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Big Bad Bear Week! But it’s a Good Morning!

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After a week when our market went into the big bad bear territory, losing 4.2% for the week (over a fifth of a bear!), we saw the worst close on Friday for around two and a half years! And I hate to rub it in but we’ve lost 11.6% in 2016!

By the way, a presidential election year (or the fourth year in the cycle) has generally been the second best year for stocks. The best year is the third year before election day in the US. However, that didn’t work out in 2015, did it? That said, I have thought that maybe last year’s bad showing for stocks would give us a great chance for a rebound but for that to happen, good news has to trump bad news, with the latter around in spades at the moment.

If you need proof (and I know you don’t), just look at the Deutsche Bank and European bank concerns this week that whacked our banks! It’s like there’s a pile of people out there, who think if they raise concerns about really important things, such as the state of the banking system, that it will help their efforts to smash stocks! Could that be possible? Could there be people like that out there?

Anyway, enough complaining and finger pointing, it is what it is when it comes to stock markets. But there is good news this morning out of Wall Street! Energy and bank stocks had a good morning (or they were at 5am) when I woke up. If it lasts, it will be step one in a possible turnaround for market sentiment but I’ve learnt to temper my positivity – an 11.6% drop in one and a half months, as well as the very mentioning of pesky bears will do that!

So why the good news?

Here’s a list of reasons:

Look, I’ve been around long enough to know that you don’t get too excited about positive, speculative developments when you’ve got negative question marks, such as falling commodity prices, a slowing China, negative interest rates, recession talk and a bear market hanging over stocks. However, the good news is being ignored and most of it is economic. It’s why central banks, as well as most economists, are surprised by this current, excessive market negativity.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Let me rerun this…

I wrote this, this week, on www.switzer.com.au [1]

And in case you’re a whinger, who wants markets to always go up, remember this about our stock market. The GFC closing low was 3145.50. We’re now at 4775.7. That’s a 51% rise over seven years (from March 2009 until now). Now let’s add in say a 5% return for dividends each year. That’s 35%, giving a total of 86%. Let’s also throw in 1% for franking credits each year, giving us a gain of 7% over that seven-year period. The grand total for anyone, who had a portfolio as good as the index plus dividends, is 93% (or a 13.2% rise each year).

Apologies if you have been a whinger but sometimes we have to put stock markets into numerical perspective.

Top stocks – how they fared

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The week in review

(click the blue text to read more)

What moved the market

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Calls of the week

Food for thought

“Be fearful when others are greedy and greedy when others are fearful.”

– Warren Buffet – US investor and businessman

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, one of the biggest movers was Vocus Communications with a 2.95 percentage point increase in the proportion of its shares sold short to 12.67%.

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Source: ASIC

My favourite charts

Long term partners are cheapskates!

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Based on a survey of 1,043 Australians by Finder.com.au, if you’ve been with your loved one for over 10 years, you and your partner are more likely to be tight-wads on Valentine’s Day! Those together 6-10 years are likely to receive the most expensive gifts.

Job ads at 3 and a half year highs

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Job ads lifted 1% in January, and are up 10.8% on a year ago. Current levels are the highest since July 2012 – a nice indicator of the strength of business activity.

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