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Another Trump win with a good jobs report!

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Trumpomania has had to contend with some real world issues this week – the OPEC meeting, the US jobs report and on Sunday, it’s the Italian referendum.

In case you missed it, OPEC followed the optimist’s script, coming up with a production limitation agreement and oil is now a tad over $US51 a barrel, which is a good outcome for stocks now and rolling into 2017.

On the employment front, the US economy added 178,000 jobs last month, taking the unemployment rate to 4.6%. A Reuters poll pointed to an expected gain of 175,000, with the unemployment rate remaining at 4.9%

So it’s two down and the positivity around the President-elect has not been trumped, as we wait for the third horseman – the Italian referendum. I hope that this is not an apocalyptic experience for financial markets.

Interestingly, for the first time this week, US business websites started focusing on the Italian referendum, suggesting markets were hesitant ahead of the vote that could see the Italian Prime Minister, Matteo Renzi, quit if the ‘No’ vote gets up.

The polls say this will happen and, understandably, markets are not ignoring the possible impacts on the euro with the referendum’s result bound to raise questions about the likelihood of Italy remaining in the European Union.

Grexit and Brexit were not ignored by global stock markets and if the Italians create havoc with their voting, our stock market could be the first to react or quite possibly – overreact!

In Europe, stocks had their biggest drop in a month, with political curve balls aplenty. On top of the Italian vote, Austrians go to the polls on Sunday and the EU’s first far-right politician looks set to take power. And the French President Francois Hollande announced he wouldn’t run for a second term, with an election due in April and May. Why two months? Well, if no candidate wins an outright majority in the April poll, then the top two go head-to-head on May 7.

On the local front, next week we get our September economic growth numbers and a slower result seems likely after seeing figures for construction and business investment. AMP’s Shane Oliver is tipping a 0.2% figure for the quarter, which will bring annual growth down under 3%, but some economists have suggested that it could be a negative number!

If a negative result happens, then another RBA rate cut will be put back on the table by some economists, many of whom have been telling us that more cuts are coming. The RBA’s new boss, Dr Phil Lowe, clearly would prefer no more cuts but he won’t ignore a surprisingly low growth reading.

And next week he gets a pretty good run of economic data to make a judgment call. On Monday, we see the latest business indicators and job ads, which have been at a four-year high. Tuesday brings the RBA board meeting, the balance of payments and Government finances. These numbers culminate into the economic growth figure on Wednesday and I reckon the Oz dollar will be a key reactor to what the Statistician produces.

Things have been running so well it only seems likely that something has to go wrong sooner or later and some kind of profit-taking brings stocks down a peg. Since the US election, the S&P 500 has been up 4% and the Russell 2000 for small caps has been 10% higher! Our market is up 3.6% but we still can’t beat the 5500 level. Therefore between Sunday and Wednesday, there could be enough news to take us down lower or make another assault on that cap on the overall index.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

By the way

Some of my expert colleagues think I might be too concerned about the Italian election but a Reuters story this week shows I’m not alone on this subject, with Reuters reporting “that the European Central Bank stands ready to buy more Italian bonds if a referendum on Prime Minister Matteo Renzi’s constitutional reform this weekend rocks markets.”

That said, the Yanks aren’t too worried, with the VIX or fear index at a low reading of 14.19 and US stocks hovering between positive and negative territory overnight. You have to admire those positive Yanks, even if they can be weird at times.

Top stocks – how they fared

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The week in review

What moved the market?

Calls of the week

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Food for thought

“Amateurs sit and wait for inspiration, the rest of us just get up and go to work.”

– Stephen King

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 also shows how this has changed compared to the week before.

This week the biggest mover was Syrah resources, with its short position increasing 1 percentage point to 9.77%.

20161202-shortpositionslarge

Source: ASIC

Chart of the week

2012 slump to Trump bump!

electionsThe times definitely are a-changin’, just look at how differently the market reacted after the Presidential election in 2012 compared to the recent Trump bump! Can it last?

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