Switzer on Saturday

Data, drama and a Doh! decision

Founder and Publisher of the Switzer Report
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It’s been a week when the RBA boss, Glenn Stevens had a Homer Simpson “Doh!” moment, where our stock market showed how important the dollar is and, more significantly, how important our relative interest rates are.

However, in the States, they wiped away any current inclinations towards a stocks sell off, with the Dow up over 250 points! And this was on the back of a ‘Goldilocks’ jobs report, which was neither too hot nor too cold, with 223,000 jobs showing up in April. Unemployment fell from 5.4% to 5.3%.

This tough week at the office for the economy and the stock market has piled the pressure on Treasurer Joe Hockey. With newspaper stories saying his job is on the line, this Budget and its sell has to be miles better than last year’s effort.

In reality, if Joe fails, his boss Tony Abbott could be saluting Malcolm Turnbull by year’s end! And he wouldn’t like that. I hope this drama has a happy ending for the economy and Joe and Tony because another leadership drama would again undermine confidence.

Meanwhile, our unemployment number went up (as economists expected) but the more important story has to be that over the past six months, 161,000 job seekers have found positions! That’s the best result in four years.

In case you don’t believe it, green shoots are actually showing – recall Harold Mitchell last week saying that ad sales were pointing in that direction.

Here’s what I found growing in our economy’s garden:

  • The ANZ job advertisements numbers increased 2.3% in April, after falling for the first time in 10 months in March. Better still, in trend terms, job ads have now increased for 18 consecutive months, although the pace of growth has been slowing since the end of last year.
  • Retail sales rose for the tenth straight month, up by 0.3% in March, after rising by 0.7% in February. Annual spending growth rose from 4.3% to 4.5%, mildly above the decade-average growth rate of 4.3%.
  • New home sales rose by 4.4% in March to a four-year high.
  • Over the past 12 months, there has been a record high 210,484 dwellings approved for construction, which is 11.2% higher than the same time last year.
  • Inflation was 0.2% in March and is now a tame 1.2% and explains why the RBA was able to cut rates this week.

I could throw in house prices as another positive. Even the stock market is up about 8% (if you throw in dividends and franking credits). What are some “so and so’s” complaining about?

What I liked

  • The run of economic data this week, as the above shows.
  • The 0.25% cash rate cut, until we read that the “easing bias” line had been dropped!
  • The weekly initial jobless claims rose by 3,000 to 262,000, which must suggest that the majority of big market players think that first day up for rates is still way off.
  • You could be wondering why a 3,000 rise in people claiming they are jobless is seen as good. Well, the previous week’s number, which was 3,000 lower, was the best and lowest reading since 2000. So it was a small rise off a great result.

    swos-20150509-001

  • Seeing this chart again reminds me why dividends are miles better than term deposits:
    What are the key points? Stick with me on this and here goes. The ascending green bars show that on the $100,000 investment, the dividend return was around 7% in 1979 but term deposit rates were higher, thanks to inflation in those days. However, as time went by, dividends grew. By 2014, they were returning $80,000 on that $100,000, while term deposits were giving you about 5%! Worse still, your capital value of the $100,000 in a term deposit was, you guessed it $100,000 – that’s why that straight red line is on the chart. Now look at the blue line. This shows that by 2014, for example, the capital value of the $100,000 invested was heading towards $1.8 million! The role of term deposits is to look after your cash buffer for some bad times and you get a bit of interest. Dividend-paying stocks will look after you in the long run.
  • The US jobs report that doesn’t force the Fed’s hand but confirms that their economy is still recovering nicely, with unemployment at the lowest level since May 2008!

What I didn’t like

  • That RBA comment, the dollar going up and the stock market going down.
  • The market taking Glenn’s words literally. He will cut more if the dollar stays up.
  • The crazy rise in yields in the bond market that no one seems able to explain convincingly. If we thought the US economy was better than expected, bond yields should head up. Few bond experts want to run with that story. They seem nonplussed and that worries me when it comes to the bond market. Remember, it’s been said that when the Fed raises rates, the bond market could have a meltdown but the operative word is “could”. Nervous types might need to go to cash. I’m not a nervous type!
  • The Federal Reserve Chair Janet Yellen warning that high equity valuations could pose “potential dangers” to the IMF’s Christine Lagarde but she then backed off to say the market was not overvalued then. Looks like a ‘loose lips’ week for central bankers.

The drama continues on Tuesday

With the Budget on Tuesday night, I’m hoping the media sees positivity not negativity after Joe presents. I’m expecting a great Budget for small business because the very man who knows tipped me off! Of course, I didn’t get details but I got assurances.

One guy who is super positive is Nine’s Scott Cam, who I caught up with at a footie function yesterday. I taught Cam when we were both very young and I commiserated with him about not winning the Gold Logie on Sunday night. His reaction was good: “Don’t worry Switz, I’ve already got one of those.”

Top stocks – how they fared

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The week in review

(click the blue text to read more):

What moved the market:

  • RBA Governor Glenn Stevens dropping the “easing bias” words from the RBA statement.
  • The banks, with Westpac results missing profit and dividend expectations and CBA reporting weaker than expected third quarter cash earnings.
  • The official jobless rate, which has risen to 6.2% in April, from 6.1% in March.
  • And comments from Fed boss Janet Yellen on her chat with IMF boss Christine Lagarde – both agreed stock valuations were ‘’too high’’.

The week ahead:

Australia

  • Monday May 11 – NAB business survey (April)
  • Tuesday May 12 – Federal Budget
  • Tuesday May 12 – Housing finance (March)
  • Tuesday May 12 – Credit and debit card lending (March)
  • Wednesday May 13 – Wage price index (March quarter)
  • Wednesday May 13 – Tourist arrivals (November)
  • Friday May 15 – Lending finance (March)

Overseas

  • Tuesday May 12 – US Federal Budget (April)
  • Wednesday May 13 – China monthly data (April)
  • Wednesday May 13 – US Retail sales (April)
  • May 10-15 – China lending (April)
  • Thursday May 14 – US Producer prices (April)
  • Friday May 15 – US Industrial production (April)
  • Friday May 15 – US Consumer sentiment (May)
  • Friday May 15 – US Capital flows (March)

Next week, the Federal Budget steals the limelight and Treasurer Joe Hockey will be heavily scrutinised by investors if he reveals any surprises on Tuesday, May 12 from 7:30pm (AEST). There are a few other important indicators in the pipeline, including the wage price index for the March quarter – out Thursday – and housing finance and lending data released on Tuesday.

Overseas, there’s also some top economic data released by the Yanks and China. US retail sales for April, along with monthly data on retail sales, production and investment in China, are some of the big releases out on Wednesday.

Calls of the week

(click the blue text to read more):

  • This week, Greens leader Christine Milne made the call to resign from politics after 25 years. Richard Di Natale got the top job, with former deputy leader Adam Bandt totally dumped from the new leadership team.
  • The Reserve Bank decided to cut the cash rate by 25 basis points, to 2.0%.
  • BHP Billiton shareholders made the call to approve the demerger of South32, with the demerger resolution achieving 98.05% in favour at simultaneous shareholder general meetings in Perth and London.
  • And an Aussie girl tried to sneak a kiss from Prince Harry after meeting members of the public outside Sydney Opera House!

Food for thought

Success is doing ordinary things extraordinarily well.

– American businessman, Jim Rohn

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, the biggest mover was MMA Offshore, with its short position increasing by 1.06% to 10.74%. UGL followed, moving 0.94% to 11.86%.

20150508 - Short stocks

 

Source: ASIC

My favourite charts:

Beer gets the boot!

20150508 - beer

 

 

Aussies are now drinking far less beer, with the lowest level of consumption recorded in 68 years! Consumption of beer fell from 4.04 litres of pure alcohol per person for those over 15 years of age, to 4.01 litres in 2013/2014.

Glenn Stevens’ ‘Doh!’ moment!

20150508 - asx

 

 

Source: Yahoo!7 Finance, 8 May 2015

Unfortunately a much sought after rate cut didn’t tickle the stock market’s fancy too much after Glenn Stevens chucked a Homer Simpson moment and took out the “easing bias” wording from the latest RBA statement! Doh!

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