Posts Tagged ‘investors’

Stock Market Analysis: Weekly Market Wrap

Friday, June 17th, 2011

Spectre of Greek Default Spooks Global Markets

Traders headed for the exits this week as the sell-down continued. Investors were cautious as data remained soft in the U.S. and in Asia, and the spectre of a debt restructure/default in Greece is dominating investor sentiment.

Globally markets have continued to be plagued with concerns over the sovereign debt issues in Europe, particularly in Greece. Asian markets have also been dragged lower by reports showing that Japan is in a recession, that Chinese growth is slowing near-term, and by an increase in capital reserve requirements hitting the Asian banks.

Commodities prices have also been under pressure this week due to concerns over the faltering global economy.

Australian Market

The ASX All Ordinaries and the S&P/ASX 200 have experienced selling again this week. The Aussie market continues to test the key support levels of its March lows and is trading at the lower end of its falling channel formation. It is crucial that support holds at these levels, otherwise we could see the market test 4200 near-term.

Australian shares are starting to show some value but investors are unlikely to rush to open new positions until the situation in Greece is resolved. Miners have suffered due to concerns about economic growth near-term and energy stocks have been weak as crude oil tests $US95 per barrel, but banks are starting to look good on a yield basis.

The focus is on Greece at the moment but there are also domestic headwinds continuing to confront investors, including the poor GDP figures, slowing jobs data, the mining tax and the possible carbon tax, all of which are weighing on sentiment.

U.S. Markets

U.S. stock markets are trading lower for a seventh week. Financials have led the fall, but material and energy stocks also fell as economic worries continued to weigh on sentiment, dragging the indices down again.

Investors continue to be wary of risk as the Greek debt crisis remains unresolved. A Greek default would be fractious to the European Economic Union, with global ramifications on financial systems, leading to massive losses for creditors and impacting on the global economic recovery. Defensive sectors such as utilities and consumer staples components provided some support.

Overnight, U.S. stock markets ended mixed after a late session rally. The Dow Jones Index ended higher, after recovering from 3-month lows, while the S&P 500 and the Nasdaq again closed around their lows for the year. The U.S. dollar jumped higher in a “flight to safety” which put pressure on commodities prices.

The Dow Jones closed up 0.5% at 11,961, the S&P 500 index closed up 0.2% at 1,265, the Nasdaq ended down -0.3% at 2,624, and the smaller cap Russell 2000 was up 0.3%.

European Markets

European stocks have continued to weaken this week as worries about Greek finances and the health of the U.S. economy again weighed on sentiment.

The Greek ASE index slumped as the country was practically shut down on Wednesday by a 24-hour general strike to protest new austerity measures, and demonstrations in Athens turned violent. Greek bonds were trashed, sending yields to their highest levels since the inception of the euro, as euro-zone officials failed to make progress on discussions about aid to Greece.

Elsewhere the Irish budget minister warned of more budget cuts, and the European Central Bank warned that contagion from the euro-zone’s debt crisis remains the top risk to financial stability in the EU bloc, while reiterating their opposition to a Greek debt restructure.

The S&P Ratings Agency cut Greece’s sovereign rating to junk territory, cutting it to CCC from B, the lowest in the world, rather focusing on the likelihood that euro-zone officials will reach a deal to help the nation avoid a default.

Investors continued selling as the week unfolded, even as the European Union and the International Monetary Fund said that the next tranche of Greek aid is likely to be approved at a meeting of euro-zone finance ministers on Sunday. A second bailout package for Greece and a decision on the nature of private-sector involvement is scheduled for early July.

Banks were under pressure again across the region with the National Bank of Greece and Alpha Bank each down more than 4%, while major French banks were down after being put on review for possible downgrade by Moody’s Investors Service, because of their exposure to Greek debt.

Overnight in London the FTSE 100 index was down -0.8% at 5,699, the German DAX was down -0.1% at 7,110, while in France the CAC was down -0.4% at 3,792.

Asian Markets

Asian share markets have traded lower again this week, with Hong Kong and Australian markets hitting multi-month lows and trading at their lows for the year, after a sharp sell-off in the U.S. mid-week. In Hong Kong the market has been under pressure as an announcement of higher bank-reserve requirements by China hit Hong Kong-listed financials.

Persistent news of a possible Greek default has also unnerved investors globally. In China the Shanghai Composite has fallen, as banks sold-off after the People’s Bank of China announced a half a percentage point increase to the reserve requirement ratio. This is China’s sixth increase this year, and will take effect 20 June, bringing the ratio for most large lenders to 21.5%. Miners have also weighed due to the prospect of slower global growth.

Overnight in China the SSE Composite was down -1.2% at 2,664, while in Hong Kong the Hang Seng Index was down -1.5% at 21,910 and in Japan the Nikkei 225 Index was down -1.4% at 9,411. The South Korean KOSPI was down -1.7% for the session, while the Indian market was down -0.5%.

Our View

The Australian share market has had a another sell-off this week and markets look set to remain subdued as we head into the end of the financial year. As the week progressed investors continued to choose caution, as fears of Greek debt contagion seeped into investor psyche.

The S&P/ASX 200 index is testing its March lows and we may see consolidation near-term as the index has pushed towards the lower end trading range of its falling channel. The headwinds remain with a strong Aussie dollar, slow jobs and retail sales numbers and the proposed carbon and mining resource taxes, plus the end-of-financial year clean-out all weighing on sentiment.

The S&P/ASX 200 is currently trading at 4510 and is trying to find support around these levels. Key levels for the index next week will be 4600 and 4400.

By Michael Hevern
Head of Research

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Stock Market Analysis: 2011 Q1 Quarterly Review – Part 2

Friday, April 15th, 2011

Q1 2011 Quarterly Review Part 2: Australian Market Performance by Market Capitalisation

The first quarter of 2011 provided some major challenges for investors and the market. Floods and cyclones across eastern Australia, geopolitical unrest in the Middle East and North Africa, sovereign debt concerns in Europe and of course the Japanese earthquake, tsunami and nuclear crisis have produced major volatility throughout the quarter and changed investor confidence.

In Part One of our Q1_2011 Quarterly Review we examined the market on a sector-by-sector basis and gave our forecast of themes for the investment landscape for Q2 2011.

Today we’re reviewing the ASX market’s first quarter performance as measured by market capitalisation. This performance is illustrated in the chart below.

ASX Performance Market Cap_March 2011

ASX Performance Market Cap_March 2011

Chart: ASX Market performance by Market Cap for the Quarter Ending 31 March 2011.

Why Consider Market Capitalisation?

There are a number of reasons why investors and traders will look at market cap as a criterior when selecting stocks. Depending on the size of the investment portfolio liquidity may be an issue, and options traders will likely only consider the ASX 20 for liquidity reasons. Large cap, mid cap and small cap market segments will perform differently at various times in the market investment cycle.

Large caps tend to outperform when investors are more cautious or bearish, while small and mid caps are more likely to outperform when the bulls are in control, as this is when traders are more likely to accept the inherent risk.

For the purpose of analysis we have defined large caps as: ASX20 (.AXTL), ASX50 (.AXFL), ASX100 (.AXTO), ASX200 (.AXJO) and ASX300 (.AXKO). Mid caps: ASXMidCap50 (.AXMD), ASXMidCap_Industrials (.AXMD), and ASXMidCap_Resources (.AXMR). Small Caps: ASXSmall_Industrials (.AXSI), ASXSmall_ORDS (.AXSO), and ASXSmall_Resources (.AXSR).

Note: codes in brackets are for use in the Market Analyser software. Use these codes to review indices, and drill down to examine the stocks within. If you are not a Market Analyser user, sign up now for a free software trial.

Rolling Year-on-Year (YoY) Performance

The rolling year (YRRolling) performance (as shown by the black bars) illustrates just how difficult this market has been for long term investors, who tend to concentrate on large cap stocks. Annual performance has been generally negative, with the clear exception of mid and small cap resource stocks both segments rose over 26% for the YoY. The stocks making up the Small Ordinaries index also outperformed, up 10.6% YoY, while the Small Industrials and MidCap Top 50 eked out gains of around 2% YoY.

The other indices examined had negative performances of around -2% YoY, with MidCap Industrials the worst performers, down over -5%.

So investors or traders who ignored the mid and small cap resources (and the Small Ords) segments of the market will have underperformed for the year.

Monthly Performance

We saw the market volatility spike in March due to the Japanese disaster, but the market has undergone a stellar recovery from the lows of the severe sell-off. March performance (Mth (MAR)) (as shown by the green bars) has been flat across the board, which is surprising given the huge sell-off triggered by the Japanese disaster. However the small caps and mid caps underperformed and finished in the negative, indicating that investors are becoming more risk-averse due to the market volatility. For the month of March the S&P/ASX 20 and the Small Caps Industrial managed to finish over 0.5% higher for the month.

Quarterly Performance

The quarterly (QTR_11Q1) performance (as shown by the blue bars) has revealed strength in the market leaders (measured by market cap). We highlighted in our report last quarter that investors would likely be taking profits on their small and mid cap resource stocks, moving their funds to the larger cap, more liquid stocks. The market volatility has been a catalyst for this rotation of funds. The top ASX 20 to ASX 300 stocks rose around 2% for the quarter. This performance was similar to that of the previous quarter, but performance of other market segments has turned around significantly.

The quarterly performance of the mid caps was relatively flat, however this is a significant turnaround for the mid cap resource stocks which were down -0.7%, down from 28% in the December quarter.

The small caps have also experienced a turnaround with small cap industrials managing to stay in the positive, up 0.9%, while the Small Ords and small cap resources finished down -1.9 and -5.3%, down sharply from 10.7 and 19% in the December quarter.

So investors or traders who failed to take profits in the small or mid cap resource segments of the market will have been hurting this quarter.

Weekly Rolling Performance for April 2011

We have analysed what has happened in the market for April so far. The weekly rolling (WkRolling) performance (as shown by the red bars) illustrates that the new quarter has begun with some selling/profit-taking, with under performing sectors last quarter leading to the recent sell-off lower. Only the ASX 20 and ASX 50 stocks have managed to eke out gains in early April, up 0.8% and 0.4% respectively.

The ASX MidCap 50, MidCap Industrials, and ASX SmallCap Ordinaries have all pulled back are least 1%, while SmallCap Resources have pulled back nearly -2%. The market closed at its lowest level in nine trading sessions overnight which points to weakness in the near term.

Conclusions

Again investors who trade larger cap stocks could have simply concentrated on the S&P/ASX 20 and still have generated a similar performance to those who used the S&P/ASX 300 as their stock investing universe. This is something that longer term investors should note, as it is much easier to keep track of 20 stocks versus 300 stocks, and investors can boost performances through the use of options on the top 20 stocks.

There has been a big turnaround in the stellar performances of the small cap and mid cap resource stocks, which is pointing to investor risk aversion. The market has experienced fantastic gains since the turnaround from the GFC in March 2009, but now markets globally are trading near key resistance levels and investors are becoming more cautious. Investors need to take advantage of the cheap insurance being offered through the options market to protect long-term positions. There is still M&A activity in the market as evidenced by the recent takeover bid for Equinox, so nimble traders can still profit.

The Trade

The market remains a stock picker’s market as shown in the market performances over the past quarter. Those subscribers who follow the recommendations of MDS Financial Research get timely recommendations of trading opportunities as individual stocks start to move.

In summary the ASX20 and ASX50 stocks have outperformed. M&A activity will be a key driver going forward, particularly if we continue to see a pull-back in the resources sector, after Goldman Sachs recently made a call to take profits on commodities, given their spectacular performance. Aussie interest rates are likely to remain on hold for the near-term and the Aussie dollar being at record levels will impact corporate earnings.

Given the market performances over the past quarter and year-on-year, there are a number of strategies traders and investors can use, including relative strength comparisons and mean reversion.

1) Investors who use relative strength comparisons and look to trade strong stocks in strong sectors should concentrate on the larger cap stocks from the S&P/ASX 20 through to the S&P/ASX 300 universe of stocks. Using relative strength we would expect Small Ordinaries and SmallCap Resource stocks to continue to under-perform.

2) Investors who use a mean reversion strategy may want to concentrate on the SmallCap Resource and the MidCap Resource stocks, which have been underperforming the broader market, and if they are looking for the market to pull back, then they may look to the larger cap stocks to retrace.

Investors should gain confidence from the larger cap stocks holding on to their performances, but they may be tested with the indices trading around the 5000 level in 2011.

The investment themes for the next quarter will be:

* the economic recovery from the domestic floods and droughts
* the global economic recovery from the Japanese disaster
* geopolitical unrest in the Middle East and North Africa
* commodity supply constraints and pricing
* the strong Aussie dollar
* corporate earnings – can companies pass on higher input costs?
* interest rates and inflation
* continuing M&A activity

Stay tuned for further analysis of performances, as next time we will examine the performance of commodities in relation to stocks.

By Michael Hevern
Head of Research

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Stock Market Analysis: Global Market Support Holds

Friday, March 4th, 2011

Globally, stock markets sold-off early in the week, as geopolitical unrest spread in the Middle East with violence escalating in Libya. Market volatility is increasing, but traders continue to buy-the-dips and the 50 day moving average support has not been breached.

The broad early losses came after April NYMEX crude oil futures traded around $US103 a barrel for the first time in over 2 years, due to the potential disruptions to supplies. Brent Crude traded around $US120 a barrel. The Gold price spiked this week, trading at record levels over $US1,430.

As the week progressed investor nervousness over the potential for elevated crude oil prices derailing the global recovery eased, and gold and crude oil prices backed off record levels.

Also in the news, the central banks in Europe and the United States re-affirmed their commitment to continuing their stimulus spending, at least in the near-term.

Data in the US shows that fund managers are again under-performing the S&P benchmark index. This is adding fuel to buying as the markets pull back with fund managers chasing performance.

Australian Market

Trading in the Australian market has again been dominated by investor sentiment from overseas and by the multitude of stocks that have gone ex-dividend this week. Stocks sensitive to higher oil prices again weighed on the market and financials have sold-down, while the miners showed some support. The government is revisiting the imposition of a carbon tax, which has added to the negative investor sentiment.

ASX investors took in their stride the forced early closure of the local bourse on the last day of the trading month. The problem was due to a “technical issue” according to the ASX. Competition for the ASX came one step closer as the regulator took another step.

Also on the theme of “technical issues” Commonwealth Bank ATMs had problems on March 1st that allowed people to withdraw more money than what was actually in their accounts.

The ASX All Ordinaries held below the 5000 level, while the S&P/ ASX 200 remained below 4950. This week we review the gold sector in our Analyst’s Eye.

US Markets

The US markets began the week lower but again showed surprising resilience in recovering, having once again bounced off their 50 day moving averages. The US dollar, commodities and jobs have been the focus this week. The US dollar has been volatile and trading lower, commodities continue to trade at record prices and job growth appears to be improving.

Jobs data out of the US has boosted optimism that the non-farms monthly payroll report due out tonight will confirm that unemployment may be turning around.

Overnight, the Dow closed up 0.1% at 12,067, while in the broader market the S&P 500 index was up 0.2% at 1,308 and the tech-heavy Nasdaq ended up 0.4% at 2,748. The S&P 500 held below key support at 1324. 1275 is the next target.

European Markets

European stock markets have had a volatile week, having found support on their 50 day moving averages. Investors have been wary of the Middle East and North African unrest, the resulting crude oil price spike and concerns over the ongoing global economic recovery. The Standard & Poor’s ratings agency has warned that it will keep its credit ratings on debt-ridden eurozone pair Greece and Portugal on negative watch. However as the week progressed bargain hunters stepped in, with traders continuing to buy the dips. Germany continues to outperform in the region.

Overnight in London the FTSE 100 index closed up 1.5% at 6,005, the German DAX was up 0.6% at 7,225, while in France the CAC was up 0.7% at 4,060.

Asian Markets

Asian markets have generally bounced this week. The gains in the Chinese and Hong Kong markets came despite China’s downgrade of its medium-term growth forecast, as Premier Wen Jiabao said the government’s official target for average GDP growth over the next 5 years will be 7% annually (down from a target of 7.5% in the past 5 years). The mining and energy sectors have supported these markets with crude oil and gold prices at record levels.

The South Korean market sold off heavily early in the week with military training operations in the Korean Peninsular causing tension, but foreign bargain hunters again stepped in as the week progressed. In India the Sensex index rose sharply after the finance minister said the next financial year’s fiscal deficit and government borrowings would be less than the market expected. Shares in Coal India surged over 10% after the company said it has raised product prices by up to 30% for select customers.

Yesterday in China the SSE Composite closed down -0.4% at 2,903, while in Hong Kong the Hang Seng Index was up 0.3% at 23,396 and in Japan the Nikkei 225 Index was up 0.9% at 10,586.

Our View

Next week we should see the S&P/ASX 200 index test resistance around 4930, having found support at its 50 day moving average, but selling pressure will likely resume if the oil price remains at these elevated levels and unrest in the Middle East is not resolved soon.

The S&P/ASX 200 is currently trading at 4855, at its key pivot level. The focus for next week will again be on the unrest in the Middle East, European debt concerns, and reaction to the US jobs report. Key levels for the index next week will be 4930 to 4780.

Investors should continue to monitor the tensions in the Middle East and North Africa. Be prepared to hedge your positions, as the current low options volatility provides investors with long term portfolios opportunity to hedge their positions cheaply.

By Michael Hevern
Head of Research

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Future Fund sells Telstra

Friday, August 21st, 2009

The government’s Future Fund has offloaded more than a quarter of its holding in Telstra, reducing its stake to 10.5%.

This sale brings in $2.4 billion for the fund, and comes after earning $144.5 million in dividends since the T3 float in 2006.

Analysts believe the fund’s managers have been seeking to diversify their portfolio and take advantage of the general rise in the markets.

The shares were sold yesterday through a book-build run by investment bank UBS at $3.47, a 5% discount on the closing price, and UBS has been selling them on to institutional investors overnight. The impact on the share price can be seen by this chart of early trading today:

ASX Code: TLS
Chart from Market Analsyerclick here for a free 14-day software trial.

For more details on this news story:

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ASX Share Ownership Study

Wednesday, June 24th, 2009

The ASX has released the results of a Share Ownership Study conducted in November and December last year, providing some interesting insights into investor activity, confidence, processes and behaviour.

The survey indicates that 41% of adult Australians own shares, down from 55% in 2004. A focus on reducing debt, volatile market conditions and a gloomy economic outlook are cited as reasons for the decrease in share ownership.

Among the key stats and behavioural insights:

  • retail investors have reduced the mean number of shares in their portfolios from 8 to 7
  • the level of uncertainty in the market has increased, with more investors leaning towards the perceived safety of blue-chip shares
  • 22% of retail investors expect to buy shares in the next 12 months, which indicates a sense of optimism
  • the proportion of adult Australian men who are share owners has remained steady at 40%, however the proportion of women has declined from 37% to 30% in 2 years
  • while the average value of trades has increased slightly from 2006, the average value invested has declined sharply
  • 70% of direct investment share owners use online brokers to buy and sell shares

To read the full survey, click here to go to the ASX website.

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Wednesday, 20th May 2009 MDS Morning Wrap

Wednesday, May 20th, 2009

Presented by Michael Hevern
MDSFinancial

Click here to watch the presentation.

or

Click here to download the mp3 audio recording (1042Kb).

General Advice Only

*************************************************
In this morning s wrap

DOW: down 0.3%
March Housing Starts down 13% (1960 lows);
Financials Weigh; Profit Taking

NASDAQ: up 0.1%
HP 1Q Profit down 17%;
Sales Down; Jobs Cut

FTSE: up 0.8%
Financials & Energy Lead Rebound;
DAX up 2.2% & CAC up 0.9%

NIKKEI: up 2.8 %
Mitsubishi Bank: First Annual Loss ($2.6bn) Bad Debts Double
Hang Seng up 1.3%;

Oil: up 1.1% ($60)
New Highs
Ahead of US Driving Season

Gold: up 0.8% ($926)
Commodities Mixed;
USD Lower

SPI down 2 (-0.1%)
SPI: Critical Level(s): 3850
Support Holding?

ASX News

PNA Puthep Copper Reserves up 33%
TLS – Sol Trujillo has made a premature exit
APN raising $99m 1 for 5 rights; cuts divy
Raisings rumour $1bn for ANZ & AMC
Results 1H AWB (~50%); LNN (+7%); 09 JHX
Golds and Energy to support
Materials, Financials to see profit taking
ASX to open higher; US profit taking

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Monday, 18th May 2009 MDS Morning Wrap

Monday, May 18th, 2009

Presented by Michael Hevern
MDSFinancial

Click here to watch the presentation.

or

Click here to download the mp3 audio recording (1135Kb).

General Advice Only

*************************************************
In this morning s wrap

DOW: down 0.8% (down 3.8% week)
April Industrial Production Down;
Rally Loses Momentum

NASDAQ: down 0.5% (down 3.5% for week)
Rotating Out of Tech

FTSE: down 0.3%
Financials Lead Retrace;
DAX flat -0.01% & CAC up 0.4%

NIKKEI: up 1.9% (down 2% for week)
Banks Facing HeadWinds;
Hang Seng up 1.5%;

Oil: down 3.6% ($56)
Demand Concerns
Biggest Falls Since 1981

Gold: up 0.5% ($931)
Commodities Mixed;
USD Lower

SPI down 42 (1.1%)
SPI: Critical Levels: 3800 & 3600
Support Broken

ASX News

RIO Committed to Chinalco deal; BHP still in the mix
AIO expected to refi $258m (due 30th May)
AMC set to buy RIO s Alcan packaging assets
BBG Profit falls (due to strong $A)
Capital Raisings: $45bn in 8 months or $23bn YTD;
last week: NUF, SGP ($2bn); STO ($3bn); SPN ($330m); WSA ($35m)
Golds to support
Materials and Energy to weigh
ASX to open lower; US reality bites

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Wednesday, 13th May 2009 MDS Morning Wrap

Wednesday, May 13th, 2009

Presented by Michael Hevern
MDSFinancial

Click here to watch the presentation.

or

Click here to download the mp3 audio recording (1211Kb).

General Advice Only

*************************************************
In this morning s wrap

DOW: up 0.6%
Fed says Banks are Healthy;
Trade Deficit Better-than-Expected

NASDAQ: down 0.9%
Intel (#1 Chip Maker) 1Q09 Better
But Profit still down 55%

FTSE: down 0.2%
Financials & Miners Weigh; Unemployment at 2.2m
DAX down 0.3% & CAC down 0.5%

NIKKEI: down 1.6%
Nissan to Cut CAPEX;
Toyota Cuts Production by 28% in 2009

Oil: up 0.6% ($59)
Six Month Highs

Gold: up 1.1% ($922)
Commodities Higher;
USD Lower

SPI up 20 (0.5%)
SPI: Critical Levels: 4000 & 3800
Resistance Becomes Support?

ASX News
Budget $22bn spend on infrastructure $58bn deficit (9000/person); Keeps AAA Rating
Inflation 1.75%; Unemployment 8.5%
FXJ F/cast 27% fall in profits (ad revenue)
SGP to raise $1.5bn (`20% disc ~$2.60)
AWB downgrades 1H09 profit F/cast (Brazil problems)
FMG say NO to Shanghai listing speculation
OSH says profits lower if Oil price subdued
Materials, Financials to recover
Golds and Energy provide support
ASX to open higher; US mixed

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Investors move out of Lend Lease

Tuesday, May 12th, 2009

Shareholders in Lend Lease dumped shares yesterday, after the company slashed $100 million from its bottom line.

The gloomy British economy has limited Lend Lease s asset sales plans which were intended to account for 30% of 2009 profit. Further pressure may come when the property portfolio is revalued on June 30.

Despite all this, CEO Steve McCann suggested there are signs the market is bottoming out and positive signals were emerging for residential property.

The share price was down 3% to $7.33 yesterday.

ASX Code: LLC
Chart from The Bourse

For further info:

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Wednesday, 29th April 2009 MDS Morning Wrap

Wednesday, April 29th, 2009

Presented by Michael Hevern
MDSFinancial

Click here to watch the presentation.

or

Click here to download the mp3 audio recording (942Kb).

General Advice Only

*************************************************
In this morning s wrap

DOW: flat -0.1%
Consumer Confidence at 5 Month High;
BoA & Citi May Need $60bn to 70bn according to the Stress Test

NASDAQ: down 0.3%
SUN 3Q Loss Widens ($210m Loss);
IBM Raises Dividend;

FTSE: down 1.7%
Resource Stocks Weigh ;
DAX down 1.9% & CAC down 1.7%

NIKKEI: down 2.7%
YEN up; Earnings Concerns; Honda Expects 71% Profit Drop;
Hang Seng down 1.9%

Oil: down 1.1% – At $49
Swine Flu Concerns

Gold: down 1.5% ($890)
Commodities Lower;
USD Higher

SPI up 29 (0.8%)
SPI: Critical Levels: 3800 & 3600
ANZ CEO Smith [March] rude shock

ASX News
ANZ 1H09 net profit -28%; cash profit -43% (incl one offs); bad debt provisions $1.4bn
QAN Merrill says pullback buying opportunity
BrisCon D-day installment payment
Materials and Energy to weigh
Financials to weigh on earnings updates
Golds to weigh
ASX to open higher; US Flat on Flu

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