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
-1.65%
AUD
$0.69

Uncategorized

Share
Print
  • Home
  • Uncategorized

Appen left at the altar. Market heads lower. Good week continues for US markets.

Appen left at the altar. Market heads lower. Good week continues for US markets.
Share
Print

Appen left at the altar
 
A bizarre blink-and-you-missed takeover approach came and seemingly went for one of the local market’s tech leaders Appen, which develops the datasets for machine learning and artificial intelligence.

Canadian company Telus International sprang a $9.50 a share bid on the company, which said it would talk to Telus to try to extract a better offer.

But in the afternoon Telus revoked its proposal, blindsiding Appen. A bemused share market lifted the Appen share price $1.87, or 29.2 per cent, to $8.27, after opening at $7.99 and peaking at $8.48 in morning trade.
 
The takeover interest in Appen galvanised the rest of the tech sector, with Tyro Payments adding 5 cents or 5 per cent to $1.04; Pointsbet Holdings gaining 12 cents, or 5 per cent, to $2.50; Pro Medicus rising $1.06, or 2.7 per cent, to $40.66; and WiseTech Global ending 94 cents, or 2.4 per cent, higher at $40.80.

Afterpay owner Block Inc. gained $1.34, or 1.2 per cent, to $110.59, while fellow BNPL player Sezzle jumped 2.5 cents, or 5.1 per cent, to 52 cents.
 
Market heads lower
 
Despite this interest lifting the All Tech Index by 1 per cent to 2,054, the topline market indices closed weaker.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index dropped 49.3 points to 7105.9 points, while the broader S&P/ASX All Ordinaries lost 0.7 per cent, to 7339.3 points.
 
The big banks were a mixed bag, with NAB down 9 cents to $31.57, ANZ 10 cents weaker at $25.53, and Commonwealth down 74 cents at $105.43, while Westpac went against the tide, eking out a 3-cent gain to $23.90.
 
In big mining, Fortescue lost 76 cents, or 3.7 per cent, to $19.92; Rio Tinto was down $1.18, or just over 1 per cent, to $110.78; and BHP shed 40 cents, or 0.9 per cent, to $42.62. 
 
Good week continues for US markets
 
On Wall Street, the 30-stock Dow Jones Industrial Average rose for a fifth-straight trading day, adding 516.9 points, or 1.6 per cent, to 32,637.2.

The broader S&P 500 index lifted 79.1 points, or 2 per cent, to 4,057.8, while the tech-heavy Nasdaq Composite index put the other two in the shade, rising 305.9 points, or nearly 2.7 per cent, to 11,470.7.
 
Market sentiment was boosted by a batch of strong earnings from the retail sector, with Macy’s (up 19 per cent), Dollar Tree (up 22 per cent) and Dollar General (up 14 per cent) leading the sector index.

In Europe, the regional Stoxx Europe 600 index ended the day up 0.8 per cent, while the UK’s FTSE 100 closed up 0.6 per cent higher and Germany’s Dax 40 gained 1.6 per cent.
 
The Australian dollar is buying 71 US cents this morning.

Share
Print

Volatility creating stock-picking opportunities in micro caps, says Ellerston

Market volatility may be unsettling investors, but it is creating compelling opportunities for active stock-pickers, says Ellerston Capital.

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.