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Bye bye Stu, buy buy BOQ, and is Joe running on empty?

Another good week for the good guys with CBA, Telstra, Suncorp and CSL (the kinds of stocks we’ve liked) all delivering for SMSF trustees. Excuse my bias but I do think our SMSF fraternity are the good guys. We hope, through this relationship we have with you, that we can give you guys the good oil as well.

On that subject, it was nice to see Charlie Aitken’s beloved Crown deliver. It was actually on my TV program that I recalled his East Coast of Australia recovery thesis, which included the likes of Suncorp and BOQ.

The latter I liked because of Stuart Grimshaw, (the now departing CEO, who’s going to head up the biggest pawn shop business in the US) and the fact that every property expert on my show was telling me that south-east Queensland property was coming back from the dead. Charlie’s ravings talked me into Suncorp and the dividend but I’m nervous about insurance companies because I have a memory!

On BOQ

Grimshaw’s departure is sad, as he’s a good performer. Note the share price spike over the past year or so, which we plugged strongly here. Like all great leaders, however, he has assembled a team of leaders around him and I’ll be surprised if the interim CEO, John Sutton, doesn’t get the main gig. Given I reckon this will happen, any sell off linked to Stuart’s departure should be a buying opportunity, which I’ll be happy to avail myself of.

So I’m singing bye, bye Stuart goodbye and buy, buy, BOQ, good buy! And I should add that my SMSF thanks Stu for his efforts.

Correcting the correction carry on

Morgan’s chief economist, Michael Knox, still thinks a correction will happen over September and October setting us up for an end-of-year rally. His econometrics tells him that the S&P 500 index in the US is fair value at 1830 but its all-time high is 1991.39. It closed Friday at 1955 so there’s a long drop possible.

If, say, geopolitical concerns met the usual spookiness of September (when US tax payments can hit the stock market and fair value shows up) it would only be an 8% fall, which isn’t a correction. Officially, 10% is a correction. I think only something really scary could make this happen, as dip buyers like me should stop a progressive drop of stocks by 10%.

Adding to this story, reports overnight say that George Soros, who has made some of the biggest market bets of all time, has now punted against the S&P 500. Soros doesn’t always get it right but the momentum of his money didn’t make a big impression on the key market index on Friday, which was down a measly 0.11 of a point! However, this major move against the S&P 500 at this time, when September is renowned for sell offs, can’t be ignored.

Of course, if US company reporting remains better than expected, then fair value levels would sneak up anyway, which again could limit the extent of the market’s drop. That’s what I’m expecting but geopolitical curve balls are worrying me. More on this later.

What I liked this week

What I didn’t like

Worse still, it has helped satirists like Alex Shean, whose father sent this to me:

Top stocks – how they fared

Numbers that moved the market

Business confidence [1] increased in July from +7.8 to +11, which is a 10-month high!

Chinese retail sales rose [2] at an annual rate of 12.2% in July – a healthy figure for our largest trading partner.

Earnings season tasted sweet for Telstra, who reported an annual profit of $4.3 billion [3], announced a $1 billion off-market share buyback, and will give their shareholders an increased final dividend of 15c, fully franked.

Total lending finance figures lifted [4] by 7.6% in June, which is a six and a half year high! This growth was large, but came off the back of a material lift in commercial finance lending – up 12.1% after a 5.9% fall in May.

The week ahead:

Australia:

Monday August 18 – New car sales (July)
Tuesday August 19 – ANZ Roy Morgan Consumer Confidence
Tuesday August 19 – Reserve Bank Board minutes
Tuesday August 19 – Imports of goods (July)
Wednesday August 20 – Testimony by RBA Governor

Overseas:

Tuesday August 19 – US Consumer prices (July)
Tuesday August 19 – US Housing Starts (July)
Wednesday August 20 – US FOMC minutes
Thursday August 21 – “Flash” manufacturing surveys
Thursday August 21 – US Philadelphia Fed survey (August)
Thursday August 21 – US Existing home sales (July)
Thursday August 21 – US Leading index (August)

The Reserve Bank is in focus next week, with the minutes of the last Board meeting published on Tuesday, and on Wednesday, Governor Glenn Stevens will deliver his twice yearly statement to the House of Representatives Standing Committee on Economics.

Compared to Australia’s little black book of economic events, the US has a fair bit of top shelf data on their agenda. The week will kick off on Tuesday with US Consumer Prices and US Housing Starts – both issued for the month of July – while the all-important Fed meeting minutes on Wednesday might include a whisper about any upcoming rate climbs. Thursday sees US data on manufacturing and the US Philly Fed survey, and alongside these manufacturing readings will be data on US existing home sales for July, and the index of leading indicators for August.

Calls of the Week:

Jimmy Fallon made a special tribute [5] to comedic genius Robin Williams this week, and described him as the “Muhammad Ali” of comedy.

Joe Hockey made the call that “the poorest people either don’t have cars, or actually don’t drive very far’’ this week when he tried to justify his increase to the fuel excise on ABC radio. [6]

And Tony Featherstone said that OnTheHouse Holdings, Nearmap, and iBuy Group are three tech companies that have all the traits of a takeover target [7] – so keep your eyes on this list for any interesting action!

Food for thought

You have to learn the rules of the game. And then you have to play better than anyone else – Albert Einstein.

Last week’s TV roundup

Domino’s delivered more than just good pizza this week, with a stellar earnings profit [8] boosting share prices. So what other stocks are shining during earnings season, and which stocks should we be holding? Tim Samway from Hyperion Asset Management told me exactly how he will be investing moving forward on Super TV.

With the Aussie dollar tipped to slide over the coming year, should we be exposing ourselves to international stocks? Nick Griffin from K2 Asset Management explained how we can make some great investment decisions [9] off-shore.

In this Super Sessions update, Paul Rickard and I talk about growth stocks and where you can find them [10], and take a close look at how you can access international markets using exchange traded funds (ETFs).

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 the biggest mover was Cochlear (COH), who had its short position decrease by 1.67% to 16.06%.

Source: ASIC

My Favourite charts:

Lending on the rise!

Source: ABS, CommSec

Business conditions hit four year high!

Source: NAB Monthly Business Survey

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