Home / Defensive assets / Financial Planner’s morning report – ASX to open higher, gold at record levels, US-China trade talks

Financial Planner’s morning report – ASX to open higher, gold at record levels, US-China trade talks

The ASX 200 (XJO:ASX) finished down another 0.7% on Wednesday, pushed lower by healthcare (-1.7%), industrials (-1.5%) and consumer staples (-1.2%).
Defensive assets

ASX to open higher, gold at record levels, US-China trade talks

The ASX 200 (XJO:ASX) finished down another 0.7% on Wednesday, pushed lower by healthcare (-1.7%), industrials (-1.5%) and consumer staples (-1.2%). Cochlear Ltd (ASX:COH) was the biggest detractor, falling 2.8% as investors once again flocked to the mining sector as gold prices maintained all-time highs above USD$2,000.

It is becoming apparent that the Chinese and their insatiable demand for Australian commodities may once again cushion the blow to our economy. Chinese exports from Australia reached close to 50% in June with investors having identified the trend and pinning dividend hopes on the likes of BHP Group Ltd (ASX:BHP) and Fortescue Metals Group Ltd (ASX:FMG).

In an income starved world, this strategy has some merit, whilst keeping in mind these are the most cyclical of businesses. The US market continued its recovery, the S&P 500 adding 0.6% and nearing an all-time high, after the White House scheduled a catch up meeting with the Chinese regarding their trade deal and it became more likely that a second round of stimulus would be agreed before the end of the week.

  • The happiest place on earth?

    One of my personal favourites, The Walt Disney Co. (NYSE:DIS), rallied 8.8% overnight after announcing better than expected subscribers on its Disney+ platform; it seems families stuck at home around the world are turning to Toy Story, Cars and Star Wars to keep the kids entertained.

    Despite beating internal expectations that saw streaming subscribers hit 60.5 million, profit fell 147% for the business, as its theme parks (85% revenue decline), media movie studios (55% decline) and media networks (2%) all declined in unison.

    Things are, however, looking up with the NBA basketball and MLB baseball seasons restarting, benefitting their ESPN sports channel, theme parks slowing re-opening and movie theatres expected to restart at the end of 2020. In my view, the pandemic is offering a buying opportunity for a world-class content and advertising business.

    Back at home, all is not looking well

    The buy-now-pay-later sector has been on fire lately, with those who missed out either cursing themselves or flagging concerns about the lack of regulation. It seems that ASIC has their eyes on the sector, but have been hamstrung by the pandemic, amid concerns about over-commitment, penalty and missed payment fees heaped onto unwitting customers.

    In a similar vein, brokers are increasing concerned about the major banks ability to deliver competitive returns for investors, with some 10-15% of consumer and small business loans deferred along with $274 billion residential mortgages; I’m not sure that most borrowers on ‘holiday’ know their interest is still compounding and repayments have simply been delayed.

    Telstra Corporation Ltd (ASX:TLS) announced another asset sale, bringing the total to $1.5 billion, after passing it’s Victorian data centre to Centuria on a 30 year lease with a price of $416.7 million; the stock fell 2.3%.

    Drew Meredith

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




    Print Article

    Related
    Tech sector soars as bond yields and banks fall

    Despite increased volatility emanating from the banking sector, tech stocks have been supported by falling bond yields on fears the global economy could slip into recession this year, with big-name companies leading the gains.

    Nicki Bourlioufas | 27th Mar 2023 | More
    Bonds surge back to relevance after hellish 2022

    Credit and equity markets both suffered a very bad 2022, as the collapse of negative correlation between stock and bond prices left no safe haven for investors. But 2023 could be a big year for bonds, with analysts warning investors waiting on the sidelines that they risk missing out.

    Lisa Uhlman | 25th Jan 2023 | More
    Profit important but cash is back, even during times of high inflation

    The British investment firm’s current cash weightings have hit historic levels after perceived risks in the global economy moved it to help preserve rather than accumulate capital.

    Ishan Dan | 5th Dec 2022 | More
    Popular
  • Popular posts: