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Our stock market was Trumped again by the tweeting President!

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You could have blown me down when I discovered that we’d gained 0.5% in the S&P/ASX 200 Index over the week. Of course, if it weren’t for President Trump’s out-of-control tweeting, we would’ve been a lot higher.

And given the big Dow drop overnight, once again due to the potential Trump trade war, it’s going to be ugly on Monday for our stock market.

Thursday’s Wall Street close saw the Dow up 240 points and we finished down 0.1 of a point. However, we should have seen a 30-point plus gain but Donald had to tweet that maybe the Chinese need tariffs on US$150 billion instead of the US$60 billion first suggested.

And while we wait for the Chinese response in this trade ping pong game, our stock market suffers, with the Trump tariff tantrum blocking the progress of our shares higher.

After this tweet, Dow futures were down 350 points and this follows a good day on the market on Thursday, when the White House was hosing down the likelihood of a trade war and Wall Street liked the vibe. However, Donald trumped this optimism on the potential trade war front by talking about bumping up the tariff imposts on China by an extra US$100 billion!

The day before the US President indicated that he wasn’t gunning for Amazon, after implying previously that the opposite was the case! For crying out loud – we’re not used to this kind of politics and Wall Street hates it.

But given Donald’s unpredictability, why can’t the market ignore his tweets? Well, you have serious people like JPMorgan’s chairman, Jacob Frenkel, warning that a trade war “is the greatest threat to the world economy” and as we’re a heavily trade-dependent economy, our stock market is giving into gravity.

“It’s still not a trade war – I would say there were some skirmishes, and there are skirmishes,” Frenkel said. “I think we should all remember the disaster of 1931 – always good intentions, to protect American jobs, and the result was a catalyst to the Great Depression. We should avoid it at all costs.” (CNBC)

On Friday, China returned fire, indicating US cars and iPhones could be added to the trade bans, if the President goes and doubles down on his tariff slugs on China.

And if Donald’s madcap tweets aren’t enough, our market is coping it with the Royal Commission’s impact on bank share prices and Telstra keeps doing nothing to arrest its share price slide. In our Friday webinar, Roger Montgomery, a long Telstra hater, said the company is starting to “look interesting” but he wasn’t pressing the “buy” button yet.

Six months ago, CMC’s Michael McCarthy said he would like Telstra at $2.78 but I thought he was being too negative. He might end up being right but I think I’d dive into the telco if it goes under $3, even though I have my doubts about its management team right now.

On other local notable news, Myer went up 7.3% to 37 cents on reports the South African Woolworths Holdings was eyeing off the hapless retailer. The stock’s rise might be short-lived, as Woolies SA denied the reports.

Meanwhile, Fairfax revealed that Aristocrat (which is the darling of the analysts with 20% upside, if they’re on the money) lost a US court case over a product of theirs, which was ruled to be “illegal online gambling”. However, Citi expects a win on appeal and has a target price of $32.20. The stock finished the week at $23.56!

And for Trump believers who think his negotiating tactics are like a bluff poker player, with Donald holding all the aces, note that iron ore prices went up when White House officials pooh poohed trade war talk but they slumped after the President tweeted about tripling the tariffs on China!

There is a contrarian play for Donald’s supporters, who think he’s too smart to really start a real trade war. Gee, I hope they’re right!

By the way, the US jobs report was soft overnight, with 103,000 jobs showing up in March, rather than the 185,000 expected by economists. Meantime, the unemployment rate stayed steady at a low 4.1%. So what happened? I love this from The New York Times: “February’s report was a barnburner: Companies added jobs at the strongest pace since 2015, and the labor force gained hundreds of thousands of workers. The report for March wasn’t as strong, but still extended a remarkable run in the job market.”

My only hope is that Donald’s trade barn-burning doesn’t create a fire and economic ‘tit for tat’ war that turns a correction into a crash. And from an economic point of view, the US is our political/military ally but China is the number one buyer of our exports!

What I liked

What I didn’t like

We’re being Trumped – can we make money out of it?

It’s clear President Trump is playing a high stakes game with his trade battle with China and our stock portfolios are paying the price. However, if a trade war is avoided and the US wins concessions from the Chinese, then we could be looking at a buying opportunity.

In early February, the S&P/ASX 200 Index was at 6121 and we’re now at 5788. So if the trade war goes away, a rebound for our market looks very likely and that could be a 5.7% gain, which I guess is what Donald has cost us with his tariff tantrums.

The only question is: will we avoid a trade war?

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:

“There’s nothing like a jolly good disaster to get people to start doing something” Charles, Prince of Wales.

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:

In light of the Commonwealth Games starting this week, here is a graph that shows the regions which have hosted the games since 1930.  Australia has hosted the games five times.

Source: Queensland Government

Top 5 most clicked:

  1. A rough first quarter, but it’s always darkest before the dawn [2] – Charlie Aitken
  2. Buy, Hold, Sell – what the brokers say [6] – Rudi Filapek-Vandyck
  3. Question of the Week [7] – Graeme Colley
  4. Santos bet pays off for takeover target portfolio [3] – Tony Featherstone
  5. Trade fears put pressure on portfolios [1] – Paul Rickard

Recent Switzer Super Reports:

Thursday 5th April 2018: Darkest before the dawn [9]

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.