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The Overnight Report: Global Banks Under Pressure

Daily Market Reports | Feb 09 2016

This story features RESMED INC, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: RMD

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed down 177 points or 1.1% while the S&P lost 1.4% to 1853 and the Nasdaq fell 1.8%.

Stoic

For the second session in a row yesterday, the ASX200 opened sharply lower and traded back to square by the close. The only difference between Friday and yesterday is that the turn came on Friday in the afternoon, while yesterday the opening plunge of 50 points, in line with the overnight futures price, was immediately reversed. By lunchtime we were square.

Bargain hunters continue to find value in the beaten-down miners, with the materials sector up another 1.2% yesterday. Materials were pipped only by utilities which, as was often the case in late 2015, followed up a down-day with a 1.3% rebound. Outside of tiny info tech (-1.3%), the biggest and most influential loser on the day were the banks, down 0.5%.

Weakness in financial stocks has become a common global theme in 2016.

There was some positive economic news yesterday, with ANZ’s job ads series showing a 1.0% increase in January following a slight fall in December. The series is up 10.8% annualised, maintaining a positive trend that began in 2014, corroborating what for many has been surprising strength in Australian employment.

The trend has eased off slightly over the past six months but still suggests the current rate of unemployment will at least remain steady, ANZ suggests.

But back to the banks.

The Mighty Are Falling

European bank stocks were on a flyer late in 2015 on the promise of increased stimulus from the ECB and rising rates in the US. Rising rates are good for banks and thus US banks were similarly sought after when the world assumed the Fed was now on a steady tightening cycle.

But then came the collapse of the Chinese stock market, reflecting a weaker Chinese economy, and the collapse of oil prices. Market commentators, as I have noted here before, have simply got it wrong with regard the positive benefits of lower oil. If only through sheer fear of a global recession, investors world-wide have turned on the banks. They have flooded into fixed interest in Europe, sending short-end rates negative.

This has impacted on European bank stocks, as has risk of energy sector loan defaults and the fact the big European banks have been much slower to restructure and write down assets since the GFC than their US counterparts. They are undertaking that difficult process now, and in the meantime the likes of Deutsche Bank, Credit Suisse and UBS, for example, have seen their stock prices slammed.

No more so than last night, as the German stock index fell 3.3%, led by the banks. The German ten-year yield has fallen to a mere 0.2% while the fives and twos are both negative. The French and UK stock markets suffered similar falls.

And the mood travelled across the pond.

Fightback

Energy is not the worst performing US sector in 2016, the financials are. To a large degree this reflects a reversal of gains made late in 2015 when a Fed tightening cycle was being priced in, but general concern over a global recession has exacerbated falls.

Around 2pm in New York, the Dow was down 400 points. The banks were leading the way but there was also further pain in energy, as the oil price again fell, and further pain in the “momentum” stocks – those high flying new world names of which I spoke yesterday.

Many a commentator has been quick to point out that it is wrong to rope US banks in with European banks and their various problems. US bank balance sheets are currently very strong after significant deleveraging was undertaken post the GFC. Loan quality is much higher than it was before the GFC given a tightening of lending standards. The US banks are sitting on piles of cash and while hampered by a potential stalling in the Fed tightening cycle, are not in any great danger.

Perhaps this difference was enough to spark the bargain hunters into action late in the session on Wall Street, as the Dow rebounded to close down only 177.

There was also a technical element, given the S&P500 last night opened below its strong support level of 1870. This would have immediately triggered technical selling and served to exacerbate early falls.

There is otherwise no denying a flight to safety among those not bold enough to play stock market bargain hunter. The US ten-year yield fell 11 basis points to 1.74%, and is now down 54 basis points in 2016. Gold has been rallying for the past few sessions, and as the US dollar index fell another 0.4% to 96.61 last night, gold is up another US$19.90 at US$1192.90/oz.

Commodities

Beyond gold, there were also some sharp rallies in base metal prices over night. News of heavy rain shutting down tin mines in Indonesia saw that metal jump 3.5%, while warehouse inventory numbers helped lead and zinc to similar gains. Traders were quick to point out that with the Chinese absent, markets are very thin and subject to volatility.

Meanwhile, aluminium, copper and nickel were all relatively steady.

Iron ore is unchanged at US$44.70/t.

The oil markets have begun to concede that any talk of coordinated OPEC and non-OPEC production cuts was just that. And likely a simple ploy to try to push up prices. In the meantime, US production levels are simply not falling. One reason is that costs are falling, implying breakeven earnings levels are now much lower alongside lower prices.

It’s one reason many a marginal US oil producer remains determined to hold on through the price cycle. For many, the cost of turning off a rig and then turning it back on again exceeds the incremental loss on current barrels of production, so it’s worth trying to stick it out. Of course, this strategy is merely self-defeating. Until production falls, oil prices will not rise.

West Texas is down US94c at US$29.93/bbl and Brent is down US$1.09 at US$32.92/bbl.

The Aussie is up 0.2% at US$0.7085.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed down 64 points or 1.3%. Can we see a third successive fightback?

NAB will release its January survey of local business confidence today.

Shopping Centres Australasia ((SCP)) is among a handful of companies reporting earnings today, while ResMed ((RMD)) and Tabcorp ((TAH)) go ex-div.
 

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