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US stocks closed lower on Tuesday in the first trading session of this holiday-shortened week as the rising price of oil places further pressure on the Federal Reserve on an inflationary front. The S&P500 fell 0.42%, the Dow Jones lost 0.56% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell in late trade to close down 0.08% after trading higher all day. Oil prices have been on the rise over the last week after Saudi Arabia extended its 1-million-barrels per day voluntary oil production cuts. US Treasury yields also rose on Tuesday which reduces investor appetite for riskier assets like equities.
Looking at the odds of a recession in the US, Goldman Sachs cut its recession odds to 15% and said it anticipated the Federal Reserve will skip a rate hike at the next FOMC meeting later this month. While this news would normally boost the market, investors weighed this news against September being historically one of the weakest months for equities.
In Europe, markets fell on Tuesday as sentiment around stimulus out of China begins to fade despite favourable economic data released in the region in the form of the Eurozone producer price index showing producer prices were down 7.6% YoY in July, dropping for a 7th consecutive month. Another dampener on Tuesday was the revision for inflation expectations for the next three years rising from 2.3% in June to 2.4% in July, while one-year expectations remain unchanged at 3.4%. The STOXX600 fell 0.2% on Tuesday, Germany’s DAX and the French CAC each lost 0.34%, and, in the UK, the FTSE100 shed 0.2%.
The local market rebounded in afternoon trade yesterday to close the session just 0.06 % lower after trading in the red all day. Iron ore miners like BHP and Rio Tinto and the utilities sector weighed on the market while health care and industrials stocks offset some of the heavy losses in afternoon trade. The market also rallied in afternoon trade following the RBA’s rate decision announcement.
The RBA has maintained the nation’s cash rate at 4.1% for the month of September as Philip Lowe handed down the decision at his last meeting as RBA governor. The reason behind the hold was as the board assesses uncertainty around the economic outlook and its bid to establish a more sustainable balance between supply and demand in the economy. The rate pause will allow the RBA more time to assess the impact of rate hikes to date however future rate hikes were flagged to ensure inflation falls to the target 2-3% in a reasonable amount of time.
Qantas boss Alan Joyce has brought forward his departure as CEO, walking off the job yesterday, months before he was set to step down as CEO amid the airline’s troubled run of recent weeks including his bonuses mounting over $10m at a time when the airline is facing a record corporate fine for allegedly selling tickets to flights that were known to be cancelled in 2022. Vanessa Hudson, Joyce’s replacement, will begin her reign as CEO from today. Qantas shares responded positively to the news with the share price rallying 1% on Tuesday. Just this morning, on her first day in office as CEO, Vanessa Hudson said ‘right now, achieving this balance must first start with our customers’ and said it is time to show Qantas customers why the flying kangaroo deserves to be their trusted first choice.
Chalice Mining shares continued to sell off yesterday, with the mining stock falling a further 13% in the aftermath of the scoping study update-driven sell-off. Tietto Minerals also faced a sharp decline yesterday after the gold miner downgraded its production guidance materially.
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