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Maybe, just maybe the worst is just about behind us! Or is it?

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The Dow was down 174 points on Thursday but we lost only 27.8 on the S&P/ASX 200. By 4 pm yesterday, European markets were tipped to go higher on comments from Fed boss Janet Yellen. What did she say?

First she was more bullish on the US economy. Second, she denied the December rate rise was a mistake. And third, she made it pretty clear that two rate rises for the Yanks are expected.

Adding to the commentary, the Japanese Finance Minister did some serious jawboning, promising action to stop the ruinous rise of the yen, especially against the greenback. Fortunately, our dollar didn’t get caught in the crossfire, only up a little at 75.37 US cents on Friday afternoon.

On Friday, our stock market ended at 4937.2 and as we ended last week at 4999.40, that’s a 62-point loss for the week.

Why has our stock market been so susceptible to gravity over the past 12 months? The answer rests on the hate session on our banks, the weakness for material stocks such as BHP and Rio and that damn Oz dollar hasn’t helped.

The queue to slug our banks reminds me of the line of people in the movie Airplane!, who smacked that poor female passenger who had a fear of flying and was crying out for support (if you need a refresher on this, go to https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=d1Cpc8Vw-2A [1]).

Everyday, a new reason to sell the bank surfaces but not everyone sees it as the market has since mid-2015. “Over the last 30 years, they’ve rarely been as cheap as they are today,” said Julian Babarczy, head of Australian equities at Regal Funds Management (SMH).

But the Arrium voluntary administration and its potential half a billion dollar slug to local banks has got some analysts even more negative, as they look around for other left-field failures.

This collapse of the old OneSteel business could actually do the ‘Whyalla Wipe-Out’ that Craig Emerson jokingly sung about, as doom was predicted for mining because of the carbon tax (those with courage can revisit that at https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=L1pEt7bgY2U [2]).

Arrium has joined the queue with Dick Smith, Slater and Gordon and others, which could be bad debts for the banks so there are some reasons for concerns on that score. Then there’s the housing boom ending and more demands from APRA for the banks to add to capital. And furthermore, until we saw our 3% economic growth number for the year to December, there were claims that we were slowing down, with some crackpots seeing a recession in their economic crystal balls.

However, all this might explain why markets have taken the CBA share price down from a high just over $95 to where it is at $70.76 yesterday. And remember, financials make up about 40% of our market cap or the index, so it easily explains why the S&P/ASX 200 index has had a shocker since April last year.

Throw in the misery for BHP and Rio this past 12 months and you can only hope that the experts, who are calling the worst is behind us for commodity prices, are right!

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That said, at this stage, the overall market index charts are not offering enough promise that the worst is over. However, if there is a game changer event or development, those technical tracks can also change. So, what might those events be?

The April 17 oil producers’ meeting in Doha, Qatar could deliver a production freeze, which would stabilise or even raise prices, which has had positive effects on share prices. Then there is the next FOMC meeting on April 26-27 and we know that post pow-wow comments from Janet Yellen can be market-moving. Thankfully, she has learnt to say the right thing to markets.

Coming up next week, US earnings season starts and by early June, we should have a good idea of what the company profit outlook should be. I’m not expecting great news for US profits but the outlook statements will be closely watched. If there is a more positive view linked to a better than expected economy and a lower dollar, then a lot of the current negativity could be offset.

Then on June 23, the Brits vote on whether they stay in the EU and all the argy bargy ahead of this decision could easily unsettle markets, just as the Greek’s possible Grexit did last year. And all these market threats or opportunities happen in that notoriously dangerous market period, where “sell in May and runaway…”, can dominate stock markets.

Clearly, we’re entering a make or break period for the markets and our portfolios’ fortunes. I’d like to be 100% positive on stocks doing OK over the next six months but we’re entering a minefield. You know I think we have the capacity to finish in positive territory for the year. However, I also know this could be a bumpy, volatile ride because we’re depending on the team at OPEC, along with Russia, Iran, et al.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

We need to see a very good Budget on May 3.

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

“The best way to predict the future is to create it.”

– Peter Drucker, US businessman

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 MMA Offshore, with a 1 percentage point increase in the proportion of its shares sold short to 7.89%. JB Hi-Fi followed with a 0.84 percentage point increase from 8.69% to 9.52%.

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Source: ASIC

My favourite charts

Chinese tourists trump NZ!

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CommSec has shown how tourists from greater China (China & Hong Kong) equalled 108,400 during February, beating our mates from across the ditch at 102,600. Maybe Charlie Aitken was on to something with his ‘structural growth themes’ including opportunities to capture the in-bound Chinese dollar. [21]

Is Tesla driving the future for cars?

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Take a look at the pre-orders for Tesla’s new electric car model! This chart shows how, as of April 2, Tesla received 276,000 pre-orders for its new model compared to a grand total of 107,000 car deliveries to customers from 2012-2015.

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