ASX to Rise; RBA Admits Reputational Damage on Yield Control

The Market Herald2022-06-21

Aussie shares will shoot for their first rise in eight sessions following a  rebound in European stocks and US equity futures during a US market holiday.

ASX futures rallied 47 points or 0.74 percent. The advance raises hopes for a break in a losing run that has stripped 688 points off the S&P/ASX 200 since June 8.

Oil reversed to a gain overnight. Iron ore sank for a ninth session. Copper fell to its lowest since early October before bouncing higher. The dollar steadied below 70 US cents.

Europe

Banks and energy producers led as European stocks rebounded from last week’s losses. Trading volumes were constrained by the Juneteenth long weekend in the US.

The pan-European Stoxx 600 index climbed 0.96 percent. Britain’s FTSE 100 index put on 1.5 percent.

The financial sector climbed 3.3 percent to lead gains. Banks slumped last week after the US Federal Reserve announced the biggest rate hike in 28 years, and central banks in Switzerland and Britain both raised.

Germany’s DAX index gained 1.06 percent despite a surge in producer prices. German wholesale prices were a third higher last month than the same time last year, well above expectations.

French stocks trailled after President Emmanuel Macron lost his parliamentary majority over the weekend. Macron’s centrist coalition secured the most seats in the National Assembly, but fell short of an absolute majority. The CAC 40 index edged up 0.64 percent.

The European Union has been struggling with vastly different borrowing costs among member countries as sovereign bond yields surge. Governments in Italy and Greece have had to pay much more to borrow than Germany and France.

The disparity under the constraints of the euro once again raised the risk of the currency bloc disintegrating. The crisis prompted the European Central Bank to announce plans last week for a new tool to address the issue.

US equity futures rallied with Europe. S&P 500 futures firmed 41 points or 1.11 percent. Dow futures rose 256 points or 0.86 percent. Nasdaq futures gained 129 points or 1.14 percent.

Europe’s benchmark has fared better than Wall Street this year. The Stoxx 600 has fallen almost 17 percent while the S&P 500 entered a bear market.

Turmoil on cryptocurrency markets temporarily abated. Bitcoin was this morning trading back above US$20,000 at US$20,548 after falling as low as US$17,630 over the weekend.

Australian outlook

Is that… green? The S&P/ASX 200 appears to have broadly positive leads for the first time in an aeon.

US futures built nicely overnight as Europe ignored the commodities turmoil that swept Asia yesterday. Those pricing pressures have not dissipated for Australia’s miners, but strength in European banking, energy and travel stocks suggest there should be counter-balances for the ASX this session.

The market looks short-term oversold and due some respite, even if only for a session or two. Rallies in recent weeks have been treated as selling opportunities (“fading the rally”). Today will be another test of investors’ willingness to stay the course. Any sort of positive finish tonight would be a win for the bulls.

The Reserve Bank has two opportunities today to clarify the outlook for interest rates. First, Governor Philip Lowe delivers a speech on ‘Inflation and Monetary Policy’ at a Sydney event at 10 am AEST. Then at 11.30 am the central bank releases the minutes from this month’s policy meeting, which concluded with the biggest rate hike in 22 years.

The dollar steadied this morning, up 0.1 percent at 69.53 US cents.

Commodities

Iron ore turned negative for the year as Chinese steel mills cut production in the face of falling demand. Chinese housing construction has fallen sharply amid declining property prices and a debt crisis among developers.

“May was particularly bad, down somewhere between 30 and 40 percent year on year on new starts,” Colin Hamilton, head of commodities research at BMO Capital Markets, told Britain’s FT.

Ore prices slumped 8 percent yesterday to US$111.35 a tonne, according to S&P Global Platts. The spot price for ore landed at Tianjin fell US$3.38 or 2.6 percent to US$128 a tonne.

BHP and Rio Tinto declined in UK trade.BHP‘s UK stock fell 1.59 percent. Rio Tinto shed 1 percent.

Oil hit a one-month low before recovering. Brent crude settled US$1.01 or 0.9 percent ahead at US$114.13 a barrel after trading as low as US$111.52.

Prices plunged on Friday as crude belatedly responded to worries about demand destruction as inflationary pressures force consumers to reduce spending.

“We’ve got two really competing narratives happening,” Houston oil consultant Andrew Lipow told Reuters. “One is sanctions on Russian supplies. On the other hand, we see the high prices resulting in some demand destruction.”

“Friday’s steep price fall can be seen as a delayed reaction to the concerns about recession that have already been weighing on the prices of other commodities for some time,” Commerzbank analyst Carsten Fritsch said.

Copper touched its lowest since October 1 before recovering as the mood on the London Metal Exchange improved. Benchmark copper finished 0.3 per cent ahead at US$8,989.50 a tonne. Aluminium climbed 1.3 percent, nickel 0.3 percent, lead 0.6 percent and zinc 0.5 percent. Tin eased 1.3 percent.

Gold was little changed ahead of the resumption of US trade. Gold for August delivery was lately down 50 US cents or 0.03 percent at US$1,840.10 an ounce in electronic trade in the US.

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