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A nothing week with stocks moving on no rhyme nor reason

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Another week of no real surprises, including not much of a move for stocks on Wall Street again to take this market considerably higher or lower but the tendency has been skewed to the downside. However a lot of this negativity seems to have little rhyme or reason.

We’ve now copped four weeks of losses for stocks, despite a 26-point gain on the S&P/ASX 200 Index, which hit the closing bell at 5682.10. That means we were down 0.2% for the week.

But it wasn’t all mildly bad, with the dollar down to 79.45 US cents yesterday, though overnight it crept back to 79.6 US cents. This sucker won’t give us the depreciation we have to have easily, though it was 81US cents on Thursday, in case you missed it.

I quizzed AMP Capital’s Shane Oliver on why our market would give up 55 points on Thursday after Janet Yellen indicated that the Fed would start selling bonds and securities it accumulated over the QE period. In the US, bank stocks went up with the anticipation of higher interest rates, which is seen as a plus for financials. And given our market’s excessive exposure to this sector and how often the sector trends on Wall Street translate into similar moves here, the sell-down of our market was head scratching. (Our financials did rise on Friday, possibly indicating our market smarties are slow learners.)

Sure, the index is nothing more than the consequence of individual stock moves and gold and other miners were hit by a jump higher of the greenback, but why wouldn’t our currency-sensitive stocks have got a kick from the lower Oz dollar?

No rhyme or reason looks like a good excuse and this from the US shows how market players are trying one thing to make money and then taking profit before buying what they were selling two weeks ago: “It looks like the money’s switching back over to energy. Financials have recovered a little bit as bonds have softened,” said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade. (CNBC)

JJ was referring to financial stocks paring earlier losses, which means there was re-buying after reselling and so on and so on… As I said, no real rhyme or reason but I guess these guys have to do something when they go to work!

In fact, I’m not getting why better economic outlook stories seem to mean little for stocks. OK, I must admit I’ve never seen economists so split on our economic destiny but they’re all upgrading their views. The rate-cutters are quietly becoming “on-hold” guessers until late 2018 or even late, wait for it, 2019!

The economics teams at NAB and ANZ are now tipping the first rate rise will be mid-2018 and the most courageous, Paul Bloxham of HSBC, is calling the first quarter of 2018 as the time for the first rate rise!

Why? Well, he thinks we’ll be growing at 3.3% by year’s end and other signs, such as rising business investment, higher profits and even better wage outcomes, will be starting to show up.

ANZ’s economic forecasters now see two rate rises over 2018 so that might be important information for would-be rate fixers.

One view that most economists seem to be signing up to is that the Yanks could see three to four rate rises next year, which has to push the greenback up and our dollar down. Those who are thinking about investing overseas to get the currency windfall might need to get more serious about it.

Stocks the experts liked this week on TV

Simon Cohn (Investors Mutual): Ansell, Integral Diagnostics, SCP (Shopping Centres Australasia).

Rudi Filapek Vandyke (FN Arena): CSL & Aristocrat Leisure.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Another overdue like

In a blow for level playing fields, London deemed Uber unfit to run a taxi service on Friday and stripped it of its licence to operate from the end of next week, in a major blow to the US firm and 3.5 million users in one of the world’s wealthiest cities. (Reuters) I love competition but it has to be fair to all players and Uber might do what taxis do (and maybe better) but it’s not governed by the same rules that have been designed to protect the public and fill the public purse, which we are all supposed to benefit from. If every profession decided to flaunt the rules for price-cutting competition reasons, then we, as a society, could be in for a few future shocks.

The week in review

Top stocks – how they fared

20170922-topstocks

What moved the market?

Calls of the week

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Food for thought

Nobody made a greater mistake than he who did nothing because he could do only a little. Edmund Burke

Last week’s TV roundup

Stocks shorted

ASIC releases data daily on the major short positions in the market. These are the stocks with the highest proportion of their ordinary shares that have been sold short, which could suggest investors are expecting the price to come down. The table shows how this has changed compared to the week before.

This week, one of the biggest movers was Healthscope, with its short position increasing by 1.02 percentage points to 10.7%.

20170922-shortstocks

Chart of the week 

screen-shot-2017-09-22-at-11-31-20

Source: Bloomberg, Federal Reserve, AMP Capital

The chart above shows a dot plot of expected interest rate hikes by the Federal Reserve Bank compared to predictions by the market in 2017. The Fed’s plot points to one more rate increase this year, although it’s well above market expectations.

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