Pre-Open Data
Key Data for the Week
Australian Market
The Australian sharemarket suffered its biggest daily loss since February, falling 1.9%. All sectors ended the session lower, with the Materials, Industrials and Energy sectors all conceding between 2.0% and 4.0%.
The mining giants led the losses in the Materials sector as Fortescue Metals conceded 3.1%, BHP fell 3.4% and Rio Tinto dropped 3.8%. This decline in investor sentiment was also felt in the gold mining industry; Evolution Mining and Northern Star Resources shed 3.4% and 3.5% respectively.
Rumours of an increase in the supply of Iranian oil sent the Energy sector 2.8% lower. Sector heavyweight, Woodside Petroleum lost 2.6%, while Oil Search weakened 4.1%. Whitehaven Coal led the losses in the coal mining industry as it slumped 6.2%.
The Information Technology was not immune to the day’s losses, falling 1.6%. EML Payments suffered a 45.6% fall after concerns were raised regarding its Irish subsidiary’s anti-money laundering controls. Ireland’s central bank has now flagged some significant concerns regarding these measures.
Commonwealth Bank was the worst performer of the big four, closing 2.5% lower.
The Australian futures market points to a 0.06% rise today.
Overseas Markets
European sharemarkets closed lower on Wednesday, weakened by inflationary fears and an increase in long-term bond yields. The Materials sector was among the worst performers, led lower by the mining giants as Glencore lost 3.3% and London-listed BHP dropped 4.6%. The rise in bond yields aided the Financials sector as it posted the smallest decline; ING fell 1.9%, while HSBC bucked the downward trend to close 0.2% higher. The broad-based pan-European STOXX 600 gave up 1.5%.
US sharemarkets were also weaker on Wednesday as discussions regarding the Federal Reserve’s bond-buying program sparked fresh inflationary fears. Wednesday’s trade also saw a steep decline in all major crypto currencies. As a result, crypto currency exchange, Coinbase Global, fell 5.9%, while Bitcoin miners, Marathon Digital and Bitfarms lost 5.6% and 4.5% respectively.
By the close of trade, the Dow Jones lost 0.5%, the S&P 500 shed 0.3% and the NASDAQ gave up less than 0.1%.
CNIS Perspective
The long-term relationship between wages growth and inflation is too strong to ignore and yesterday’s wages data suggests inflation remains a fair way off.
Wages growth picked up slightly in the March quarter, up 0.6%, coming off a record low in the December quarter. There is still a lot of spare capacity in the labour market and wages growth remains weak.
The strongest growth in the quarter was in accommodation and food services (1.2%). The main driver of this rise was in award jobs, a result of the Fair Work Commission’s Annual Wage Review.
There have been reports of labour shortages in pockets of the economy, particularly for sectors which rely on foreign workers. Inactivity in wage-setting practices means it could be slow for such pressures to flow through to the data.
The RBA has suggested we need to see wages growth at, or above 3%, to get inflation sustainably back into the central bank’s target band. We are still a long way from this with annual growth of 1.5% in the March quarter. For now, a material pick-up in wages growth, and therefore inflation, still looks to be some way off.
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