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The Overnight Report: Oh Won’t You Stay

Daily Market Reports | May 25 2016

This story features PRL GLOBAL LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: PRG

By Greg Peel

The Dow closed up 213 points or 1.2% while the S&P gained 1.4% to 20176 and the Nasdaq jumped 2.0%.

Reprieve

Had I been writing this Report yesterday evening I would have suggested the local market looked very vulnerable. Last Friday we saw a market looking very much like it wanted to go up, supported by recent developments in monetary policy. On Monday we plunged from the open but immediately the technical buyers stepped in.

But that rebound faded in the afternoon. Yesterday we saw another attempt to recover from early sogginess before a sharp fall towards the closing bell. That drop ensured a close under 5300, and that is technically weak. Markets that want to go up but can’t find support tend to swiftly become markets that go down.

Had the Dow been down two hundred points this morning it would have been Goodnight Irene. But the Dow is up two hundred points so the local market is in for a reprieve. The futures are up 75 points this morning.

Yesterday saw only healthcare and utilities hold up against a tide of weakness elsewhere. Energy saw the biggest fall of 1.3% on a lower oil price, but oil is strong this morning. Materials responded to a weaker iron ore price and that was weak again overnight, albeit the two big miners rallied in London.

The telcos finally caved with a 1.0% fall and it's surprising that hadn’t happened earlier, given Telstra’s outage woes.

All of the above will prove academic today.

More enduring is RBA governor Glenn Stevens’ suggestion in a Q&A yesterday that inflation in Australia is too low, and that RBA still wants to see it back above 2%. This implies another rate cut is on the cards, and as such the index did jump higher, briefly, at lunchtime yesterday, before selling again overwhelmed.

The Aussie also dutifully dropped on Stevens’ comments, despite the fact the market has already baked in another rate cut and that’s what had us down at 72 in the first place. Strength in the greenback overnight had the Aussie falling as low as 71.4 before it stabilised, down 0.6% over 24 hours at US$0.7184.

Risk On

There’s been a lot of concern of late about the upcoming Brexit vote, much Chicken Little commentary and speculation the Fed will remain on hold until after the referendum just in case the world goes to hell in a handcart. Polling, up to now, has favoured the “stay” vote, but inconclusively so.

The latest poll released last night has inspired confidence in there being no Brexit. It showed “stay” at 55% and “go” at 42% — the widest margin to date. Importantly, the poll only recorded the intentions of those who definitely plan to vote, and for the first time the “stay” vote outweighed the “go” vote in the over-65 cohort.

The fear has been that the “goers” would be more likely to come out to vote than the “stayers”, and that there would be a greater nationalistic fervour among older Britons. Last night’s poll eased those fears.

And subsequently eased market fears, both in London and across the Channel. The FTSE jumped 1.4%, the German DAX 2.2% and the French CAC 2.5%.

That sense of relief then flowed across the Pond. But if that wasn’t enough, data released before the opening bell on Wall Street revealed US new home sales jumped 16.6% in April, the biggest monthly jump in 24 years.

(Keep an eye on those Aussie stocks with a finger in the US building materials pie today.)

For US home building stocks, it was off to the races. And for the rest of the market, the result was the same. But hang on…surely the strong home sales numbers give the Fed more reason to hike in June, and an easing of Brexit fears removes that particular barrier? Shouldn’t Wall Street crumble on rate hike fears?

Many believe this will likely still occur in the short term, were the Fed to hike next month. But in the wider scheme of things, such a solid new homes sales result suggests the US economy is actually at lot stronger than many had assumed – particularly those who up to now could see no economic reason why the Fed should feel the need to hike. And on a global scale, if there is to be no Brexit then that takes out a major concern that would otherwise have investors hiding on the sidelines.

Two sectors stood out last night – banks and tech. Rate hikes are good for banks. Tech represents the epitome of the “risk on” trade, being for the most part very speculative. But “tech” includes names like Apple, and when the biggest stock in the market rallies hard, there’s a big impact on the indices.

Yet it wasn’t really a “rally”, per se. The Dow shot up 200 points from the opening bell and stayed there all day. Volumes were not particularly heavy. It is thus most likely, commentators agreed, that last night was more about short-covering than anything else.

Commodities

It also didn’t hurt that West Texas is up US$1.00 or 2% after a couple of soggy sessions, to US$49.11/bbl, and Brent is up US76c at US$49.13/bbl – as good as parity. The strong home sales data feeds back to expectations of stronger oil demand.

Base metal prices could fare no better than mixed in London nevertheless. Copper and nickel are up around half a percent and aluminium, lead and zinc are down around half a percent.

Iron ore fell another US$2.50 to US$50.20/t.

The US dollar index is up 0.4% to 95.59 on rate hike expectations, thus gold is down US$21.30 at US$1226.90/oz.

Today

The SPI Overnight closed up 75 points or 1.4%.

Locally we’ll welcome the numbers for March quarter construction work done today, which feed into tomorrow’s capex data. Otherwise, it’s quite a busy day on the local stock front.

Programmed Maintenance ((PRG)) will release its earnings result. Investor days will be held by all of Boral ((BLD)), Suncorp ((SUN)) and WorleyParsons ((WOR)), while Perpetural ((PPT)) will provide an update on its investment division.

Adelaide Brighton ((ABC)) and G8 Education ((GEM)) are among a handful of companies hosting AGMs today.
 

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