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Turning point time, Leo DiCaprio and cheaper shoes

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I wrote the headline to this story before the Yanks reacted to the Bank of Japan cutting interest rates and Wall Street took off. So it’s a good news morning that greets us in the Switzer Super Report (Saturday edition). Yahoo!

This week gave the feeling that we could be at a turning point. Clearly, the real game changer has been the apparent bottoming of the oil price. After plumbing the depths of $US26 a barrel, it has headed up to around $US32 a barrel for most of this week and, amazingly, it has held!

But let’s be honest, it has been helped by some improving, even exciting headlines for a tired bull, who, frankly, is sick of bears and everything they bring. In fact, during the week, I saw Leo DiCaprio fight it out with a huge grizzly bear in the film The Revenant – they can do a hell of a lot of damage!

That aside, I have been psychologically boosted by a number of headlines and related stories that make me think we’re close to a turning point, if we haven’t already encountered it.

Let’s deal with the positive news overnight that had the Dow up 295 points, when I bounded out of bed this morning. The big driver was the Bank of Japan cutting interest rates, copying the Swiss and Europeans, who have pioneered negative rates. This is what I call the Rooster Cogburn approach to monetary policy, which is virtually saying: “Get out there, stop saving and spend, you sons of bitches!” (The great John Wayne actually said: “Fill your hands, you son of a bitch!” in the movie True Grit.)

Of course, you could be worried that Japan needs negative interest rates but I think a lot of people would be saying that, at long last, the Japanese are starting to not act like the Japanese! This new attitude might be necessary to get them out of the economic quagmire they’ve been in since the economic miracle of the 1970s and early 1980s turned into an economic quagmire.

Adding to the positivity on Wall Street, the Chicago PMI, which is a factory indicator, came in at 55.6, against a consensus guess of 45 and miles better than the 42.9 result in December. This is a kick in the guts reading for those dopes tipping a US recession.

If a recession is coming, US consumers aren’t seeing it, with the latest confidence reading at 92, which is a little down on December but still a good one.

Also, the early reading on GDP for the fourth-quarter came in at 0.7%, which matched expectations, though it was down on the huge 2% number from the previous quarter.

On top of this good news, we saw earnings from the likes of Visa and Microsoft, with the latter beating expectations on revenue and profit.

Also, energy companies are all having a good week, with the oil price up. And this morning, the trend continued, with crude creeping up to $US33.48 a barrel.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

Not sure if I like or dislike this

This is good news for consumers but bad news for retail and shows what’s happening and will keep happening. In a big surprise, the price index of women’s shoes was 5.7% lower than a year ago – the weakest reading in 34 years – and that’s despite a falling dollar. So how come? I bet it’s the fact that more women are buying shoes on the Internet and retailers in the real world have to compete.

This is a tricky world we’re living and investing in!

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

Overseas

Calls of the week

Food for thought

Some people want it to happen, some wish it would happen, others make it happen.

Michael Jordan – American basketball player

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 Fortescue Metals Group with a 0.59% increase in the amount of its ordinary shares sold short from 8.53% last week to 9.12%. JB Hi-Fi went the other way with, with a 2.80% decrease week-on-week to 14.24%.

20160129-shortstockspositions [17]

Source: ASIC

My favourite charts

NSW on top again

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CommSec’s State of the States report shows NSW is the best performing economy – taking out the top spot across 6 of the 8 key indicators. Its top ranking for one of those indicators – dwelling starts – is shown above.

Composite investor sentiment – US shares

20160129-CompositeInvestorSentiment-USshares [19]

Source: AMP Capital

I like the way Shane Oliver is thinking, with his chart showing a possible retracement of US shares. In his commentary he says “signs of extreme pessimism and investor capitulation are continuing to build, with our investor sentiment index on US shares nearing levels associated with bounces.” And since the smarty pants published this last week, that’s what’s happened! Click here [16] to see my interview with Shane on this very topic.

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