Daily Market Reports | May 06 2022
This story features NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED, and other companies. For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: NAB
The company is included in ASX20, ASX50, ASX100, ASX200, ASX300 and ALL-ORDS
| World Overnight | |||
| SPI Overnight | 7213.00 | – 113.00 | – 1.54% |
| S&P ASX 200 | 7364.70 | + 60.00 | 0.82% |
| S&P500 | 4146.87 | – 153.30 | – 3.56% |
| Nasdaq Comp | 12317.69 | – 647.16 | – 4.99% |
| DJIA | 32997.97 | – 1063.09 | – 3.12% |
| S&P500 VIX | 31.20 | + 5.78 | 22.74% |
| US 10-year yield | 3.07 | + 0.15 | 5.11% |
| USD Index | 103.55 | + 1.04 | 1.01% |
| FTSE100 | 7503.27 | + 9.82 | 0.13% |
| DAX30 | 13902.52 | – 68.30 | – 0.49% |
By Greg Peel
For what it’s worth…
The frustrating element to yesterday and what is lining up for today is that the S&P500 jumped 3.0% on Wednesday night on the Fed’s 50 point rate hike but the ASX200 only rose 60 points or 0.8% yesterday, but with the S&P down -3.6% overnight our futures are down -113 points or -1.5% this morning.
And the Wall Street plunge was yet again mostly about Big Tech.
Not that we should be perfectly aligned, but once again the sneeze-cold mantra is at work, along with stairs-elevators.
It would have been a better session for the ASX200 yesterday if the banks had not decided to sit it out. National Bank ((NAB)) tried to gee things up with an increased dividend accompanying its earnings result but still managed to fall -0.6%.
I suggested yesterday that investors had decided to take the risk on higher RBA rates improving bank margins enough to offset the likely increase in bad debts, but the Fed rate hike, with more 50s to come, perhaps has now prompted pause for thought. Although biggest lender, Commonwealth Bank ((CBA)), did manage a lone 0.7% gain.
It didn’t help the financials sector in general that fund manager Janus Henderson ((JHG)) fell -13.1% after announcing an -8% fall in assets under management at its AGM. Next worst individual performer on the index fell only -1.9%, being Life360 ((360)), which is on either winners’ or losers’ boards almost every day.
Otherwise, every other sector closed in the green, with resources again leading the way. Energy rose 2.0% and utilities 1.7% on overnight oil price jumps, driven by possible EU bans of Russian exports, while materials rose 1.5% despite some weakness among base metal prices.
Lithium was the star of the day, with Liontown Resources ((LTR)), Pilbara Minerals ((PLS)) and Novonix ((NVX)) taking the first three places in the index, rising 7.7%, 7.6% and 7.1% respectively.
Technology posted the biggest percentage move (+2.5%) on the Nasdaq bounce but that will today be but a dream. After an awful week of REIT yields being undermined by rising interest rates, real estate finally bounced 1.7%.
Consumer discretionary also saw a bounce of 0.9%.
As is often the case after wild swings on Wall Street, I could go on, but there’s little point.
What goes up…
There was apparently a clue in Wednesday night’s relief rally on Wall Street, after the Fed took 75 point rate hikes off the table, in that the buying was deemed to be of “low quality”, mostly driven by short covering. This implied that if the shorts were now covered, Wall Street began last night in a Wile E. Coyote position – a little too far past the cliff.
And so it was that while on Wednesday night every S&P500 sector and every Dow stock closed in the green, last night every S&P sector and every Dow stock closed in the red. The Dow rose 2.8% on Wednesday night and fell -3.1% last night. The S&P was up 3.0% and down -3.6%, and the Nasdaq up 3.2% and down -5.0%.
That last comparison is the standout, as last night was yet again mostly about Big Tech.
Once again the concept of the mega-caps being defensive went out the window. Apple and Microsoft – the two mega-techs in all three indices – fell -5.6% and -4.4%.
In the Nasdaq and S&P, Google fell -4.7%, Facebook -6.8%, Tesla -8.3% and Amazon -7.6%.
Amazon is now down -40% from its high.
Within the wider tech spectrum, stocks that were down -40-50% earlier this year are now down -60-70%. The big lockdown winners of 2020, such as Zoom, Peloton, Docusign and others, have now all but completed round-trips from pre-covid levels.
There are two historical comparisons currently being made – that of 1994 and of 2001.
1994 saw the last major Fed tightening cycle as then Fed chair Alan Greenspan tackled high inflation, and included not just 50 point hikes but also a 75. The pattern in 2022 is looking very like the pattern of 1994 for the S&P500 to date, which was one of similar swings and roundabouts in a generally weak year, before Wall Street started a fresh bull market.
That bull market was very tech-driven, and lasted until 2001 when the dotcom bubble burst. Australian tech investors beware. That year saw the Nasdaq lose -75% before bottoming.
There may be some solace that last night the Dow was down over -1300 points heading into the last hour, and the Nasdaq down -6%, before some late buying appeared. Given last night’s plunge netted out against Wednesday night’s rally to a great extent, the S&P500 did not post a new 2022 low last night, hence it remains inside its range.
Arguably the specific trigger for last night’s selling was the US ten-year bond yield, which having fallen slightly on the Fed decision to 2.92%, jumped 15 points last night to 3.07%. It seems 3% is the line in the sand.
The debate now has those believing Wall Street is oversold and hence Fed hawkishness is more than priced in, and those who warn the swift withdrawal of significant Fed support (higher rates and Fed bond selling) will simply be too much of a shock to the system.
Particularly for those younger types who have never been here before.
It might nevertheless provide some comfort to consider that because the tech sector is so influential on Wall Street, selling in those names triggers index selling and ETF selling that drags the non-tech sectors into the vortex, such that selling begets selling that may have no fundamental cause. Investors are forced to stand aside for now.
Commodities
| Spot Metals,Minerals & Energy Futures | |||
| Gold (oz) | 1876.80 | – 5.50 | – 0.29% |
| Silver (oz) | 22.47 | – 0.48 | – 2.09% |
| Copper (lb) | 4.32 | – 0.06 | – 1.27% |
| Aluminium (lb) | 1.43 | + 0.01 | 0.50% |
| Lead (lb) | 1.03 | – 0.00 | – 0.45% |
| Nickel (lb) | 13.68 | – 0.18 | – 1.32% |
| Zinc (lb) | 1.82 | – 0.00 | – 0.12% |
| West Texas Crude | 108.26 | + 0.45 | 0.42% |
| Brent Crude | 111.06 | + 0.99 | 0.90% |
| Iron Ore (t) | 145.20 | + 2.40 | 1.68% |
Base metals remain on the weak side, but we’ll see what happens when China returns today. Iron ore is looking a little healthier.
Interesting that on a 15 point jump in the US ten-year and a 1% surge for the US dollar, gold is only down -0.3%, implying safe haven status is kicking in.
Bitcoin fell -8%.
Speaking of round-trips, the Aussie is right back where it was two days ago after falling -2%, to US$0.7113.
Today
The SPI Overnight closed down -113 points or -1.5%. Could be one of those Fridays.
The US April jobs numbers are out tonight.
Macquarie Group ((MQG)) reports FY22 earnings.
REA Group ((REA)), News Corp ((NWS)) and Block ((SQ2) have reported quarterly earnings.
Block fell -10% last night on Wall Street.
APA Group ((APA)) holds an investor day.
The Australian share market over the past thirty days…
| BROKER RECOMMENDATION CHANGES PAST THREE TRADING DAYS | |||
| BKG | Booktopia Group | Downgrade to Hold from Add | Morgans |
| CTD | Corporate Travel Management | Downgrade to Neutral from Buy | Citi |
| CWN | Crown Resorts | Downgrade to Hold from Buy | Ord Minnett |
| FLT | Flight Centre Travel | Downgrade to Sell from Lighten | Ord Minnett |
| FMG | Fortescue Metals | Upgrade to Neutral from Underperform | Credit Suisse |
| HMC | HomeCo | Upgrade to Neutral from Sell | UBS |
| MGR | Mirvac Group | Downgrade to Equal-weight from Overweight | Morgan Stanley |
| PTB | PTB Group | Upgrade to Add from Hold | Morgans |
| QAN | Qantas Airways | Downgrade to Accumulate from Buy | Ord Minnett |
| RCW | RightCrowd | Downgrade to Hold from Speculative Buy | Morgans |
| RWC | Reliance Worldwide | Upgrade to Overweight from Equal-weight | Morgan Stanley |
| SUL | Super Retail | Upgrade to Buy from Accumulate | Ord Minnett |
| TCL | Transurban Group | Downgrade to Accumulate from Buy | Ord Minnett |
| VEA | Viva Energy | Downgrade to Accumulate from Buy | Ord Minnett |
| WOW | Woolworths Group | Downgrade to Underperform from Neutral | Credit Suisse |
For more detail go to FNArena's Australian Broker Call Report, which is updated each morning, Mon-Fri.
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CHARTS
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: 360 - LIFE360 INC
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: APA - APA GROUP
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: CBA - COMMONWEALTH BANK OF AUSTRALIA
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: JHG - JANUS HENDERSON GROUP PLC
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: LTR - LIONTOWN LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: MQG - MACQUARIE GROUP LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: NAB - NATIONAL AUSTRALIA BANK LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: NVX - NOVONIX LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: NWS - NEWS CORPORATION
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: PLS - PLS GROUP LIMITED
For more info SHARE ANALYSIS: REA - REA GROUP LIMITED

