Pre-Open Data
Key Data for the Week
Key economic data released this week:
Australian Market
The Australian sharemarket closed 0.55% lower on Friday, following a sharp sell-off late in the session. The loss added to a difficult week for the local ASX 200, which posted its worst weekly decline since late April.
Wealth manager AMP was the standout performer on the market, up 19.5%, after it received an acquisition offer from US investment firm Ares Management Corporation. Negotiations are in the preliminary stage, with AMP in the process of conducting its portfolio review. The big four banks were mixed; with Commonwealth Bank and ANZ closing up 1.3% and 0.6% respectively, while Westpac slipped 0.2%.
Resmed rose 9.5%, after the sleep apnea maker announced 1Q21 sales rose 10% to US$751.9 million, boosted by demand for the company’s ventilators and masks during the coronavirus pandemic.
Fortescue Metals gained 4.5% after the company received several broker upgrades, while mining heavyweights BHP (-0.7%) and Rio Tinto (+1.6%) were mixed.
The Australian futures market points to a 0.88% rise today.
Overseas Markets
European sharemarkets were mixed on Friday, as some strong company earnings results were offset by ongoing concerns about fresh lockdowns across the region. French oil and gas producer Total climbed 2.8%, after the company maintained its dividend, despite a sharp fall in third quarter net profit. The broad based STOXX Europe 600 rose 0.2%, however the German DAX and UK FTSE 100 eased 0.4% and 0.1% respectively.
US sharemarkets fell on Friday, weighed down by Technology stocks. Heavyweight names Amazon (-5.5%), Apple (-5.6%), Facebook (-6.3%), Spotify (-10.1%) and Twitter (-21.1%) all closed lower. However, Alphabet lifted 3.8%, boosted by an increase in advertiser spend in Search and YouTube, along with continued strength in Google Cloud and Play. By the close of trade, the Dow Jones slid 0.6%, the S&P 500 fell 1.2% and the NASDAQ dropped 2.5%.
CNIS Perspective
The big US tech companies with a combined market value of US$7 trillion reported their latest earnings late last week, taking the blame for market softness even though the group exceeded revenue expectations.
Amazon’s quarterly profit nearly tripled, to US$6.3 billion. The company also added almost 250,000 employees in the period, surpassing more than a million workers for the first time.
Users across Facebook’s app family (Facebook, Instagram, WhatsApp and Messenger) rose 15% during the quarter. Despite a wide-ranging boycott by advertisers, the company’s revenue and profit both surpassed expectations.
One of the stars of Alphabet’s positive numbers came from record advertising revenue from its YouTube unit, which rose 30%, bolstered by stay-at-home viewing. Apple’s revenue rose 1%, beating expectations, however, the markets anticipates a delayed release of the new iPhone, which added market pressure.
Microsoft saw a surge in demand for its cloud computing services and steep rise in video game usage saw revenue jump 12% for the quarter. However, the company hinted profit margins might come under pressure as it plans to continue to invest heavily into its cloud platform Azure.
These big tech names are built to excel in situations like pandemic’s as we are forced to adapt more and more rapidly to a digital world. With Europe largely into its second lockdown and the US posting their worst week for new cases, there does not seem to be any meaningful shift in the very upbeat fundamental and secular growth narratives.
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