Pre-Open Data
Key Data for the Week
Key economic data released this week:
Australian Market
The Australian sharemarket extended its gains on Monday to five consecutive days after the ASX 200 improved 0.6%. The Materials and Information Technology sectors were the strongest performers, both up 1.5%, while the Utilities and Consumer Discretionary sectors closed in the red.
The Materials sector saw strong gains yesterday as iron ore prices surged 5.4% due to strong demand from China. Fortescue Metals climbed 3.8%, while Rio Tinto and BHP rallied 2.5% and 2.1% respectively. Goldminers were mixed on Monday; Evolution Mining fell 1.0% and Northern Star lost 0.5%, while Newcrest Mining rose 0.2%.
The Financials sector also advanced. Westpac closed flat after the company announced the sale of Westpac Fiji and its 89% stake in Westpac PNG for up to $420 million. ANZ added 0.2% and NAB rose 0.5%, while Commonwealth Bank lifted 0.7% after the company gained a banking license for its Dutch subsidiary.
The Information Technology sector rallied yesterday. Accounting software platform, Xero, jumped 4.2% and Appen rose 0.8%. Buy-now-pay-later companies were mostly lower; Afterpay lifted 2.2%, while Splitit sunk 4.8%, Sezzle lost 3.3% and Zip Co fell 1.1%.
The Australian futures market points to a 0.15% fall today.
Overseas Markets
European sharemarkets were mixed overnight as Brexit negotiations continued. British Prime Minister Boris Johnson and EU President Ursula von der Leyen issued a joint statement that indicated a new trade deal was impossible due to “remaining differences on critical issues”. The Financials sector was the weakest performer; Lloyds Bank and HSBC lost 4.3% and 2.6% respectively, while Deutsche Bank fell 1.7% and Barclays slipped 1.6%. By the close of trade, the broad based STOXX Europe 600 fell 0.3% and the German DAX lost 0.2%, while the UK FTSE 100 added 0.1%.
US sharemarkets were also mixed on Monday as investors anticipated details of potential COVID-19 relief stimulus. The Information Technology sector outperformed; Spotify surged 7.0% and Facebook jumped 2.1%, while Apple and NVIDIA lifted 1.2% and 0.4% respectively. However, Intel fell 3.4% following reports Apple is planning a new series of Mac processors in 2021. The Energy sector was the weakest performer, down 2.4%, following a fall in global oil prices. Chevron lost 2.7%, while ExxonMobil slipped 1.9%. The Dow Jones closed down 0.5% and the S&P 500 fell 0.2%, while the NASDAQ climbed 0.5% to close at a record high.
CNIS Perspective
The relationship between consumer confidence, consumer spending and GDP growth is a theory that we have highlighted many times in the past.
Last week’s GDP number for the September quarter illustrates quite clearly this is more than just a theory, but a reality. As growing hopes of a vaccine hit the market and lockdowns eased in Australia, an almost knee jerk reaction to consumer confidence has seen a significant jump in the quarterly GDP number.
Corresponding to this is a fall in the household savings rate as consumers loosen the purse strings.
Should you wish to discuss this or any other investment related matter, please contact your Investment Services Team on (02) 4928 8500.
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