Skip to main content

Latest stock market podcasts

Morning Bell 5 June

Grady Wulff
June 5, 2023

Wall St ended Friday’s session on a high, with the key indices each adding over 1% and the Dow Jones jumping 2.1% as investors welcomed a mixed payrolls report with an unexpected rise in unemployment and a slowdown in annual wage growth, all signs that the Federal Reserve’s aggressive rate hike action is taking effect on cooling economic growth in the US. In May, the US economy added 339,000 jobs in a sign that the booming labour market in the US remains strong, however unemployment increased to 3.7% from 3.4% which was one of the fastest increases in unemployment since early in the pandemic. Some of the increase in unemployment could be driven by mass layoffs in the technology sector that have seen over 200,000 workers lose their jobs this year across the big and smaller tech names.

Over in Europe, markets closed higher on Friday as investors responded to US lawmakers passing a bill to raise the US debt ceiling and cap government spending for 2-years, just days before the potential default deadline date. The STOXX600 rose 1.5% led by mining, oil and gas stocks all rallying. Germany’s DAX rose 1.25% on Friday, the French CAC added 1.87% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 rose 1.56%.

OPEC+, a group of global oil producers, met in Vienna on Sunday to discuss output policy to stabilise oil prices which have been battered down in recent times by weakened demand out of China. At the meeting on Sunday, OPEC+ reached an agreement to extend output cuts announced in April this year of 1 million barrels per day into 2024 amid price instability of recent times and the potential for excess supply.

On the local index, Friday’s trading session ended the week on a positive note as the ASX closed 0.48% higher on the last trading session of the week, buoyed by a sharp rally for materials stocks on a rise in the price of iron ore. Consumer staples and health care stocks were the sectors that underperformed the local market on Friday.

What to watch today:

  • Ahead of the local trading session, the SPI futures are anticipating the ASX to open the first trading session of the week up 1.06% on the back of the global rally that ended last week on a positive note.
  • On the commodities front this morning, crude oil is trading 3.31% higher at US$74.10/barrel, uranium is up 1.87% at US$54.60/pound, gold is up 0.11% at US$1949.63/ounce and iron ore is up almost 1% at US$105.50/tonne.
  • On the foreign exchange front, AU$1.00 is buying, US$0.66, 92.51 Japanese Yen, 53.17 British Pence and NZ$1.09.
  • Taking a look at economic data, Germany’s trade balance data is released today for April with the market expecting a decline in trade surplus to 15.1bn euros from 16.7 billion euros as the economy entered into a recession in recent weeks.

Trading Ideas:

  • Bell Potter has increased the price target on Wisetech Global (ASX:WTC) from $60 to $74.25 and maintain a hold rating on the leading global provider of logistics software solutions following increased growth outlook for the company on the back of assumed greater penetration or success in both customs and compliance and landside logistics markets. This follows the announcement of a global customs rollout with Kuehne Nagel – the largest sea-freight forwarder in the world, and the acquisition of two landside logistics companies this half.
  • And Trading Central has identified a bullish signal on Reece (ASX:REH) following the formation of a pattern over a period of 34-days which is roughly the same amount of time the share price may rise from the close of $18.32 to the range of $19.15 to $19.35 according to standard principles of technical analysis.

Morning Bell 13 September

Bell Direct
September 13, 2024

Morning Bell 12 September

Bell Direct
September 12, 2024

Morning Bell 11 September

Bell Direct
September 11, 2024

Morning Bell 10 September

Bell Direct
September 10, 2024

Morning Bell 9 September

Bell Direct
September 9, 2024

Weekly Wrap 6 September

Bell Direct
September 6, 2024

Morning Bell 5 September

Bell Direct
September 5, 2024

Morning Bell 4 September

Bell Direct
September 4, 2024

Morning Bell 3 September

Bell Direct
September 3, 2024

Morning Bell 2 September

Bell Direct
September 2, 2024

Weekly Wrap 30 August

Bell Direct
August 30, 2024

Morning Bell 30 August

Bell Direct
August 30, 2024