Home / ASX 200 expected to rise, 5 ASX shares to watch

ASX 200 expected to rise, 5 ASX shares to watch

Wednesday proved to be another wild day for markets with Australia's ASX 200 index down over 1% at the open, only to rally 2% and finally finish 5 points down as the session ended.

The Wild West

Wednesday proved to be another wild day for markets with Australia’s ASX 200 index down over 1% at the open, only to rally 2% and finally finish 5 points down as the session ended.
Over in the US it was the opposite, with stock markets sustaining gains leaving the Dow Jones up 2.2% for the day as the beaten up ‘value’ companies staged a strong recovery.
European markets benefitted from the announcement of a $1.1 trillion fiscal stimulus proposal under which the likes of Germany and France will effectively share the risk of debt used to fund the periphery.
Importantly, some $500 billion will come in the form of grants rather than loans. French carmakers including Renault (EPA:RNO) and Peugeot (EPA:UG) were up over 10% each.

Bulls, Bears and…

Experts continue to pontificate over whether this sustained rally signals the end of the previous bear market, or the continuation of the existing bull as they attempt, with little accuracy, to predict what will happen next.
In my view, the unique nature of COVID-19 means traditional comparisons are moot, hence suggestions this may be a dead cat bounce is overstated.
The ASX200 was supported by the banking sector on Wednesday, as National Australia Bank (ASX:NAB) and Westpac (ASX:WBC) rallied 7.8% and 8.6%, respectively, following a positive report for uber-bear UBS. In fact, NAB announced a near quadrupling of its share purchase plan to $1.25 billion from $500 million.
Similarly, it was the most beaten down ‘value’ companies benefitting from a clear rally out of defensives and materials, into cyclicals, as cement-maker Boral (ASX:BLD) and CSR Ltd (ASX:CSR) both rallied over 7%.

Gold still shines

The gold sector was hardest hit as prices fell as the economic outlook improves.
Northern Star Resources Ltd (ASX: NST) and Newcrest Mining (ASX:NCM) fell over 7% each. However, you might expect short-term rallies as weak economic data continues.
Vitamin-maker Blackmore Ltd (ASX:BKL) entered a trading halt seeking $117 million in fresh capital, yet the company was facing real pressure from its Chinese expansion before COVID-19 so looks a difficult proposition. The political pressure on China continues to increase with the US State Department indicating they see the Hong Kong law changes as inappropriate. Finally, chip-maker Micron (NASDAQ: MU), increased sales forecasts by another 10% to $5.2 billion sending the entire sector, including NVIDIA (NASDAQ: NVDA), higher.
The daily report is written by Drew Meredith, Financial Adviser and Director of Wattle Partners.

  • Drew Meredith

    Drew is publisher of the Inside Network's mastheads and a principal adviser at Wattle Partners.




    Print Article

    Related
    ‘Reflect and reconsider’: ASIC chair calls for complexity cull

    The legislative threads surrounding financial services “look less like an elegant tapestry and more like a painting by Jackson Pollock”, the ASIC chair said, before announcing a new thinktank to reassess ways the regulator can help make the system more efficient and less complex.

    Tahn Sharpe | 21st Nov 2024 | More
    ‘Pivotal moment’ as greenwashing overtakes returns as key ESG concern

    Amidst a healthy uptick in investment returns and consumer confidence, the ESG sector is coming to grips with increasing concern about greenwashing, which has now become the major deterrent for investors – up from 45 per cent in 2022 to 52 per cent today.

    Tahn Sharpe | 21st Nov 2024 | More
    INSight #402 with Craig Brooke from KeyInvest

    Craig Brooke from KeyInvest shares insights to James Dunn from The Inside Network on bank versus non-bank lending. The Inside Adviser

    The Inside Adviser | 21st Nov 2024 | More
    Popular
  • Popular posts: