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Trump’s tariffs + Hayne = Chautauqua

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With Grand Final fever in the air in Melbourne and Sydney, you might not have noticed that it was the end of a quarter that promised so much, with a 10-year high being registered. Eventually, however, the impact of the Royal Commission into the finance sector and President Trump’s trade war strategies worked against a sustained rise of stocks here in Australia.

However, it’s working for the Yanks, with the Dow up 9.4% for the three months to the end of September!

“The S&P 500, meanwhile, is set to post its best quarter since fourth quarter 2013, having risen 7.3 percent,” CNBC tells us. “The Nasdaq is also up more than 7 percent, on pace for its best biggest one-quarter gains since first quarter 2017.”

Locally, we were up only 13 points for the week and the quarter and the S&P/ASX 200 index reminds me of that champion racehorse Chautauqua, who was retired yesterday, after again refusing to play ball and jump when the barriers flew open.

This eight-year old gelding won around $8.8 million and beat the world’s best but has decided he’s had a gutful of racing and has virtually said “no more!” Interestingly, he recently did jump in a trial and zoomed home with all his old gusto. That’s why I think our stock market resembles this great horse. There’s a great run left in us as well.

Trump and Hayne have kept us in the barrier but if we can just get out, our market could fly home late this year!

That said, we still have Donald with his tariff plays and a mid-term election to hold stocks back. And then we have to see what the new Morrison Government will come up with post-Hayne and his interim recommendations that were handed in yesterday.

For stock players, the good day for bank stocks yesterday was a nice sign but it might be too early to declare that the bad news for financial stocks is over.

It’s still a ‘wait-and-see’ game for a longer-term investor and I’m prepared to miss a few percentage points of rises before I declare the worst is over for the embattled banks.

The S&P/ASX 200 ended 13 points for the week to close at 6207.6. CBA was up 1.9% on Friday to $71.41, NAB rose 1.76% to $27.81, Westpac put on 1.16% to $27.93 and ANZ jumped 1.4% to $28.18. And that’s despite Commissioner Kenneth Hayne’s scathing assessment of the major players in our financial landscape.

What the Government comes up with to fix the sector is not only going to be huge for bank stock prices and the index, it’s going to be a political football that will be kicked around until election day. If the Libs can hold the seat of Wentworth on October 20, then the big poll should be May 18. That’s going to be a lot of kicking and politicking on the subject, which could be another roadblock for stocks, especially with Bill Shorten’s policies on negative gearing, capital gains tax and tax rebates for self-funded retirees.

Now I think you can see why market experts talk about stock markets climbing a “wall of worry.”

Keeping us positive yesterday was the rising price of oil and this is a pretty good assessment from the AFR: “Brent crude oil prices hit a near four-year high this week, rising on the back of supply concerns in Iran and OPEC’s unwillingness to lift production levels. Energy stocks were the main beneficiary on the market with BHP Billiton the market’s best performer due to its oil exposure, its shares rising 3.1 per cent to $34.63.”

Back to the US stocks overnight and the market is concerned that a trade deal with Canada has not been inked so it can join the Mexico-USA trade pact recently agreed to.

Historically, the fourth quarter in the US is good for stocks and especially December but the next three months have more tariff negotiations and the mid-term elections to cope with. However, I think the next reporting season and what business leaders say about how their operations are being affected by tariffs could determine how good or bad the December quarter will be.

“Unless we see some resolution, trade talks are going to heat up,” said JJ Kinahan, chief market strategist at TD Ameritrade. “But first, we have to go through the earnings season and hear what CEOs have to say on the matter.” (CNBC)

I can’t wait to see our market jump out of that cursed “barrier” but it might have to wait until December, though I am still prepared to buy any significant dips of the index because I don’t think this bull market is dead yet.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Donald is a gem

With the Canadian trade negotiations floundering, this is how President Trump adds his unique input into the mix. He actually said this: “We don’t like their representative very much.” Her name is Chrystia Freeland but I’ve never heard a national leader ever get so playground personal in politics. It’s nearly like a comedy line you might have expected from Norman Gunston.

He’s hurting our stock market for the moment but he is a media entertainment machine!

The Week in Review:

 Top Stocks – how they fared:

What moved the market?

Calls of the week:

The Week Ahead:

Australia

Monday October 1 — CoreLogic Home Value index (September)
Monday October 1 — CBA/AiGroup manufacturing gauges (September)
Tuesday October 2 — Reserve Bank Board meeting
Wednesday October 3 — CBA/AiGroup services gauges (September)
Wednesday October 3 — Building approvals (August)
Wednesday October 3 — New vehicle sales (September)
Thursday October 4 — International trade (August)
Friday October 5 — Retail trade (August)
Friday October 5 — Speech by Reserve Bank official

Overseas

Sunday September 30 — China Purchasing manager indexes (September)
Monday October 1 — US ISM Manufacturing Index (September)
Monday October 1 — US Construction spending (August)
Tuesday October 2 — US New vehicle sales (September)
Wednesday October 3 — US ADP private employment (September)
Wednesday October 3 — US ISM Services index (September)
Thursday October 4 — US Challenger Job Cuts (September)
Thursday October 4 — US Factory orders (August)
Friday October 5 – US Non-farm payrolls (September)
Friday October 5 — US International trade (August)

Food for thought:

I have cities, but no houses. I have mountains, but no trees. I have water, but no fish. What am I?
Send in your answer to subscriber@switzer.com.au

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.

[12]Chart of the week:

The federal budget deficit for the 2017/18 financial year was the lowest it has been in a decade, as this chart from CommSec shows:

[13]Source: Federal Treasury, CommSec

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