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How long can this stocks stress last?

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The Dow sold off overnight following a US jobs report that has kept market experts guessing about what the Fed could do in two weeks’ time, when it could raise rates for the first time since the GFC.

In August, they tipped 220,000 jobs would be created but only 173,000 showed up and that’s a pretty big miss. However, unemployment dropped to a lower than expected 5.1%, while the average hourly wage increased by a bigger than expected 0.3%.

It also should be thrown in that history records that the August job number often suffers the biggest revision upwards!

The summary is that the case for a rate rise this month has not been helped nor hindered by this jobs report, so rate rise anxiety will persist. And it also means we’re no wiser about whether a rate rise could result in a big stock dumping or a relief rally.

One thing is clear. We are in a downtrend or a buyers’ strike and we need a positive news-breaker to turn around sentiment.

That’s overseas but what about the local story, where we might have ended up yesterday by nearly 13 points to see the S&P/ASX 200 index at 5060.8 but we lost 4.2% for the week, which was the worst for three months!

Two things bother me. One is the current market sell off, which looks overdone. The second is how our media hates Tony Abbott so much that they feed like a great white shark when there’s a less than impressive economic reading.

Understand this: stocks go up when economies go or grow up. At the moment, there are growth question marks over China, which is important to global growth, being the biggest contributor to world demand. The US is growing well and sustains my optimism for stocks, which I think will rebound by year’s end.

Europe is looking promising considering its challenges, while I got this on Japan from ChannelNews Asia: “Japan’s economy contracted in April-June due to weak consumption and exports and analysts expect only a modest rebound in the current quarter, keeping the BOJ under pressure to further ease monetary policy.”

So Japan is not helping optimists at the moment but could surprise us.

Meanwhile, at home, our growth story in the June quarter was weaker than expected but the negativity about this old number was excessive.

Thank God I’m supported by credible economics commentators like Ross Gittins of the SMH, who this week wrote a piece on the disappointing economic growth number on Wednesday, which was headlined: “Joe Hockey is right: Economy is neither wonderful nor woeful.”

Ross made a number of honest points that a lot of journalists left out, such as:

The chart below shows the “year average” growth wasn’t great but, at 2.4%, it’s not so historically disastrous.

swos-20150905-001 [1]

I maintain that future economic indicators, such as business investment plans, job ads, building approvals and others give me and other economists hope that our economy is gradually getting better and the dollar under 70 US cents will be a big help for future growth. I promise!

Adding to the general annoyance was the lacklustre reporting season that explains why stocks have given into the negativity of a weaker than expected China, a US closer to a interest rate rise and a US reporting season that showed the stronger greenback was slowing up earnings for some huge exporters such as Apple, Amazon, IBM, etc.

CommSec says “almost 82% of those reporting full-year earnings reported a profit – below average. But almost 61% improved their profit results – above average. And, encouragingly, 85% of full year companies lifted or maintained dividends.”

So, like our economy, it wasn’t all bad news but at the moment, the pessimists, the short-sellers, the hedge funds and their ilk hold the upper hand. As annoying ‘experts’ often joke when you ask them why stocks were down on any one day they say: “Sellers outnumbered buyers.”

However, it’s pretty well right, at least for the present.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

So how long will this stocks stress last?

As long as we’re sweating on the Fed to raise rates and for the Chinese economy to give us something economically positive, stocks will be under pressure from the simple fact that sellers are outnumbering buyers. At home, the bad economic news pre-July has to look a thing of the past and we have to show that both low rates plus the stimulatory Budget plus a dollar now at 69.11 US cents (and heading lower) will combine to create stock buyers who are now sellers.

Remember this: the dispassionate calculations of what fair value is for our stock market is north of 5700, so as we’re at 5060 that means we are 640 points short of this mark and that’s around 12.6%. If we throw in a conservative dividend return and franking credits, there’s 15% plus out there for the positive, persistent, patient player!

If the Fed raises in the middle of the week after next and a sell off happens, then I think November could be the start of a nice finish to the year. I only hope China can come to the party and bestow positivity upon our economic and market prognostications.

Top stocks – how they fared

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The week in review

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What moved the market

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Calls of the week

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Source: RSPCA ACT, ABC

Food for thought

The way to get started is to quit talking and begin doing.

– Walt Disney, American entrepreneur

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 Myer, which saw their short position reduce to a still very high 20.15%, while fellow retailer Dick Smith Holdings went the other way with a 0.72% percentage point increase in the proportion of its shares sold short to 11.26%.

20150904 - short stocks [19]My favourite charts

Opportunity during adversity

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As Charlie Aitken pointed out, the VIX index, which demonstrates the “fear factor”, can be used as an opportunity to be “conservatively constructive” and buy blue chips – like the big banks!

24 years strong

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Despite the negative nellies out there focussing on the fact that our GDP number was softer than expected, Savanth Sebastian of CommSec pointed out that Australia has gone through 24 consecutive years of growth since our last recession in 1991! Now that’s something to focus on!

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