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Budget bashing of banks explains Friday’s sell off

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The Budget was good for stocks on Wednesday and Thursday, then along came Friday and the banks gave into gravity. The S&P/ASX 200 Index lost 0.7% to finish at 5836.9 but it did sneak up a tad over the week.

So, just how bad was the Budget for the banks? Well, the CBA lost 3.2%, Westpac 3.8%, ANZ dropped 4.7%, while NAB lost only 0.6%, which wasn’t a bad effort. That said, I can’t think of anything else that happened in the world of banking that could have explained their share prices’ fight with gravity.

Part of the reason why the Index did OK, despite the big banks (which are good for about 25% of the Index) was the better performance of mining stocks and, of course, infrastructure stocks, with the Budget being so good for the latter sector of the stock market.

Retailers are also fighting negativity, with even a US hedge fund manager piling into JB HiFi this week. Its share price went from $26.65 to $23.88 over the five days trading but there are those out there who don’t believe JB haters.

A month or so ago, UBS identified a group of stocks that it labeled the B-team, with JB, Harvey Norman and Bluescope (and others) all tipped to have a good year ahead!

It comes when Gerry Harvey was flabbergasted by a Citi analyst, who said retail was verging on a recession! Gerry called it “fake news” pointing out that he, and other well-known retailers, are doing well. “There’d be a lot of retailers out there doing extremely well; it’s a good market at the moment,” Mr Harvey said. “For everyone to talk about being on the verge of recession, it’s such a stupid thing to say.” (SMH)

I think some parts of retail are troubled but others are clicking over nicely. I don’t like the retail figures for assessment of the economy because the modern consumer now spends a lot on services – massage, hair care, personal training, telco, cleaning, etc. – which don’t show up in the retail figures. They also buy more from overseas via the Internet and while that can be an economic problem for local retailers, it can mean higher disposable income for local consumers, who then spend it on more services and café lattes.

I’ve even been caught getting my toes and fingers manicured and that wouldn’t have happened 10 years ago!

I think the Amazon hype has been spliced into the share prices of JB and HVN, and UBS could well be on the money with these companies. By the way, Citi points to the slowdown in the housing sector but work started on 231,658 new dwellings over 2016 – a record for a calendar year. And unless the modern builder is a much better beast that those of yesteryear, I’d say a lot of these properties will still be built over the rest of this year. And then they have to be sold and then stocked with new stuff from the likes of JB and Gerry’s stores. Also, approvals for new builds remain historically high and many of these homes would not even have been started!

Retail did have a bad week in the USA, with JCPenney down 14% overnight and the likes of Macy’s and Nordstrom having a shocker when they reported. That said, the Commerce Department said retail sales increased 0.4% in April from March. This number was less than expected but was OK, considering it’s still a cold month for shopping in America.

I think department stores are a risky bet nowadays, as Myer has shown, but it doesn’t mean all retail is bad, with Nick Scali being a case in point.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

On the Budget

I can’t get excited about a Budget until I see what the wacky team of opportunists in the Senate decide to do. We really don’t need another Budget impasse but, if this does happen, it will hurt the economy and Malcolm Turnbull’s leadership. It could eventually hurt stock prices, as this is a pro-growth Budget but, if the growth is delayed, then there could easily be a reassessment of current stock valuations.

If the Budget largely goes through, bank share prices will recover, based on a stronger economy. However I suspect we’ll see some more downside for the big four banks, while Macquarie, with its foreign earnings and the expected lower $A, could easily do a bit better than its rivals. There will be buying opportunities then for our banks because I believe the growth story for Australia.

The week in review

Top stocks – how they fared

topstocks

What moved the market?

Calls of the week

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Food for thought

“The best thing I did was to choose the right heroes.” – Warren Buffett

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 Bellamy’s Australia, with a 3.07 percentage point increase in the amount of its shares sold short to 11.26%.

20170512-shortpositions

Source: ASIC

Chart of the week

Return to surplus in 2020/21?

screen-shot-2017-05-12-at-10-53-04 [15]

Source: Budget papers, CommSec

A deficit of $29.4 billion or 1.6% of GDP is tipped for 2017/18 – down from $37.6 billion or 2.1% of GDP this year. And we’re expected to return to surplus in 2020/21. Let’s hope these forecasts become reality!

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