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Spurting oil, the Swiss switcharoo and another Switzer!

I know we’re out of season but watching the daily run of play for stocks, I feel like we’re watching our team being on the wrong side of the referee early in the game but I still have an overwhelming feeling that my side can turn around this bad spell to finish on top. Even if we have to go into extra time.

That’s the way I’ve felt since November last year when the ‘spurting’ oil supply led to a huge slump in oil prices, energy stocks and then stocks generally. And this has happened despite just about everyone from the President of the Bundesbank to the IMF boss Christine Lagarde arguing that the cost and income benefits of lower oil prices will far outweigh the negatives of beaten up energy companies and related geographical areas, such as Texas, that thrive on black gold.

But still stock markets look wobbly because of oil. I believe the short-sellers, hedge fund managers and smarty pants traders are exploiting the volatility that was absent last year, which undermined many of these suckers’ profits and so they are making inedible hay – to beasts like me – while the sun is battling these temporary black clouds!

Consistent with this assessment was Wall Street overnight. With two and a half hours to go, the Dow was up over a 100 points on what market reporters say was a rising oil price! Of course you can’t always trust stocks specialist scribes but if oil prices have taken us down, the reverse, logically, is possible.

The triple-digit gain was put down to:

What was the deal with the Swiss franc?

The Swiss killed off its ceiling price on the Swiss franc relative to the euro, which took its exchange rate up 30%! To maintain this artificial exchange rate, the Swiss central bank was one of the biggest buyers of the euro and it underlines that these world-renown bankers expect something big on Thursday. I damn well hope so!

What I didn’t like this week

What I liked

Top stocks – how they fared

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The week in review (click the blue text to read more):

What moved the market (click the blue text to read more):

The week ahead:

Australia
Monday January 19 – State of the States (January)
Monday January 19 – Monthly inflation gauge (December)
Monday January 19 – New car sales (December)
Tuesday January 20 – Imports of goods (December)
Wednesday January 21 – Consumer confidence (January)
Thursday January 22 – Detailed employment (December)
Thursday January 22 – New home sales (November)

Overseas
Sunday January 18 – China House prices (December)
Tuesday January 20 – China Economic growth (December quarter)
Tuesday January 20 – US NAHB housing market index (January)
Wednesday January 21 – US Housing starts (December)
Thursday January 22 – Markit “flash” manufacturing (January)
Thursday January 22 – US Home prices (November)
Friday January 23 – US Existing home sales (December)
Friday January 23 – US Leading index (December)

The States battle it out for the top spot for “economic performance” in CommSec’s State of the States survey – released Monday. Also out on Monday are the ABS figures for new car sales in December, and TD Securities and the Melbourne Institute release their monthly inflation gauge for December. The ABS is back on Tuesday to release imports of goods for December, and on Thursday, there’s more detailed employment data due along with November’s new home sales.

The biggest one to watch overseas is China’s data on economic growth – or GDP – for the December quarter. The US does have a fair bit on its agenda, but most investors will probably be paying attention to company reports as US earnings season is in full swing.

Calls of the week (click the blue text to read more):

Food for thought

No one’s ever achieved financial fitness with a January resolution that’s abandoned by February.

Suze Orman – American author and television host.

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 Monadelphous Group, with its short position increasing by 1.43% to 8.23%. Metcash followed closely, with its short position increasing by 1.21% to 11.86%.

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Source: ASIC

My favourite charts:

Winning portfolio – annual average 2-year return

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Since our SSR income portfolio started – over two years ago – the average annual return has been almost 16%! Here it is against the accumulation index, which had average annual returns of 12.67%.

Solid lift in employment!

[24]Source: CBA Economics

It was good news for our unemployment rate, which decreased to 6.1% in December, the lowest rate we’ve seen since August last year. The number of people employed increased by 37,400 to 11,679,000 in December (seasonally adjusted). But this graph – illustrating cumulative employment since January 2010 – shows that not all states are growing.

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