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Stock market: Good week at the office but can it be sustained?

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Well it wasn’t enough to write home about, but that’s exactly what I’m doing, so a 1.8% climb in the S&P/ASX 200 index for the week was the best performance for this time period since the last week in March!

The best bit of data this week was the Westpac consumer confidence reading going positive and the dollar with a 78 US cents handle on it is better than an 81 cent one.

Consumers have been lagging businesses and their confidence and if the little Aussie shopper can start doing the right thing, then my optimistic calls on the economy should work out.

Around the world, the US and German stock markets made all-time highs and in the latter’s case the improving outlook for the EU economy should set the scene for more stock market positivity out of Europe. Well, that’s provided the Spanish can keep their Catalonian brothers and sisters from seceding.

Away from the positives for local stocks and lower iron prices have taken a bit of the wind out of the resources sector’s sail. That said, mining was up 0.1% for the week, while the consumer discretionary sector put on 4.4%.

Story of the week had to be the Accor Group’s offer to buy out Mantra’s stable of hotels. The 20.1% rise shocked me along with the takeover offer but the company’s share price has been all over the place lately and every time I was asked about the group I always argued it look well-placed to do well but not this well.

Platinum Asset Management is another that has come good after being in the sin bin for too long and the 10% gain this week reinforces my view that the worst is behind the company.

And while on turnarounds, Bellamy’s being up 32% was staggering but only the brave could have kept believing in this company’s story. Of course, if you were a recent speculator on the stock you’d be on good terms with yourself but I doubt many have the sustenance to dollar cost average this sucker such that you’d be happy today!

We’re still in going nowhere land but I liked AMP’s Shane Oliver’s take on the “sweet spot” we look to be in. “This is still a seasonally volatile time of the year for shares, North Korean risks remain high, Trump related risks remain and Wall Street is overdue for a decent 5% or so correction, which would affect other share markets,” he wrote on Friday. “However, beyond short-term uncertainties, we remain in a sweet spot in the investment cycle – with okay valuations particularly outside of the US, solid global growth and improving profits but still benign monetary conditions – so we remain of the view that the broad trend in share markets will remain up. This should eventually drag Australian shares up from their range bound malaise.”

Hope springs eternal!

What I liked

What I didn’t like

One more like

Why does Wall Street keep on rising? Because of daylight saving, the NYSE closes at 8am our time so I fly a little blind on Wall Street’s actual close. But again at 5.25am as I write this, the Dow is up 37 points. It seems to just creep up every day. Why does it do this?

First, there isn’t a big enough scare factor out there to give US stock markets the 5% plus pullbacks they look like they need.

Second, the Fed doesn’t look like it’s going to spoil the party by taking away the stimulation of low interest rates too quickly.

And finally, the US earnings outlook for the September quarter is tipped to be good. “People are generally expecting a strong earnings season,” said Tom Martin, senior portfolio manager at Globalt. (CNBC)

Earnings season has gotten off to a good start, with 87% of companies that have reported topping bottom-line expectations, according to Nick Raich, CEO of The Earnings Scout. “The good news is the number of companies currently beating estimates, and the margin by which they are doing so, is running at a clip well above what these same 31 companies have recorded, on average, over the past three years,” Raich said in a note to clients. (CNBC)

“The bad news is the rate of 3Q 2017 vs. 3Q 2016 earnings and sales growth has slowed from last quarter, and as more companies report, the growth rates will drop more,” he said.

If Donald gets a tax plan approved, we’ll join the party on a lower Aussie dollar.

 The week in review

Calls of the week

Top stocks – how they fared

20171013-topstocks

What moved the market?

The week ahead

Australia

Overseas

Food for thought

“It is not the strongest of the species that survive, nor the most intelligent, but the one most responsive to change.”

– Charles Darwin

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 shows how this has changed compared to the week before.

This week, one of the biggest movers was Quintis (QIN), with its short position increasing by 3.72 percentage points to 8.23%. Meanwhile, Select Harvests (SHV) saw the biggest decrease of 1.61 percentage points to 11.73%.

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Top 5 most clicked stories

Charts of the week

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China has now passed New Zealand as our top source of tourists. China & Hong Kong together passed NZ in tourist numbers in September 2015.

Recent Switzer Super Reports

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