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The Australian market edged higher yesterday, quickly brushing off the weak lead from Wall Street. Materials shares declined the most, as commodity prices fell, while coincidentally the US dollar index rose to the highest level in 20 years, and the US dollar index is a measure against six currency counterparts. The fall in commodities also dragged the Australian dollar down to a two-year low.
Buy-now-pay-later company Zip (ASX:ZIP) has mutually agreed to cancel its proposed merger with Sezzle, another BNPL stock. This announcement saw Zip gain 6% and was the best performing stock on the ASX200, while Sezzle (ASX:SZL) crashed 39% in yesterday’s session, and was the worst performing stock on the All Ords. Zip will be paying Sezzle $US11 million (AUD$16.4 million) for compensation costs.
The most traded stocks by Bell Direct clients yesterday were Westpac (ASX:WBC), Whitehaven Coal (ASX:WHC) and BHP Group (ASX:BHP).
European stocks were boosted by luxury and travel stocks. The STOXX 600 closed 0.5% higher, after having opened lower. US equities were lower however, ahead of June’s inflation report. The Dow Jones closed 0.6% lower, the S&P500 down 0.9% and the Nasdaq down 1%. The latest US Consumer Price Index data is scheduled to be released at 10:30pm AEST (Wednesday morning in the US). It’s expected to rise by 8.8% in June on a year-over-year basis. The last reading in May was 8.6%, and that was the largest increase the US had seen in CPI since 1981. Also, in the US reporting season for the second quarter has begun. The major banks are set to report this week: JP Moran and Morgan Stanley will post results on Thursday before the bell. And the yield on the US 10-year note fell 2 basis points in New York.
What to watch today:
Trading Ideas:
Trading Central have identified a bearish signal in Harvey Norman (ASX:HVN), indicating that the stock price may fall from the close of $3.85 to the range of $3.36 to $3.46, over 17 days according to the standard principles of technical analysis.