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Australian market expected to open flat 11/07/19

 

OPENING CALL: The Australian share market is expected to open flat. The SPI200 futures contract expected to open up 5 points.

 

The S&P 500 briefly crossed the 3,000-point mark for the first time after Fed Chair Jerome Powell signaled that a rate cut is likely later this month.

 

Oil prices soared on a drop-in inventories as well as a major storm forming in the Gulf of Mexico.

 

Overnight Summary

 

 

 

 

 

 

  

Each Market in Focus

 

Australian shares rose, underpinned by consumer and tech stocks, as Asia-Pacific markets were broadly buoyed by the resumption of trade talks between the U.S. and China. The benchmark S&P/ASX 200 lifted 0.4% to 6689.8, bouncing back from two days of losses.
Consumer staples rose 1.9%–helped by big gains in the A2 Milk Co–while IT shares gained 1.8%. Miners didn’t fare so well, easing 0.4%. The Aussie benchmark is up 18% so far this year. 

U.S. stocks leapt to records after Federal Reserve Chairman Jerome Powell set the stage for the central bank to cut interest rates to bolster flagging growth.
The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.8% to end to close at a record 8202.53. The S&P 500 touched an all-time high during the trading session, briefly eclipsing the 3000 level for the first time before ending the day at 2993.07, 0.5% higher. The Dow Jones Industrial Average climbed 0.3% to 26860.2, snapping a three-day losing streak.

Major U.S. indexes had faltered in recent days as investors weighed an economic slowdown against the odds the Fed will bolster the economy by cutting interest rates. Mr. Powell’s testimony before the House Financial Services Committee signaled that the Fed is likely to cut rates later this month. Minutes from the Fed’s June meeting were also released Wednesday, and showed many central bank officials saw a stronger case for a rate cut.

The gold futures price rose by US$12.00 an ounce or 0.9% to US$1,412.50 an ounce. The spot gold price was trading near US$1,417 an ounce in late US trade. Iron ore fell by US$1.40 or 1.1% to US$121.20 a tonne.

U.S. oil prices went on a tear, rising 4.5% to a seven-week closing high of $60.43 amid falling U.S. oil inventories and a storm in the Gulf of Mexico that’s disrupting supplies.

The EIA says domestic crude-oil inventories plunged by 9.5 million barrels last week to 459 million, the lowest total in three months.

Meanwhile, a storm that is expected to become Hurricane Barry by Friday has already reduced offshore oil production in the Gulf of Mexico by 32%, or more than 600,000 BPD, as companies evacuate workers.

The WSJ Dollar Index, which measures the U.S. currency against a basket of 16 others, fell to 90.23 from 90.58 Tuesday after the release of dovish comments from Fed Chairman Powell. The comments are taken as an indication the central bank could be prepared to cut its benchmark short-term interest rate when officials meet later this month, pushing traders to search for yield outside the dollar.

Arturo Herrera, named Mexico’s finance minister after Carlos Urzúa unexpectedly resigned Tuesday, must juggle three conflicting objectives–maintaining fiscal responsibility, delivering on President López Obrador’s campaign promises of increased social spending and rescuing troubled state oil company Pemex–that will prove challenging to reconcile, UBS Wealth Management wrote.

UBS noted López Obrador has already publicly contradicted Herrera twice, once when he suggested a new oil refinery could be delayed, and once after he made statements about vehicle taxes, suggesting Herrera takes his place in the cabinet with a weak hand. The investment bank expects Mexico’s peso, trading at 19.14, to hit 20 on the dollar in six months and 20.5 in 12 months. 

European share markets fell on Wednesday. The pan-European STOXX600 index closed down by 0.2%. The German Dax fell by 0.5% and the UK FTSE was down by 0.1%. British recruiter Hays was down 6.6% as peer Page group fell by 15.1% after issuing a profit warning. In London trade, shares of Rio Tinto and BHP both rose by 1.1%.

  • Australian market expected to open flat 11/07/19, FP Markets
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