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The Monday Report

Daily Market Reports | May 30 2016

This story features ALS LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: ALQ

By Greg Peel

New High

In recent trade the ASX200 has had a couple of goes at breaching 5400, only to find profit-takers lined up in readiness. The push higher has been helped along by Wall Street, which has also been working its way back toward its highs. But whereas traders have dismissed the rally on Wall Street as a temporary short squeeze, short positions in Australia have recently been historically low.

Which suggests genuine buying is behind the local rally, with shorter term traders happy to call 5400 an appropriate level to cash in. But on Friday the index shot straight through 5400 from the open and reached as high as 5427 by mid-morning. This would suggest traders who had been riding the rally from under 5000, particularly in the likes of the big resource stocks and banks, have now squared up.

The index meandered its way in the afternoon, Friday-style, to a close of 5405 which, although below the high of the day, represents the first close above 5400 since the index plunged through that level in the China scare last August.

A half percent gain for the banks was the primary driver, while Wesfarmers managed to find some buyers having previously been knocked down on its write-offs. Consumer staples led the gains with 1.0%. For once the resource sectors sat it out, while buyers continue to look to the yield-payers of telcos and utilities in the face of likely ongoing RBA rate cuts.

The SPI futures closed up 23 points on Saturday morning, suggesting we should be set to go on with it today. But Wall Street is closed tonight, as is the UK, and it’s a very big week for local economic data releases, including March Quarter GDP.

More Yellen

All eyes were on Janet Yellen on Friday in the US as the Fed chair spoke at Harvard University. Given the apparent step-up in hawkishness emanating from her FOMC colleagues of late, Wall Street was keen to hear whether the typically more dovish chair would yet again pour cold water on the debate.

In the end, Yellen didn’t really say anything to fuel either the June hike or no June hike arguments. If the US economy continues to show signs of recovery, according to the data, then another rate hike sometime in the next few months would be appropriate, she said. And caution will be required.

While the US indices typically wobbled on the news, as the computers tried to interpret Yellen’s words, it was a case of a small down before a rapid recovery. Perhaps the take-away is that Yellen said nothing that suggests there will not be a rate hike in June. This was enough to see US bank stocks continue their interest rate-driven rally, while the US dollar index and US ten-year bond yield also rallied, implying rate hike expectations.

Or at least improving odds of a rate hike. The Fed futures market is presently only pricing in about a 33% chance of June hike. Perhaps those odds might tighten if the Brexit polls in the UK continue to trend further toward the “stay” vote, albeit many still believe the Fed will not consider moving until July just in case.

With regard the Fed’s “data dependence”, Friday night saw the first estimate of March quarter GDP revised up to 0.8% from a previous 0.5%, largely in line with expectation. Additional growth came from housing construction and warehouse stocking. We recall that the first estimate is always an extrapolation of the first month of the quarter – in this case January – and the first revision adds in the second month before the final revision adds in the third. Mid-winter is always the slowest period.

We’re about to enter June so the March quarter seems a long way away, but the positive revision was nevertheless seen as a positive by the markets, rather than generating a rate hike scare. As has been the Fed’s intention for some time, markets are now relatively well prepared for a rate hike.

Commodities

The US dollar index was 0.6% higher on Saturday morning at 95.70 as it continues to price in a rate hike or at least the underlying reason for a rate hike, being an improving US economy. It is the improving US economy that is providing reason for commodity prices to hold their ground, despite the mathematical drag of the stronger dollar.

Signs of Chinese restocking also supported base metal prices on Friday night, with the LME closing ahead of Yellen’s Harvard visit. Lead and zinc rose 1% while the other metals saw smallish gains. The LME is closed tonight.

West Texas crude is US14c higher at US$49.54/bbl.

Having looked a bit vulnerable under US$50, iron ore rallied back US$1.00 to US$50.90/t.

More beholden to the inverse relationship with the greenback is of course gold, which fell for the eighth straight session on Friday to US$1212.80/oz, down US$6.70.

The Aussie was 0.5% weaker on Friday morning at US$0.7185.

The SPI Overnight closed up 23 points or 0.4%.

The Week Ahead

It is a very big week for data this week.

Wednesday is the first of the month, which means manufacturing PMIs around the globe, followed by services PMIs on Friday.

After the holiday tonight, the US will see personal income & spending, including the Fed’s preferred PCE inflation gauge, consumer confidence, Case-Shiller house prices and the Chicago PMI tomorrow night. Wednesday it’s construction spending, vehicle sales, the Fed Beige Book and the ADP private sector jobs number for May.

Thursday it’s chain store sales, while Friday brings factory orders and the last set of non-farm payroll numbers before the June Fed meeting.

The ECB holds a policy meeting on Thursday.

Australia can also strap in.

In terms of monthly data, we have building approvals and private sector credit tomorrow, house prices and the manufacturing PMI on Wednesday, retail sales and the trade balance on Thursday, and the services PMI on Friday.

In terms of March quarter numbers we have company profits and inventories today, the current account, including the terms of trade, tomorrow, and the GDP on Wednesday.

The data is hotting up just as the corporate news begins to wind down ahead of books-close, notwithstanding any more profit warnings that may surprise during this “confession session” period.

ALS ((ALQ)) will release earnings numbers today and hold an investor day tomorrow. FlexiGroup ((FXL)) will hold a strategy day tomorrow, and Challenger ((CGF)) an investor day on Thursday.

Rudi will Skype-link with Sky Business on Tuesday morning, 11.15am, to discuss broker calls. On Wednesday he'll present Your Money, Your Call Equities while the masses will be watching State of Origin. On Thursday he'll re-appear 12.30-2.30pm and again between 7-8pm for the Switzer Report. On Friday he'll repeat the Skype-link, probably around 11.05am.
 

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

Find out why FNArena subscribers like the service so much: "Your Feedback (Thank You)" – Warning this story contains unashamedly positive feedback on the service provided. www.fnarena.com

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