Energy Futures
Gold (oz) 1414.00 – 11.30 – 0.79%
Silver (oz) 16.38 – 0.19 – 1.15%
Copper (lb) 2.72 + 0.01 0.33%
Aluminium (lb) 0.82 – 0.00 – 0.12%
Lead (lb) 0.96 + 0.02 2.29%
Nickel (lb) 6.38 – 0.23 – 3.54%
Zinc (lb) 1.10 – 0.01 – 1.05%
West Texas Crude 55.91 + 0.01 0.02%
Brent Crude 63.10 0.00 0.00%
Iron Ore (t) futures 117.00 + 1.90 1.65%

Traders blamed further evidence of European factory output slowing as reason for nickel’s plunge last night, but if that were the case, all metal prices would be lower. Nickel has just run too hard, too fast.

You can’t keep a good iron ore price down. Even if Vale restarts some production, Chinese steelmakers are running low on inventory, reports suggest.

Gold traders seemed disappointed in Draghi.

Looks like no one turned up to trade oil last night.

The Aussie is down -0.4% to US$0.6951 thanks to Dr Lowe. Must be getting close to the usual short-covering bounce.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down -34 points or -0.5%.

Tonight brings the release of the first estimate of US June quarter GDP. It will be the last major economic indicator before the Fed meeting next week.

GUD Holdings ((GUD)) and ResMed ((RMD)) will today remind us that the August earnings season begins with a few support acts.

The Australian share market over the past thirty days…

BROKER RECOMMENDATION CHANGES PAST THREE TRADING DAYS
ASB AUSTAL Downgrade to Neutral from Buy Citi
BPT BEACH ENERGY Downgrade to Neutral from Buy Citi
CPU COMPUTERSHARE Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Macquarie
DHG DOMAIN HOLDINGS Downgrade to Sell from Neutral UBS
ECX ECLIPX GROUP Downgrade to Neutral from Buy Citi
EVN EVOLUTION MINING Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Macquarie
EVT EVENT HOSPITALITY Downgrade to Hold from Buy Ord Minnett
ILU ILUKA RESOURCES Downgrade to Neutral from Outperform Credit Suisse
Downgrade to Neutral from Buy UBS
MFG MAGELLAN FINANCIAL GROUP Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Credit Suisse
NGI NAVIGATOR GLOBAL INVESTMENTS Downgrade to Neutral from Outperform Macquarie
OSH OIL SEARCH Upgrade to Overweight from Equal-weight Morgan Stanley
RIO RIO TINTO Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Credit Suisse
RRL REGIS RESOURCES Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Macquarie
Downgrade to Sell from Neutral UBS
SBM ST BARBARA Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Credit Suisse
Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral Macquarie
SXY SENEX ENERGY Downgrade to Neutral from Outperform Credit Suisse

About Greg Peel

Greg Peel joined Macquarie Bank in 1986 and acquired trading experience in equities, currency, fixed income and commodities derivatives, ultimately being appointed director of equity derivatives trading. He later published In With The Smart Money (a plain English guide to the mysterious world of financial markets and derivatives) and acted as a consultant to boutique investment funds. In 2004 Greg joined FNArena as a contributing writer. He is now a director and principal of the company. Greg compliments the journalistic background of the FNArena team with lengthy experience as a financial markets proprietary trader.

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