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Record highs for US stocks! Will Donald change that this week?

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Stocks locally have been given a US-driven tailwind to reach new post-GFC heights this week but another week of Trump trade war anxiety could change all that. And if Friday’s US-Canadian negotiations are any guide, there could be fireworks next week!

More on that in a moment but local reporting season is done and dusted and the overall results were good, without being great, but that’s consistent with what our economy looks like – good but not great.

The company show-and-tell summary gets down to the following:

This is how AMP Capital’s Shane Oliver viewed it: “2017-18 earnings growth have come in around expectations at about 8%, with resources earnings up 25%, thanks to solid commodity prices and rising volumes and the rest of the market seeing profit growth of around 5%. It’s not the 28% earnings growth being seen in the US but it’s still solid.”

And on the higher profits, he observed that “the breadth of profit increases was impressive” meaning the number of companies with rising earnings was historically significant. For a bigger picture of overall profits, this is Shane Oliver’s pictorial take on reporting season:

However, we have a long way to go to match the Yanks, with their 28% rise in collective company profits. And where the Dow and S&P 500 indexes had the best Augusts since 2014, they are further into their economic comeback than we are. In case you like milestones, the Nasdaq rose above 8,000 points for the first time, while the Dow Jones was back above 26,000 points, until Donald made some Canadian comments.

While on the US, stocks were buoyed by the Mexico trade deal announced early in the week and hopes were high that a Canadian inking on a deal would happen overnight. But a Bloomberg report of off-the record comments by President Trump didn’t help matters, where he allegedly said he was giving no ground to Canada on trade and that “it’s going to be so insulting, they’re not going to be able to make a deal!”

Later in the day, the Canadian negotiator said to reporters that “they were not there yet” and the market didn’t like it. The Canadians planned to do a press conference after the stock market closed at 4.30pm. It doesn’t sound market-positive but we’ll see.

This week has proven how important trade war talk has been for stocks. Next week will be driven by another “will he or won’t he” slam $US200 billion worth of tariffs on China on Thursday?

To the local stocks story and banks helped our market have a good week. The S&P/ASX 200 index rose 72.2 points (or 1.16%) this week, hitting the best level since December 2007 on Thursday of 6371.5 before closing on Friday at 6319.5.

Despite the bad publicity of Westpac raising home loan interest rates by 14 basis points to 5.38%, its share price sneaked up 3.2% over the week to $28.54, which shows us why CEO Brian Hartzer was prepared to draw fire on the subject. And while no other big four bank played follow the leader, they all went along for the stock price ride, with ANZ up 3.4% higher, NAB put on 3% and CBA rose 0.9%.

Bouquets have to go to Boral, who has turned its overseas foray into a winner, with underlying profit up 38% to $473 million. The company share price went up 8.2% for the week to end at $7.02.

Other big news stories were:

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Time to shop for an Amazon?

On August 6, I interviewed the CEO of MGM wireless (MWR) on my Money Talks program on Sky. He talked about his Spacetalk smartwatch, which means parents know where their young kids are 24/7. The share price has gone up over 100% since that interview! I thought about this company when I saw what Amazon has returned since going public. “If you had invested $1,000 during Amazon’s IPO in May 1997, your investment would be worth $1,341,000 as of August 31, according to CNBC calculations.”

The Week in Review:

Top Stocks – how they fared:

What moved the market? 

Calls of the week:

The Week Ahead:
Australia

Monday September 3 — CoreLogic home value index (August)
Monday September 3 — ANZ job advertisements (August)
Monday September 3 — Business indicators (June quarter)
Monday September 3 — Retail trade (July)
Monday September 3 — Manufacturing purchasing manager surveys (August)
Tuesday September 4 — Reserve Bank Board meeting
Tuesday September 4 — Balance of payments (June quarter)
Tuesday September 4 — Reserve Bank Governor speech
Tuesday September 4 — Government finance (June quarter)
Wednesday September 5 — Economic growth (June quarter)
Wednesday September 5 — New vehicle sales (August)
Thursday September 6 — International trade (July)
Friday September 7 — Housing finance (July)

Overseas

Monday September 3 — China Caixin manufacturing index (August)
Tuesday September 4 — US ISM manufacturing index (August)
Tuesday September 4 — US Construction spending (July)
Wednesday September 5 — China Caixin services index (August)
Wednesday September 5 — US Trade balance (July)
Thursday September 6 — US ADP employment (August)
Friday September 7 — US Non-farm payrolls (August)
Saturday September 8 — China International trade (August)

Food for thought:

Every ball went exactly where I wanted it to go until the ball that got me out.”
Don Bradman

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.

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Chart of the week:

In celebration of Don Bradman’s birthday on Monday, here is a chart tracking The Don’s performance throughout his Test Match career:

Source: Wikimedia

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