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US + China + Turnbull = hope = rally!

[table “116” not found /]

The name of the game is that I always tell you what I’m thinking about investing in and after my TV show on Thursday night, I was feeling a little negative. Yep, believe it or not, I can succumb to normal peoples’ inclinations, such as being too pessimistic, but I don’t make a habit of it!

That said, my job is to give you insights so take this as read that if I thought it was time to bail out of stocks, I’d tell you straight away.

No, I maintain we’re in a buying opportunity and I think the Turnbull accession to power will prove a positive omen.

In fact, I’m now running with an equation, which is what economists like, and it goes like this:
USA + China + Turnbull = hope = rally!

People going nowhere are hopeless. People going somewhere are powered by hope and, despite the current stock sell off, which has created a reason to buy, there are other reasons.

The Fed boss finally got her script right in her arduous speech on Thursday at the University of Massachusetts, where she apparently wobbled with dehydration. I’m sure part of that wobble was pressure, after blowing her communiqué after the FOMC meeting last week, which triggered off a big stocks’ slide.

The bottom line conclusion became “the Fed knows something we don’t know about the global economy – better sell.” And sell they did!

So on Thursday, the big takeout was that the Fed intends to raise interest rates this year or, as Janet said, it looks “appropriate”. She downplayed international developments, i.e. China, and indicated that she expects the US economy to be strong enough to create what every economy wants nowadays – inflation!

OK, rule the US in as a big help to stocks, either by year’s end or at least in 2016.

What about China? Every expert, their dog and the proverbial galah at the local pet shop thinks China will let down the global economy and then stock markets.

Why have we fallen about 16% from our April high and 7% from the start of the year? The economic story globally and locally disappointed, earnings struggled and the market numbers belatedly said “you’ve paid too much, so you better sell off.”

Then we were hit by APRA and David Murray disciplining the banks about capital and for lending to investors, commodity prices fell on China weakness and then Yellen spooked everyone.

The current picture looks weaker than expected so stock prices are weaker but can circumstances change?

Douglas Flint thinks things can be better than expected, especially when it comes to China. Doug, a Scot, is the chairman of HSBC and has to be a China expert. He recently said: “…data suggests that China will stage a modest recovery in the coming quarters, with full-year growth of around 7%.”What’s he on? Possibly history and experience!

He argues that Beijing will use interest rates and government spending to buy growth. That’s what I said last week was my big hope and Doug thinks I’m on to something.

“It has the room to cut interest rates to boost domestic demand. It can cut reserve ratio requirements to increase bank-lending capacity. And it can deliver strong fiscal support for growth,” Flint said, in a speech given at Cass Business School in London on Thursday and reported by Business Insider.

So let’s punt on Doug and China and let’s double up on Price Headley’s views from BIGTRENDS.COM, who told CNBC this week that we’ll see the Dow at 20,000 by mid 2016! He cites record levels of pessimism (like in 2008 and 2011), which ran ahead of big market take offs.

He argues earnings in October in the US will be better than expected and will drive the market comeback. They’re the kind of high hopes that offset the negativity that has been even affecting me so much that I wrote a piece for Switzer Daily entitled: “Is Peter Switzer turning bearish on stocks?” [1] You might have read it.

In case you missed didn’t, this is how I concluded my piece: “If China can come up with a stimulus play, if Europe continues to do better than expected and Mario Draghi (the European Central Bank boss) continues to say he’ll do what it takes and if Yellen gets her rate play and comments right, then we might just see a turnaround for stocks. One day it might happen but this bull is not for turning, yet!”

To Turnbull and I loved the ANZ/Roy Morgan consumer confidence reading having the biggest jump in its seven-year history at 8.7%. I’ve agreed with nearly everything he and Treasurer Scott Morrison has said on the economy so far.

I know there are those out there who think we need a rate cut but I hope this little Aussie bleeder of an economy proves them wrong. If it does, it will be because the Oz dollar has depreciated to push us into the great growth zone.

What I liked

What I didn’t like

I know why I have more faith in the stock market – it wins, on average, eight years in 10 and averages 10% per annum over a decade and half of this victory is dividends. Go dividends!

Next week

The Yanks get a data downpour, with everything from home sales to consumer confidence to manufacturing readings to the all-important jobs number. We need to see some good US economic news, so go USA!

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

(click the blue text to read more)

Food for thought

Winning isn’t everything, but wanting to win is.

– Vince Lombardi, American football coach.

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 one of the biggest movers was Slater and Gordon, with a 6.26 percentage point increase in the proportion of its shares sold short to 16.17%. Super Retail went the other way, with an 8.94 percentage point decrease to 10.44%.

20150925 - short positions [15]

My favourite charts

Turnbull turnaround?

20150925 - anz [16]

The ANZ-Roy Morgan weekly consumer confidence index bounced back 8.7% to 114.5 last week after Turnbull took office. It was the second biggest weekly gain in the survey’s 7-year history! It could just be a PM change ‘’honey-moon’’ period – which historically lasts for 100 days – but let’s hope this bounce can be sustained.

SMSF trustees are getting richer!

20150925 - smsf growth [17]

Source: ATO, The Australian

Since 2014, the number of SMSFs and their combined assets have grown by approximately 6%, according to the ATO quarterly SMSF statistical report for June 2015. There are now estimated to be more than 557,000 SMSFs with total assets of $590 billion. Shares account for the highest asset allocation, followed by cash.

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