Pre-Open Data
Key Data for the Week
Australian Market
The Australian sharemarket jumped 1.0% on Thursday, as all sectors closed higher. The local market rode tailwinds created by global market sentiment, as major Chinese property developer, Evergrande, met its interest payment, and the US Federal Reserve outlined a hawkish approach to increase rates as early as next year.
The Information Technology and Energy sectors pushed the market ahead, as they closed up 3.0% and 2.8%. Digital payment providers, Afterpay (4.2%) and Zip Co. (4.9%), were key technology performers. Meanwhile, important energy stocks included Woodside Petroleum, Santos and Oil Search, which added 1.7%, 2.9% and 3.4% respectively. This came as crude oil prices rose 2.0%, as supply levels fell to their lowest in three years according to NAB.
The Materials, Consumer Staples and Health Care sectors were the weakest performers, as they all eased 0.2-0.3% higher. Standout stocks included Costa Group (2.5%) and Australian Clinical Labs (0.9%). The Financials sector added 1.3%, as all the major banks advanced. Commonwealth Bank and ANZ led gains, up 1.2% and 1.1%, while both Westpac and NAB closed ~0.6% higher. Macquarie Group was another key performer, as it steamed ahead 2.6%.
The Australian futures point to a 0.11% increase today.
Overseas Markets
European sharemarkets were mostly higher on Thursday, with the STOXX Europe 600 and the German DAX ahead 0.9%, while the UK FTSE 100 eased 0.1%. Banking stocks performed well, up 2.2%, after the Bank of England raised its inflation forecasts and supported the case for higher interest rates. This weighed on the UK’s blue-chip stocks, as investors considered the central bank’s commentary.
US sharemarkets strove ahead overnight, despite the US Federal Reserve’s similar commentary around potential interest rate increases as early as next year. The Dow Jones, S&P 500 and NASDAQ were up 1.5%, 1.2% and 1.0% respectively. Most sectors closed higher, with Utilities and Real Estate being the only detractors. The Energy (3.4%) and Financials (2.5%) sectors were key performers, as they pulled the market ahead.
CNIS Perspective
The US Federal Reserve will likely start to tiptoe into the unknown before the end of the year. Fed officials indicated on Wednesday they’re ready to begin ‘tapering’, the process of slowly pulling back the stimulus they’ve provided during the pandemic. This is likely to commence in November.
Whilst tapering is not new to the Federal Reserve, it has never had to pull back from such a dramatically accommodative position. For most of the past year and a half, it has been buying at least US$120 billion of bonds each month, providing unprecedented support to financial markets and the economy.
The purchases have helped keep interest rates low and provided support to markets that malfunctioned badly at the start of the pandemic.
Markets have taken the news well, but the real test is ahead. Tapering represents a teeing up of future interest rate hikes. 9 of the 18 Federal Reserve members now see the first interest rate hike in 2022. Additionally, 17 of the 18 members are expecting at least one rate hike by the end of 2023.
Every quarter, members of the committee forecast where interest rates will go in the short, medium, and long term. These projections are represented visually in a chart called a ‘dot plot’, as shown below.
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