Pre-Open Data
Key Data for the Week
Australian Market
The Australian sharemarket rallied on Thursday, up 0.7%, as 10 out of 11 sectors advanced. The local market followed a solid lead from the US on Wednesday, where concerns over US debt were alleviated.
The Energy sector (-0.8%) was the weakest performer, surprisingly, as the recent surge in global oil and gas prices slowed. This was attributed to Russian President Vladimir Putin’s announcement to increase the country’s supply of gas to global markets. Whitehaven Coal lost ground, down 7.0%, alongside Santos (-2.2%) and Oil Search (-1.8%).
The strongest performer was the Information Technology sector, ahead 2.3%, as most major constituents rose. Afterpay advanced 3.1%, while Xero and WiseTech Global closed between 2.8%-2.9% higher. Another key mover included US-based financial technology company Sezzle, which climbed 14.6%, after its partnership with Target launched ahead of the holiday shopping season.
The Consumer Discretionary sector (0.6%) performed modestly, pushed ahead by one of the session’s top performers, Super Retail Group (7.8%). This came after UBS upgraded it to a ‘buy’ rating, likely based on expected COVID-19 lockdown recovery and the upcoming holiday shopping season.
The Financials sector (1.0%) partly recovered from Wednesday’s dip, as most banks closed ahead. NAB, Westpac and ANZ gained 1.6%, 1.4% and 1.0% respectively, while Commonwealth Bank closed flat.
The Australian futures point to a 0.45% rise today.
Overseas Markets
European sharemarkets recovered strongly overnight, as the German DAX had its best day since May, up 1.9%, while the STOXX Europe 600 and UK FTSE 100 rose 1.6% and 1.2% respectively. All sectors did well, with Energy (0.2%) being the weakest performer. German automaker stocks broadly rose 3.4%, despite data which showed industrial output in August fell 4.0%. London-listed shares in Rio Tinto and BHP grew between 3.5%-3.6%.
US sharemarkets advanced further on Thursday, reinforced by progress on the US debt situation. A deal has been made to increase the ceiling in the short-term, through to early December, to avoid a government default. The Dow Jones, S&P 500 and NASDAQ rose 1.0%, 0.8% and 1.1% respectively. Most sectors closed ahead, led by Consumer Discretionary (1.5%) and Materials (1.3%), while the Utilities sector lagged behind (-0.5%). Key movers included Technology stocks like NVIDIA (1.8%), Fortinet (2.6%) and Amazon (1.2%).
CNIS Perspective
US policy makers have agreed to kick the can down the road, striking a short-term deal between Republicans and Democrats to raise the debt ceiling that has kept financial markets on edge the past week. This will prevent a US government sovereign default that was potentially only weeks away. An extra US$480 billion in borrowing is expected to carry government until the 3rd of December, when the issue will again have to be dealt with.
The catastrophic consequences of the world’s largest economy defaulting on its debt is hard to consider as the Republicans, it would appear, are using this issue as leverage to water down Joe Biden’s infrastructure and welfare spending packages. The US, with debt that currently stands at US$28 trillion, has never before defaulted on its debt obligations. The ceiling was introduced in 1939 to limit how much debt the government can accumulate and has been lifted on more than 100 occasions.
In financial markets you can never say never and with the division in US politics being so extreme, the next debt ceiling showdown in the run up to Christmas will likely see more 11th hour brinkmanship.
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