Stay informed Sign up for our newsletter and be the first to know.
Stay informed Sign up for our newsletter and be the first to know.
Brilliant Investment Thinking by Advisers for Advisers.
ASX
+0.33%
S&P
-1.45%
AUD
$0.69

Uncategorized

Share
Print
  • Home
  • Uncategorized

ASX closes 0.4% lower: gold miners out-performing

ASX closes 0.4% lower: gold miners out-performing
Share
Print

RBA halts sell off, record trade surplus, gold rallies
 
The S&P/ASX200 (ASX: XJO) staged a mid-session recovery finishing down just 0.4% after being as far as 1% lower.
 
The selloff was broad-based in terms of sectors with eight of the 11 sectors finishing in the red, but by and large it was focused on the tech sector which fell 3%.
 
This followed a selloff in the likes of Facebook and Apple overnight, with ASX-listed tech facing a bigger problem.
 
Whilst global tech is seen as ‘expensive’ by many, Aussie tech tends to trade on even higher multiples almost solely due to the lack of other growth options available domestically, hence the likes of Appen (ASX: APX), down 5%, tend to sell off even more heavily when sentiment turns.
 
It remains a ‘cyclical’ versus technology story with the energy sector continuing to rally, Santos (ASX: STO) up 2.5%, as the oil price hit another three year high after OPEC+ announced an uninspiring production increase.
 
Little change in trade, job ads fall, Delta impact to be ‘temporary’
 
The gold price rallied on a weakening AUD despite the commodity stagnated for several months.
Long seen as an inflation hedge, it is more suited as a hedge against volatility.

Australia achieved another record trade surplus which hit $15 billion in August overcoming a precipitous fall in the price of iron ore.
 
Luckily, Australia’s exports of coal, gas and wheat were enough to offset the weakness.
 
Similarly, imports fell likely due to the difficultly faced by many businesses in ordering and taking delivery of stock.
 
The RBA announced that rates would remain on hold, reiterating their previous position, with no change to the recent tapering of bond purchases.
 
The Governor highlighted the negative hit to growth in the September quarter but remains confident of a bounce back in December whilst also predicting we will recover lost ground by the second half of next year.
 
Shares in Bega Cheese (ASX: BGA) were 1.3% higher after an analyst suggested they should merge with Fonterra in an effort to extract synergies and effectively buy back their naming rights.
 
Dip buyers emerge, economy improving, Facebook in damage control
 
The US market saw another day of dip buying with the technology sector leading the way once again, the Nasdaq adding 1.7%.
 
The gains were broad based following a positive reading on the services sector PMI, which printed at 61.9 points suggesting that the economy is in a strong position despite the Delta outbreak.
 
The big names were central to the recovery, NVIDIA (NYSE: NVDA) up 4% and Netflix (NYSE: NFLX) close to 6%, whilst Facebook (NYSE: FB) recovered some lost ground gaining 2.5% as the whistle-blower’s testimony continues.
 
The shutdown of the site was fixed on Tuesday however this previous employee is highlighting inappropriate actions by management in the pursuit of profit.
 
Despite all the headlines the tech sector is down just 5.4% from its high.

Share
Print

The quiet giant of private markets: why secondaries are gaining ground

For advisers building private equity allocations, secondaries offer liquidity, faster deployment and a more diversified starting point.

Seven soft skills financial advisers need to develop as client expectations rise 

From behavioural coaching to difficult conversations, this article explores the seven human skills that increasingly separate good advisers from great ones.

AI isn’t coming for your job. It's coming for your mind

Perhaps in the future the people who thrive won’t be those who use AI most, but those who can still think without it.

Reflexivity and the risk of market feedback loops

In periods of expansion, reflexivity supports rising valuations and expanding credit availability; but like leverage, it operates in both directions