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Trump trade war talk and Telstra helped stocks

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This week’s market action has been about the big T’s: Trump, Trade wars and Telstra. And despite the threatening clouds for stocks, I love it when our stock market marches against a global trend towards negativity. And that’s what happened this week. Our S&P/ASX 200 Index ended up 60.8 points (or 1%) for the week, finishing at 6339.2. This was a pretty heartening effort, with metal prices under pressure.

You can see that the US market was heading down until President Trump let it slip that his trade talk team would be talking to their Chinese counterparts later in August. This was Thursday in the States and the Dow liked it. And the uptrend was reinforced overnight when Donald let it out that he and President Xi were going to talk turkey – no, not the real Turkey – but the trade talk ‘turkey’ in November.

The Dow Jones Industrial Average

Source: finance.yahoo.com

“If you take the possibility of a trade war with China off the table for a few months, that allows the market to work its way higher,” said Ed Keon, chief investment strategist at QMA to CNBC. “This has been one of the market’s biggest worries. If you put it on the back burner, it’s a good thing.”

This has market players dreaming of the S&P 500 at 3000 for the end of the year.

Given we are outpacing the US market index, then if our S&P/ASX 200 index went up 5%, we’d end close to 6660! No, not the devil’s number! Why did I do that calculation?

Away from silly superstition, a big help to our market was the market’s acceptance of Telstra and its CEO, Andy Penn’s work-in-progress story, despite some ordinary profit news featuring an 8% slump in profit. The telco ended the week up 8.8% to close at $3.09 on Friday.

S&P/ASX 200’s rising week

Source: finance.yahoo.com

Those who noted and reacted to my surprise revelation a couple of weeks ago, when Roger Montgomery gave the company the loving thumbs up after years of hating the company, must be pleased. I have to say the size of the rise even surprises me but Roger reckons the lack of bad news this week from Penn gave the market confidence.

And what about the irrepressible CSL, which recorded a 29% increase in profit and expects growth to be strong in the year ahead, which led to a 6.5% rise in the company’s share price?

For anyone worried about Treasury Wine Estates, the SMH reported that Morgan Stanley has swallowed the company’s less than palatable report this week, to suggest $20 is a buyable target. The company announced its net profit after tax in 2018-19 was up 34% to $360.3 million but the market was a little concerned about fewer US wine shipments, following the company’s recent move to take control of distribution for a quarter of all sales in the US’s biggest states. Earnings in Asia also showed signs of slowing but even though the share price fell 2% to $19.02 on Friday, it did start the week at $18.20.

By the way, the dollar has fallen from 79 US cents in February to be now a tick under 73 US cents, which partly explains why our stock market is defying gravity, even with the Trump curve balls that keep on coming. Companies such as TWE, Macquarie and other overseas currency earners have got a free profit kick from the currency.

Overall for profit reporting, some 35% of companies have reported and this is how Shane Oliver of AMP Capital has scored it:

But Shane reminds us that “the quality of results tails off in the last two weeks of the reporting season, so don’t get too excited just yet. 2017-18 earnings growth are on track to come in around 9%, with resources earnings up 25%, thanks to solid commodity prices and rising volumes and the rest of the market seeing profit growth of around 5%.”

In case you missed it, the RBA boss, Dr Phil Lowe, fronted up at Parliament to reveal his take on the economy. This is my summary:

One of the great efforts for our market was to avoid getting too spooked by Turkey, its collapsing lira and then associated fears for emerging market economies. Why Turkey should impact on Argentina, Indonesia and other unrelated economies confuses many normal people. As an economist, I think the link is a little screwy.

The only link I buy is this one: as the US dollar rises because of rising interest rates in the States, money that was drawn to emerging markets when official rates of interest were close to zero in the US, starts to go back there. And because this is believable and the word “contagion” is often tossed around in these speculative money markets, it all adds to fear, so these emerging economies cop it. And it applies even if some of these economies, like Turkey (whose President, Recep Tayyip Erdogan, has had it coming to him, after he’s allowed blatant politicking to compete with sound economics) don’t really deserve to be smashed,

Fears about Turkey and a possible contagion effect fell on Friday on Wall Street but the issue is still something that could turn ugly, if mismanaged by the key political players in this drama.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Another like worth noting

The US company earnings have been great (up over 20%) and I liked Walmart’s effort on Thursday that helped US stocks spike significantly. The company’s share price was up 9.3% on Thursday but, more importantly, it not only shows that bricks and mortar businesses can compete with Amazon, if they get their online offering right, it’s a nice pointer for the strength of the US economy. But the world is changing, with Walmart reporting that online sales over the quarter were up 40%!

That said, Walmart shares are up more than 20% over the year, while, Amazon’s stock has climbed more than 90% over the period. Amazon’s market cap is now near $920 billion, while the one-time biggest retailer in the world, Walmart, is valued at $291 billion! Gee, Robert E. Kahn and Vint Cerf, who invented the Internet, and Tim Berners-Lee, who brought the World Wide Web to life, really have a lot of explaining to do to anyone who doesn’t like the brave new world of online sales and a world whose eyes are glued to smartphones nearly 24/7!

The Week in Review:

What moved the market?

Calls of the week:

The Week Ahead:

Australia

Monday August 20 — CommBank Business Sales Index (July)
Monday August 20 — Overseas arrivals & departures (June)
Tuesday August 21 — Reserve Bank Board minutes
Tuesday August 21 — Speech by Reserve Bank Governor
Wednesday August 22 — Construction work done (June quarter)
Wednesday August 22 — Skilled vacancies index (July)
Wednesday August 22 — Speech by Reserve Bank Deputy Governor

Overseas

Wednesday August 22 — US Existing home sales (July)
Wednesday August 22 — US Federal Reserve minutes
Thursday August 23 — US House price index (June)
Thursday August 23 — US New home sales (July)
Thursday August 23 — ‘Flash” purchasing manager surveys
Friday August 24 — US Durable goods orders (July)

Food for thought:

Happiness lies in the joy of achievement and the thrill of creative effort..”
Franklin D. Roosevelt

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. [14]

Chart of the week: [15]Top 5 most clicked:

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