Lunch Report: Local Shares Ease As Banks & Miners Weigh
The Aussie market is weaker at lunch on Wednesday despite a lift on Wall Street. The ASX 200 is down about 40pts or 0.8% at midday with losses across most sectors.
Read MoreThe Aussie market is weaker at lunch on Wednesday despite a lift on Wall Street. The ASX 200 is down about 40pts or 0.8% at midday with losses across most sectors.
Read MoreRegeneron Pharmaceuticals shares gained 6.0% after the company said its antibody virus cocktail may be available in the coming months. Tech giants Alphabet, Apple and Microsoft lifted 1.1-2.0%. At the close of trade, the Dow Jones index rose by 133 points or 0.6%. The S&P500 index was up 0.9% and the Nasdaq index rose by 98 points or 1.1%.
Read MoreThe ASX 200 closed 87 points or 1.6% higher at 5407 as investors focus on positive news of the gradual reopening of the economy as the spread of COVID-19 appears to be slowing.
Read MoreAussie market has opened higher on Tuesday. With the exception of modest losses for healthcare stocks, all other sectors are up. Tech & energy companies are standing out.
Read MoreInvestors weighed the reopening of the US economy against brewing tensions between China and the US.
Read MoreThe ASX 200 was down by 1.4% early in the day but rallied from lunch onwards to close 74 points or 1.4% higher to 5319. This is despite most other Asian markets falling along with US futures as tensions rise between the US & China over the origins of the coronavirus.
Read MoreThe ASX 200 is higher at lunch after falling almost 1.5% in opening trade. Banks are higher after an early stumble despite Westpac reporting a 70% fall in 1H cash earnings.
Read MoreInvestors fretted over reports that the US was threatening to lift tariffs against China. In response to earnings results, shares in Apple fell 1.6%, Amazon fell 7.6%, Chevron lost 2.8% and Exxon Mobil fell 7.2%. Shares in Tesla fell 10.3% after Chief Executive Elon Musk said in a tweet that the company’s share price was “too high”. The Dow Jones index fell by 622 points or 2.6%. The S&P500 index fell by 2.8% and the Nasdaq index lost 285 points or 3.2%. Over the week the Dow Jones and S&P 500 indexes fell by 0.2% and the Nasdaq lost 0.3%.
Read MoreThe Aussie market has ended the week on a sour note with the ASX 200 slumping 276pts or 5% to 5,245 on Friday. Losses were widespread with only seven of the top 200 stocks improving. Losses were heaviest among energy, mining and the banks.
Read MoreIn this short video, Grant Patterson, CIO and Managing Director of Providence Independent Investment Advisory discusses the current outlook with Michael Ogg, Director of Providence.
Read MoreThe highs felt after the big gains over April have been quickly forgotten with the ASX 200 slumping by roughly 200 points or 3.5% even before lunch. No sector has been spared from heavy selling with energy, materials and financials weighing most.
Read MoreInvestors engaged in end month profit-taking and responded to earnings results. In response to earnings, shares in Facebook rose 5.4%, McDonalds lost 0.1% and American Airlines fell 4.9%. The Dow Jones index fell by 288 points or 1.2%. The S&P500 index fell by 0.9% and the Nasdaq index lost 25 points or 0.3%. The Dow and S&P 500 indexes posted the strongest monthly gains since January 1987. Over April the Dow rose 11.1%, S&P 500 rose 12.7% and Nasdaq rose 15.5%.
Read MoreThe Aussie market has enjoyed some big improvements over April with the ASX 200 lifting 129pts or 2.4% to 5,522 for the last day of the month. The broader All Ords did even better climbing 9.5% in April for its best monthly gain since March 1988.
Read MoreAt the end of the day, gains were across the majority of the market with more defensively oriented stocks underperforming. Banks and energy stocks contributed most to the broader market moves. The big four banks all rallied by a minimum of 4.2%.
Read MorePresenter – Brad Underwood (Managing Director) – a Mark Creasy backed nickel, copper and cobalt explorer specializing in the Norseman and Fraser Range areas of Western Australia.
Read MorePresenter – Ted Dhanik (CEO) – mobile in-app advertising specialist engage:BDR is ‘right in the sweet spot’ of the global shift toward mobile in-app advertising, where the surging use of mobile apps is encouraging brands and advertising agencies to favour in-app advertising.
Read MorePresenter – Colin Locke (Executive Chairman) – a geological “stone’s throw” from Cadia Valley, under-the-radar micro-cap Krakatoa Resources is steaming ahead in its hunt for porphyry copper/gold systems in the prolific Lachlan Fold belt in NSW.
Read MorePresenter – Fleta Solomon (Managing Director) – the first Australian medicinal cannabis company to produce locally-grown medicines for patient use in Australia and export markets.
Read MoreScott Kelly, Manager of the DNR Capital Australian Equities Income Portfolio, provides an update on his firm’s outlook for dividends in the Australian equity market.
Read MoreSam Twidale, Portfolio Manager for the DNR Capital Australian Emerging Companies Fund, explains why he believes recent volatility in equity markets has provided some excellent opportunities in the smaller cap sector.
Read MoreAt the end of the day, gains were across the majority of the market with more defensively oriented stocks underperforming. Banks and energy stocks contributed most to the broader market moves. The big four banks all rallied by a minimum of 4.2%.
Read MoreWatch the keynote from Perennial Head of Small & Micro Companies, Andrew Smith, as well as presentations from Galileo Mining, TALi Digital, Krakatoa Resources, Little Green Pharma, and engage:BDR.
Read MoreAt the end of the day, gains were across the majority of the market with more defensively oriented stocks underperforming. Banks and energy stocks contributed most to the broader market moves. The big four banks all rallied by a minimum of 4.2%.
Read MoreThe Aussie market has had a volatile start to the session, with gains from the banks and resource stocks doing enough to push the ASX 200 up 1.12% to 5,372.4.
Read MoreThe Aussie market was unable to maintain a solid start where it was close to 1% higher but also finished well off session lows, the benchmark index traded in a 101 point range throughout the day.
Read MoreThe Aussie market was unable to maintain a solid start where it was close to 1% higher but also finished well off session lows, the benchmark index traded in a 101 point range throughout the day.
Read MoreBanks pushed the market higher in early trade after Westpac announced $2.2bln in impairments without pursuing a capital raising, although by lunch the market had surrendered the early gains to be flat, after being up 52pts at session highs.
Read MoreUS sharemarkets rose on Monday as investors were buoyed by the possibility of a reopening of the economy after the virus outbreak. Several US states are beginning to allow restaurants and other establishments to serve customers. Retail and travel stocks lifted with Kohl’s (+17.7%), Gap (+12.9%), MGM Resorts (+9.3%) and Walt Disney (+4.8%) leading the way. Shares of Tesla rose by 10.2% on plans to call some workers back to its California vehicle assembly plant next week. The Dow Jones index rose by 358 points or 1.5%. The S&P500 index also rose by 1.5% and the Nasdaq index rose by 95 points or 1.1%.
Read MoreAfter a rather flat start, Aussie shares have advanced for a second successive session in what has been a solid start to the new week. The ASX 200 ended Monday’s session higher by 78 points or 1.5% to 5321. Today’s gain was the best in close a fortnight.
Read MoreBanks weighed on the market in early trade after the NAB announced a $3.5 billion capital raising. Retailers were higher boosted by encouraging updates.
Read MoreAhead of earnings results, shares in Apple rose 2.9% and Microsoft gained 1.8%. But shares in Boeing lost 6.6% on reports of plans to cut production. The Dow Jones index rose by 260 points or 1.1%.
Read MoreThe Aussie market achieved something on Friday it hasn’t done all week, closing higher by 25 points or 0.5%. It wasn’t enough to avoid the first weekly decline in 5 weeks for the ASX 200.
Read MoreLocal shares are pushing slightly higher at lunch on Friday with markets struggling for much direction over the past few days. The continued rebound in oil prices is helping boost local energy stocks to outperform while consumer stocks are lagging.
Read MoreUS sharemarkets were mixed on Thursday. Restraining prices was disappointment on a trial of a COVID-19 vaccine. The Financial Times said Gilead Science’s Remdesivir did not improve patients’ condition in a Chinese trial.
Read MoreThe ASX 200 has again lacked much conviction with the index finishing down just 4pts or 0.08% to 5,217. This was after a positive start from a strong US lead and rebound in oil prices.
Read MoreDespite a solid lead from Wall St, the Aussie market is giving back some of its earlier improvement but still managing to hold onto gains at lunch. Resource stocks have helped lead the charge higher as commodity prices rebound from recent selling, but more defensive sectors such as health, utilities and staples are lagging.
Read MoreUS sharemarkets rose on Wednesday. The US House of Representatives is expected to pass a $484 billion relief package on Thursday. And a rebound in oil prices boosted the energy sector. The Dow Jones index rose by 457 points or 2.0%.
Read MoreAfter falling close to 5% in the first two days of the week, the Aussie market has managed to avoid a third successive decline with the ASX 200 ending the day flat at 5,221.
Read MoreThe ASX 200 is down by just 0.8%, bouncing off a low of 2.3% earlier this morning. The market has shed close to 6% so far this week partly on volatile oil prices and sluggish economic data.
Read MoreUS sharemarkets fell on Tuesday as the turmoil in the crude oil market and poor company earnings results dented market sentiment. The energy sector (-1.7%) declined for the seventh time in eight sessions as oil prices plummeted.
Read More