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Brexit to Fedexit to Investexit

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The past five trading days have been all Brexit with a bit of Fedexit as well, as the US central bank looks like it might have exited from being a rate riser, for the moment. And if you look at the S&P/ASX 200 index over the past year, you can see we have virtually exited investment – ‘investexit’ if you like – by going sideways and having extreme difficulties in going above the 5400 level.

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But that’s only a one-sided view. The chart above also shows that the lowest we’ve gone is 4765.3, so the set of drivers that can take stocks up or down is good enough to take us up to 5400 but bad enough to force us down to around 4800 or so.

Of course, in April 2015, we nearly breached 6000, so there has been a real fall from grace and if you want to call this a bear market, it certainly hasn’t been a real grizzly one, though it has been scarier than a teddy bear, so maybe I’ll settle on an intoxicated, pretty cranky koala bear! (I know they’re not really a bear but neither is this cyclical bear market.)

As the chart above shows, the ups and downs have provided reasonable buying opportunities for dip buyers on the lows and profit takers on the highs but it has been frustrating for long-term ‘buy and hold’ investors. I guess it has been OK compared to term deposits and bond investors, if you average 5% in dividends plus franking credits, and that should be the goal for a lot of wealth builders: to create a portfolio that delivers that kind of baseline result. After that, you need to be able to ride the ups and downs of that damn thing called the stock market.

And, unfortunately, until Brexit is over next Thursday, we’re likely to be poised around these levels, unless the polls and bookies get too negative or too positive. So we’re on Brexit-watch and doesn’t it remind us of last year’s market anxiety of Grexit?

There’s also a two-day testimony of Fed boss, Janet Yellen, and every word she utters will be watched, analysed and speculated upon, with St. Louis Fed President James Bullard now saying that growth will only be around 2% so he’s tipping only one interest rate rise through to 2018! You’ve got to hope he’s wrong or else we’ll see Wall Street having difficulties spiking too much higher. It would also mean our currency is going to have fewer forces pushing it down but it could be suggesting that growth worldwide will remain like it has been – very disappointing!

Let’s hope Bullard is a bull-artist but next week in the US we’ll see a lot of economic data to test out his forecasting credentials, with home prices, home sales, the leading index, manufacturing and durable goods data released.

On the local front, there’s not much statistics-wise to move stocks so Brexit could make or break a market that now has fallen for three weeks in a row, with the S&P/ASX 200 index down 150 points (or 2.8%) for the week.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

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

“It’s the repetition of affirmations that leads to belief. And once that belief becomes a deep conviction, things begin to happen.”

– Muhammad Ali, American Olympic and professional boxer

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 Oil Search, with a 0.53 percentage point increase in the amount of its shares sold short to 8.71%. Myer went the other way with a 3.33 percentage point decrease in the amount of its shares sold short from 16.43% to 13.09%.

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Source: ASIC

My favourite charts

An overlooked positive business story!

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The NAB business conditions index rose from 9.7 points to 10.1 points in May. That’s miles ahead of its long-term average of 4.8 points. Now because business confidence eased from 5.3 points to 2.7 points over the same period, the former good news story was overlooked. NAB says the steady reading suggests the positive non-mining momentum has continued into the second quarter. That’s good news for the economy and Turnbull.

Gary’s take on the ASX 200

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Chartist extraordinaire Gary Stone says the ASX200 has reached a resistance zone, tying into the geopolitical concerns at the moment, and there will be another test of that resistance level next week!

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