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Where to for the markets – reporting season coming!

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“The Dow Jones index has had its strongest start to the year in 15 years and investors are now re-assessing the strength of the gains.” That’s how CNBC saw Thursday’s action on Wall Street, with the Dow hitting another all-time high. And overnight we found out why investors continue to pile into stocks, despite the huge rises for stock prices over 2017, with US banks reporting better-than-expected as the fourth quarter earnings show-and-tell season hots up.

J.P.Morgan, Wells Fargo and the world’s biggest fund manager, Blackrock, all came in with better-than-expected results and this great start for this all-important sector for overall corporate profits makes it believable that earnings will be up around 11.2%.

But get this: analysts are now predicting that the current quarter’s profits will be even higher! And outlook statements have to get more positive, with a huge number of US companies expecting to see their tax rates drop from 36% to 21%. Sure, I know many big, internationally-exposed US companies have reduced their tax bills so much that the Trump tax cuts won’t have a big effect on their bottom lines directly but many businesses in the States will get a boost from the lower tax rate.

And then there’s the effects of developments, such as WalMart deciding to raise wages as a consequence of the tax cuts!

As one commentator concluded, “the stock market will enjoy a ‘Made in America’ boom this year thanks to a slew of policies spearheaded by the Trump administration, according to a Wall Street investment bank.”

Art Cashin, the longest-serving broker on the floor of the New York Stock Exchange and someone I’ve interviewed twice when I took my TV show to the Big Apple, told CNBC this week that these tax cuts will leave a lot of market players “pleasantly surprised” when they flow to most US companies. It’s what economists call the multiplier effect and it’s not an issue that US voters are ignoring, with a recent survey showing that 66% of voters describing the recent state of the economy as “excellent” or “good.” This is the highest reading since 2001, when the Quinnipiac poll was first started.

After Trump’s election in November 2016, the figure was at 39% but, interestingly, President Trump is on the outer, with only 39% of voters loving him, while 59% hate the guy, with many crediting President Obama for the good times.

The experts call Wall Street’s chase for growth companies and their less defensive stance as the reflation trade and it tends to bring big rises to stock markets, with outfits like banks in favour. So when I’m asked where markets are heading, my answer is up but expect some volatility.

Well, that’s the US but what about the limp response to all this global positivity? And we couldn’t get excited about our good retail figures, which must have made Amazon slayer Gerry Harvey put on his magic millions’ smile this week!

Our market ended down for the week! We lost 0.9% on the S&P/ASX 200 Index and it might have been worse if our miners weren’t so loved nowadays. And as someone who talked up Fortescue late last year, which duly saluted the judge, I loved this from Perpetual’s Matt Sherwood: “Miners are getting re-rated and people are starting to recalibrate portfolios to the one sector that could see significant upside.” (Fairfax)

Rio Tinto shares shot up 1.7% yesterday to a six-and-a-half year high on Friday of $80.62. Meanwhile, fossil fuels are still making appeal, with oil prices hitting their best levels since December 2014 over the week. US West Texas Intermediate crude futures are around $64.

Given how lacklustre our market is right now, I thank God we have plenty to dig up in the ground or our stock market might be going backwards! That said, I expect many of our non-mining companies to surprise on the high side this year.

At the moment, people like Matt think earnings will be up about 5% here in Australia but I suspect that figure will be pushed higher, especially if our retailers keep surprising on the high side.

Super Retail rose 3.6% to $8.70 over the week, Harvey Norman was up 1.4% to $4.38 but JB Hi-Fi shot up 8.8% to $28.36 over the week, which has been a company Paul Rickard and I have warned would surprise those who were overrating Amazon!

What I liked

What I didn’t like

The Week in Review

Top Stocks – how they fared

What moved the market?

Calls of the week

The Week Ahead

Australia

Overseas

Food for thought

We may have all come on different ships, but we’re in the same boat now – Martin Luther King, Jr.

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.

Charts of the week

The total value of dwelling approvals rose by 14.8% to $7.7 billion in November, a record high.

Purchases made with debit cards grew by an annual rate of 15.2 per cent in November – a 4.5-year high. Meanwhile, debit cards have become younger Aussies’ preferred method of paying for goods and services over credit cards, according to CommSec.

Source: Commsec

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