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Coronavirus fears are winning & stocks are losing, but for how long?

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As I tipped in yesterday’s webinar, the US stock market and therefore our market has a few more legs down before the optimists/buyers outweigh the pessimists/sellers. That said, with three hours before the closing bell at the New York Stock Exchange, the earlier 894 point loss on the Dow had trimmed back to 505 points.

If the final close is bigger than 894, then we should expect another rough day for our stocks on Monday.

The big news overnight included:

This good labour market story, which also says a lot about the strength of the US economy going into this Coronavirus-threatening period, has been added to three other reasons to help optimists maintain the faith that a rebound will eventually kick in.

First, China is starting to go back to work, which has to be a tick for fixing the global supply chain concern. Second, there is an expectation that global stimulus will eventually lean against the understandable negatives for economies and stock prices. And third, Chinese stock markets are rallying on the back of the belief that the country is getting on top of its challenges.

CNBC has captured the Coronavirus

Here’s nine days for the Dow and seven of them tell the story and until the green boxes start beating the red boxes, we will be in a downtrend. And what will turn it?

That’s simple – believable signs that Europe and the USA are winning the battle against the virus. The spread of the virus in the USA is capturing Wall Street’s attention now.

Reported infections worldwide are now over 100,000 and the deaths are around 3,380.

CNBC says the US has seen 12 people die but that will grow and the number of infections in New York was 33. That’s a low number but it’s still early days.

Donald Trump is putting pressure on to find a cure for the disease and an $8.3 billion spending bill has been signed to add to the 50 basis points rate cut from the Fed earlier in the week. The Yanks don’t muck around when the word “emergency” is driving sentiment.

Just as we’re seeing in China, when the virus-beating news starts to surface, stock markets will turnaround but it’s still early days for the US and Europe, with its open borders and its huge tourism business, what happens there remains a big stock market issue.

The chart below has been inserted for doubting optimists.

The Shanghai Composite over Five Days

Don’t forget on Wednesday after Joe Biden had a ripper performance at the Democrat’s Super Tuesday vote, the Dow had it second best point-gain ever! At the close, the Dow Jones index was higher by a record 1,294 points (or 5.1%), ending at session highs.

However, “US share markets fell sharply on Thursday as investors fretted about the swift spread of the deadly coronavirus in the United States. California declared a state of emergency and the number of virus infections in New York doubled,” CommSec’s morning update told us.

This shows US market sentiment can turn on a dime (as the Yanks might put it) but it’s too early for any positive spinning yet. That said, that jobs number was a bonus. Imagine if it had been an absolute shocker!

To the local story and our S&P/ASX 200 Index lost 225 points (or 3.5%) over a week of ups and downs but the latter won the battle, though that shouldn’t surprise. There simply hasn’t been enough good news, however, our Government is starting to get the dialogue to us a little more right to help stocks beat their battle with gravity. Words like “stimulus package” and “business investment allowances” and “tax cuts” are all the right communiques when stock markets are worried about something like a potential pandemic.

The cost of this damn virus to our portfolios is 13.2%, if your collection of shares track the index. And banks copped it because of the RBA’s cash rate cut on Tuesday, which was passed on in full.

This is the sad story for the banks: CBA lost 9.6% to $73.93, NAB was slugged 12.4% to $22, ANZ 10.8% to $22.14 and Westpac 9.7% to $21.35.

Travel-related stocks were crushed, with Qantas down 15.7% to $4.66 and Flight Centre plunged 18.8% to $26.50 – but doesn’t the small 6% fall in Sydney Airports give us a clue about the value of being the only game in town!

Fund management’s copped it, with Platinum off 17.2% and Pinnacle Investments down 17.2%. These are tough times for businesses that primarily deal in stocks that are in a virus-scaring slide. A great company such as Magellan Financial Group is down about 29% since its high of $74.75 in mid-February!

And then there were the miners, with BHP down 4.2%, Rio off 1.2% and Fortescue 4.8% lower. They’re pretty small drops but BHP, since its February high, is down around 16%.

On Monday, I will look at the stocks that have stood strong against the virus-driven sell off, but clearly CSL and the gold miners gave it to the Coronavirus but there were some others that are worth thinking about.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

I’m keeping the faith

I know these sell-off episodes can be testing, so I thought I’d replay the chart I’ve been using to allay investors’ fears that stock markets eventually beat viruses and other medical emergencies that scare the pants off the world. Look at this chart.  The black dots are the various viruses of the past. See how the blue line rebounds strongly out of the black dots. This chart should help you have a good weekend.

The week in review:

On our YouTube channel this week:

Top Stocks – how they fared:

The Week Ahead:

Australia
Tuesday March 10 – NAB business survey (February)
Tuesday March 10 – Weekly consumer sentiment
Wednesday March 11 – Lending (January)
Wednesday March 11 – Consumer confidence (March)
Wednesday March 11 – Speech from Reserve Bank official
Wednesday March 11 – Labour account (December)
Thursday March 12 – Credit & debit cards (January)

Overseas
Tuesday March 10 – US NFIB Business optimism (February)
Tuesday March 10 – China Inflation (February)
Wednesday March 11 – US Consumer prices (February)
Wednesday March 11 – US Monthly Budget (February)
Thursday March 12 – US Producer prices (February)
Friday March 13 – US Trade prices (February)
Friday March 13 – US Consumer sentiment (March)
Friday March 13 – China New vehicle sales (February) 

Food for thought:

“Financial peace isn’t the acquisition of stuff. It’s learning to live on less than you make, so you can give money back and have money to invest. You can’t win until you do this.” – Dave Ramsey

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.

Chart of the week:

AMP Capital’s Shane Oliver shared this chart that looks at the number of coronavirus cases worldwide along with Google searches for ‘Coronavirus’ and ‘Hand Sanitizer’:

Top 5 most clicked:

Recent Switzer Reports:

Monday 02 March: How to play the current market [13]

Thursday 05 March: Buy the opportunities [14]

Important: This content has been prepared without taking account of the objectives, financial situation or needs of any particular individual. It does not constitute formal advice. Consider the appropriateness of the information in regards to your circumstances.