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It’s China, China, China!

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The week that was, was, simply, China! China! China! A bad week for commodities, blame China! A bad week for stocks, blame China! A bad week for the dollar (though I quite liked that) blame China!

You might recall that about a month ago, while lazing on the island of Lemnos in the northern Aegean, I argued that Greece was a sideshow and the main game would be China. That was before the 30% sell off of the Shanghai Composite. Of course, I stressed that if you have a crazy market that goes up 150%, it’s not so crazy to see a huge retracement of 30%. Then I argued that it’s not clear that this market fall would have a big impact on the economy. Others pointed out that only 98 million Chinese play stocks and that’s a small group in a country of 1.357 billion people. We’re talking only 7% of the population and not all these would have been losers over the year, as the market is still up around 120%!

But then along came Ray Dalio. Ray who? You might well ask! He’s a market guru and founder of Bridgewater Associates in the US and this once China bull came out on Thursday and changed his view on the economy, its potential and the effect of the stock market sell off. And Wall Street bought it but happily not excessively, with the Dow only down 119 points and some of that fall was because of some weak company reporting news.

But it didn’t help little old us – Australia. We copped the China negativity backwash, which hurt commodity prices and BHP’s share price. The Oz dollar is now at 73 US cents, though it was as low as 72.7 US cents yesterday. And then the China syndrome took stocks down 1.8% for the week!

China has certainly put us into the red, to create a corny joke.

And matters weren’t made better when, on Friday, the old HSBC PMI reading (which is now called the China Caixin PMI), came in at 48.2 against a Reuters forecast of 49.7. This says manufacturing in China is contracting (in fact, it’s at a 15-month low) and explains why commodities are soft.

Not helping stocks is Wall Street, where the feeling is that reporting season has had some star failures, such as Apple and IBM, even if the former’s F was a pretty harsh market markdown. Many of these companies are copping headwinds from a rising dollar as they sell a lot overseas.

That said, until Friday, over 70% of S&P 500 companies actually topped revenue expectations, which was something that US companies could not do for many years after the GFC, with most achieving profits via cost-cutting. This has to be a good sign. Why then is the Dow going nowhere and our stocks fighting gravity?

Well, there’s been Greece, the overhang of the fact that the Fed is poised to raise rates eventually, US stocks have been at all-time high levels, OPEC hasn’t helped energy prices and then there has been China with softer data, a crazy stock market and the number of China doubters growing.

On Monday, I’ll take you to China to see if it really is going to let us down!

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Positive thought for the week

It’s gotta get better next week and I’m praying that Credit Suisse’s analysts are an exceptional team. Go the Swiss but they might need some help from our buddies in, you guessed it, China!

Top Stocks – how they fared

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The week in review

(click the blue text to read more)

What moved the market

The week ahead

Australia
Tuesday July 28 – Weekly consumer confidence index
Thursday July 30 – Import & export prices (June quarter)
Thursday July 30 – Building approvals (June)
Friday July 31 – Producer price indexes (June quarter)
Friday July 31 – Private sector credit (June)

Overseas
Monday July 27 – US durable goods (June)
Tuesday July 28 – US Case Shiller home prices (May)
Tuesday July 28 – US consumer confidence (July)
Tuesday July 28 – US Richmond Fed Manufacturing index
Wednesday July 29 – US pending home sales (June)
Wednesday July 29 – US Federal Reserve meeting
Thursday July 30 – US economic growth (June quarter)

Calls of the week

(click the blue text to read more)

20150724 - mick fanning [10]

Source: Twitter.com

Food for thought

Optimism is the faith that leads to achievement. Nothing can be done without hope and confidence.

– Helen Keller, American author and political activist.

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 Primary Health Care with a 1.43 percentage point increase in the proportion of its shares sold short to 11.06%. The next biggest mover was Slater and Gordon with a change of 1.21 percentage points to 10.25%.

20150724 - large short positions [16]Source: ASIC

My favourite charts

We mean business

20150724 - business [17]

Business spending continues to benefit from government stimulus measures in June, according to new figures from the Commonwealth Bank Business Sales Indicator (BSI). Spending at Business Services enterprises rose by 2.0% in June, which is the strongest increase in over three years, while nation-wide spending (or the overall BSI) rose by 0.7% in trend terms in June. In the year to June, annual growth also rose by 7.6%, which is above the decade-average trend of 5.3%.

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