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US inflation highest in 40 years

MARKETS

Equity investors outside of the US seemed to take the highest US inflation in 40 years in their stride, helped by strong returns earlier in the week.

A generally positive US earnings season has helped support stocks. With results in from about 60% of the largest 500 companies, analysts expect profits rose 30% in the 4th quarter from a year earlier. This is up from estimates for 21% growth at the end of September.

In local stock news, Magellan Financial Group shares fell again as Hamish Douglass announced he would step down as chairman and take a medical leave of absence. He will be replaced by REA Group chairman Hamish McLennan whilst investment management duties will fall to Chris Mackay and Nikki Thomas, who have re-joined, and other senior portfolio managers within the business.

Macquarie reported a record 3rd quarter, helped by its markets-facing businesses, with Macquarie Capital earnings helping offset a decline in the annuities divisions such as banking and financial services.

Suncorp posted a near 21% fall in 1st half net profit after more insurance claims from natural disasters. But the company said its underlying business is strong, putting it in a good position in the 2nd half of this financial year.

Commonwealth Bank has reported a 30% growth in cash profits for the 1st half of the financial year increasing their interim dividend by 17%. The bank reported a 12.2% increase in household deposits and an 8.5% jump in home lending. Capital position remained strong. The company plans to buy-back up to $2 billion of its shares on-market, following the $6 billion off-market buy-back in the 1st half.

Computershare upgraded its full-year earnings forecast after 1st half figures beat expectations, with higher sales and profits from its register maintenance business.

As the oil price remains high, the number of US oil rigs rose very modestly to 497, its highest since April 2020. Even though the rig count has climbed for a record 17 months in a row, the weekly increases have been very modest, and production remains far from pre-pandemic highs.

ECONOMIC

Australian consumer sentiment fell again in February, only just remaining in positive territory. Rising inflationary pressures and increasing expectations of higher mortgage rates are negatively impacting sentiment. Changes in business conditions and confidence were mixed in January.

The annual inflation rate in the US accelerated to 7.5% in January, the highest since February 1982, and above market forecasts of 7.3%, as soring emerging costs, labour shortages, and supply disruptions couple with strong demand weighed. Excluding volatile energy and food categories, inflation rose 6%, the most since August 1982.

Private businesses in the US unexpectedly cut 301,000 workers in January, the first job loss since December of 2020 and the biggest since April 2020. Investors were expecting a job gain of 207,000.

The US economy unexpectedly added 476,000 payrolls in January, much better than market forecasts of 150,000, and in stark contrast to the job losses reported in the private sector ADP.

Two key US labour market metrics may take multiple years to recover to their pre-pandemic growth trend, with the labour-force participation rate and the employment-to-population ratio languishing due to high level of retirements and others leaving the workforce altogether.

A noted European central bank hawk said he expects an interest rate increase as early as in the 4th quarter of this year, as he expects Euro-area inflation to stay above 4% for much of 2022. A noted US central bank hawk tried to one-up his Euro-counterpart, suggesting a US cash rate of 1% by July.

POLITICAL

The Australian federal government announced a relaxing of border rules which will see us welcome visa holders into the country from February 21. Tourism operators are still haemorrhaging some $4 billion a month compared to pre-pandemic levels. The federal government has maintained they will not seek to boost immigration rates to “make up” for the last 2 years. Smart move leading into an election, but a poor move from an economic perspective.

Federal Treasurer Josh Frydenberg has indicated that its time to close the federal money tap and hand responsibility for the economy back to industry.

Russia reached new long-term supply deals with China as the Kremlin aims to strengthen ties with the Asian nation at a time of souring relations with the West.

US president Biden said the Nord Stream 2 natural gas pipeline between Russia and Germany would be stopped if President Putin orders an invasion of Ukraine. An invasion is highly unlikely.

Europe and the US are accelerating steps to roll back virus restrictions as politicians across both regions are deeming many public-health measures increasingly unnecessary as they come under pressure from a pandemic-weary public.

The US is apparently losing patience with China after the nation failed to meet its purchase commitments under the trade agreement reached during the Trump administration. China had pledged to buy an extra US$200 billion in US agriculture, energy, and manufactured products in the 2 years through the end of 2021. The Biden administration is under increasing pressure to show it’s willing to punish China for not holding up its end of the deal.

33 Chinese entities including electronics, optics, and healthcare/biotech companies, were added to a US “unverified list” that subjects them to tighter export controls.

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

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Equity markets mixed as relief rally soured by US tech sell-off

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

MARKETS

Equity markets were mixed this week as a strong rally earlier in the week was soured by US tech sell-off and more hawkish comments and action from both the European central bank and the Bank of England.

Reported 4th quarter US corporate earnings have continued to come through stronger than expected, with 78% of companies beating analyst estimates and more than 80% having met or beat expectations. Analysts are expecting that profits from companies in the S&P 500 rose 24% in the quarter from a year earlier.

Money markets are now expecting almost 5 interest rate increases from US Fed this year and 4 from the Bank of England. There’s also speculation that the US Fed might front-load hikes by increasing rates in larger increments, which Fed officials have poured cold water on. All will largely depend on inflation dynamics from here but will also be a function of what interest rate level the economy and markets can absorb and withstand.

In local stock news, Telstra has announced it will spend up to $1.6 billion on two projects over the next 5 years. The spending is projected to provide a $200 million earnings contribution by 2026.

Westpac has reported a net profit of $1.82 billion in the December quarter, up 80% on the quarterly average for the 2nd half of 2021. Cash earnings were up 1%, but the net interest margin declined 8 basis points to 1.91%. Total loans increased 0.7%.

Sydney Airport shareholders have voted for a $23.6 billion takeover bid from a consortium of investors, with shareholders to receive $8.75 per share.

Oil prices moved higher this week after OPEC+ stuck to planned moderate output increases (400,000 barrels per day) despite pressure from customers and consumers to raise output more quickly. The group has blamed rising prices on the failure of consuming nations to ensure adequate investment in fossil fuels, whilst Russia/US tensions also haven’t helped.

The Aussie dollar rose as the US dollar took a tumble after both the European and England central banks turned more hawkish in their rhetoric and actions.

ECONOMIC

The Reserve Bank of Australia left rates unchanged at 0.10% but announced an early finish to their quantitative easing (money printing) program, giving the bank the green light to begin raising rates. The bank made it abundantly clear in their statement that they’re in no rush to raise rates, but markets are currently predicting a rate lift-off in either June or August. Inflation, particularly wage growth, will be key.

Australian private sector credit rose by 0.8% in December to take the annual rate to 7.2%, the strongest rate since November 2008. Both housing and business credit were strong, whilst personal credit fell in December and remains well below levels a year ago.

Australian retail trade fell by 4.4% in December affected by virus issues, falling more than consensus estimates, but remains at near record levels. Food retailing was the only positive, with large falls coming from department stores, clothing & footwear, and household goods.

Australia’s trade surplus narrowed in December as imports rose strongly in the month relative to exports. Exports were mixed, with iron ore rising strongly and reasonable growth from wool and meat, whilst coal fell sharply as did other rural exports. Imports were boosted by strong gains across all the goods categories.

Australian building approvals rose strongly in December, boosted by a surprising lift in multi-unit approvals. In contrast, private detached house approvals fell as momentum continues to slow. Over the past year, the number of approvals is lower by 7.5%, however, alterations & additions approvals remain elevated.

US data showed that the central bank’s preferred measure of inflation rose at 4.9% in December over the prior year, pushing well above the bank’s target.

A separate measure showed US employers spent 4% more on wages and benefits over the past year, an increase not seen since 2001, as a tight labour market encouraged workers to demand higher pay. However, employment costs didn’t rise as much as expected in the 4th quarter easing concerns that wages are advancing too quickly.

US consumer spending fell in December as rising prices and virus fears took their toll.

US manufacturing activity slowed in January, from December, but remained in expansionary territory. Supply chain impediments caused by virus health policies were among the issues that weighed on activity.

The Bank of England voted by a majority 5-4 to increase the cash rate by 0.25% to 0.50%. Members also voted unanimously for the bank to begin to reduce the stock of UK government bond purchases by ceasing to reinvest maturing assets – i.e., reduce the size of their balance sheet by taking the liquidity away they previously provided via money printing. They will also begin to unwind the stock of corporate bond purchases.

The European central bank maintained key interest rates at record low levels in February and pledged to steadily reduce its bond purchases (money printing) this year. Rate rises are unlikely in 2022.

China’s economy continued to slow at the start of the year with manufacturing output slipping and Covid-zero policies curbing consumer spending.

POLICTICS

Russia/US tensions continued to rise this week with Russia maintaining they have no plans to invade and Ukraine trying to calm tensions on all sides. US lawmakers are apparently close to finalising the language for a sanctions bill that could include some penalties even if Putin doesn’t invade. The US has also given the green light to move troops from the US to Europe and to move troops within Europe closer to the Russia/Ukraine border.

Some 300,000 Australian fossil fuel jobs could be wiped out through declining international demand for fossil fuels, new modelling predicts. There’s a widely held belief that those job losses will be easily absorbed, but that doesn’t appear to be apparent with renewable sources of energy largely developed using automation. The job losses will disproportionately impact regional centres. Job transitions and retraining are never easy. 

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

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Markets hold their own in light of plenty of news flow

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

Local and global equity markets looked set to finish the week higher in what has been a topsy-turvy week for investor sentiment. 

In local stock news, Commonwealth Bank’s $6 billion share buy-back was more than $18 billion oversubscribed with an average scale back of almost 80%. Those holding a smaller number of shares were scaled back less whilst those left with less than 20 shares will see them compulsorily acquired.

Boral has completed the sale of its North American building products business for almost $3 billion to an American company. Boral has also completed the sale of its timber business for $64.5 million. Proceeds will be used to reduce debt.

Oil prices jumped to 7-year highs after OPEC+ agreed to stick to gradual production hikes, ignoring calls to increase production at a faster pace to bring down the oil price. The rapid ascent in the oil price has been due to a toxic combination of simultaneous re-opening across the globe (demand) along with significant under-investment in fossil fuels over the last few years (supply) given the focus on renewables. Russian President Putin said he was ready to stabilise energy prices by increasing gas shipments to Europe.
The Reserve Bank of Australia maintained the cash rate at the record low of 0.1% for the 10th consecutive month. It also confirmed its government bond yield targeting and its continued purchase of government securities at a rate of $4 billion per week at least until mid-February 2022. The central bank Governor reiterated that they expect the economy to be at pre-Delta variant levels by the 2nd half of 2022.

The Australian banking regulator APRA has raised the minimum interest rate buffer that lenders need to account for when assessing home loan applications in an attempt to slow booming home prices. The interest buffer has been increased to 3% from 2.5%. Time will tell if they need to do more to achieve their objective in what is a delicate balancing act.

Australian private sector credit grew by 0.6% in August, up 4.7% over the year, with housing and business credit rising, whilst personal credit contracted. Owner-occupied housing credit is now up 8.4% for the year whilst personal credit is down 5.6%.

Australian dwelling approvals unexpectedly rose by 6.8% in August, against expectations of a 5% decline, with both apartment and detached housing approvals increasing. Approvals for apartments drove the monthly gain. WA, SA, and VIC saw the strongest overall gains.

Job vacancies fell by 9.8% in the 3 months to end of August but remain 46% above their pre-pandemic levels. Private sector vacancies fell by 10.9% whilst public sector vacancies were up 2.3%. NSW, SA, and TAS saw the largest falls.

Australian dwelling prices rose by 1.5% across the 8 capital cities, with annual growth now sitting at 19.5%. Hobart, Canberra, and Sydney led the charge in September.

The value of new lending for housing, excluding refinancing, fell 4.3% in August, a larger fall than expected. Lending to both first home buyers and owner occupiers fell whilst lending to investors rose. Lending to first home buyers saw the biggest fall and is now down more than 21% since the peak in January 2021. Affordability hitting home.

Australia’s trade surplus came in at a record $15.1 billion in August, with exports up 4.1% whilst imports fell 1.5%, against expectations of a $10 billion rise. Non-rural exports were up a very strong 11.3% in the month to now be up more than 70% over the year. Recent iron ore price falls should see the trade surplus retreat somewhat in the period ahead but still a massive number for August.

Asia’s manufacturing activity rebounded in September after virus fears and restrictions eased. But European manufacturers reported increasing strains from supply chain squeezes. That, plus energy shortages, not helping.
China’s central government officials ordered the country’s top state-owned energy companies, with all forms of fuel on the table, to secure supplies for this winter at any cost as energy shortages threaten life and their economy.

Domenic Perrottet has been confirmed as NSW’s youngest ever premier, largely as expected, winning an internal party room vote very easily. He was most recently the Treasurer and has made some subtle changes to his front bench. Perrottet has also announced a faster easing of virus restrictions than his predecessor’s plan. Nationals’ leader and Deputy Premier John Barilaro also announced he is retiring from politics.

US politics remained messy enough to impact market sentiment as congress continues to debate their self-imposed debt ceiling of which any breach will see the government unable to pay their bills. Democrats are considering a smaller stimulus package to improve chances of it being passed, whilst the Biden administration is also set to unveil its China trade policy following a review of import tariffs. Interestingly, a recent report indicated that China is not complying with phase 1 of their trade deal with the US.

The Chinese government sent a record number of fighter jets into Taiwan’s defence zone over its national day weekend, with the numbers rising again early this week before Taiwan scrambled fighter jets and deployed missile systems to monitor Chinese planes. The show of force over 4 consecutive days is part of a growing and troubling long-term trend.  

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

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Markets buoyed by US stimulus bills

Need help? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. https://www.macarthurwealth.com.au

Local and global equity markets rose strongly this week buoyed by strong company earnings results, the passage of the US infrastructure bill, and progress on the bigger budgetary bill. 

Analysts now expect 2nd quarter profit growth of 93% for the 500 largest US companies. With their quarterly reporting season almost complete, 87% of companies have beat analyst expectations, which is the highest beat on record. 

In local stock news, general insurer Suncorp improved full-year cash earnings by 42% with shareholders to receive a special dividend, whilst the company will also undertake an on-market stock buyback. 

Toll road operator Transurban revealed that the costs of the West Gate tunnel project in Melbourne have blown out by about $3.3 billion. The company reported statutory profit of $3.27 billion. Lockdowns in Sydney, Brisbane, and Melbourne have reduced the number of cars on the road and have weighed on revenue. 

Commonwealth Bank of Australia released its 2021 financial year results reporting a $1.4 billion increase in cash profit to $8.7 billion over the last 12 months, an almost 20% increase. The bank also announced a $6 billion off-market stock buy-back. 

The gold price had fallen sharply over the last week and half before mounting somewhat of a recovery in the last few days. A stronger US dollar along with the continuing economic recovery and expectations of the US central bank paring back its stimulus program have all put downward pressure on the gold price of late. 

The iron price has continued to fall from its lofty heights following a report which said that China wants to limit steel makers’ impact on its environment, which made investors reassess their expectations for iron ore demand. 
The Reserve Bank of Australia has revised its economic growth forecast down to 4% for 2021 but has kept their forecast for unemployment at 5% for the same period. They did revise their unemployment forecast for 2022 down to 4.25% and left their inflation forecasts unchanged at 1.75% for 2022 and 2.25% for 2023. 

The negative impact of lockdowns have begun to rear their ugly head, putting aside the societal issues, as more than 15,000 home and business owners were unable to repay their loans in July. In addition, an additional 150,000 Australians became unemployed last month according to Roy Morgan. Their latest data showed the bulk of the job losses came from part-time work whilst 61,000 full-time workers also became unemployed. 619,000 workers are now looking for full-time work whilst 803,000 are looking for part-time work. 

July saw the National Australia Bank business confidence index and business conditions fall sharply, which isn’t surprising given the size and extent of lockdowns in a number of states. Australian consumer sentiment fell by more than 4% in August as consumers’ fears of unemployment rose sharply. 

US consumer prices for July rose at its slowest pace in the past 5 months as some price increases have subsided on the back of softening demand and increased supply. Even so, the July inflation number of 0.5% is still quite high, with the annual rate at 5.4%, as demand pressures and supply issues remain. 

US nonfarm payrolls increased by 943,000 jobs last month a Labor Department report showed. Economists had forecast payrolls would increase by 870,000. The report also showed strong wage gains as employers competed for scarce workers as many workers remain at home collecting overly generous unemployment benefits. The unemployment rate also dropped to a 16 month low. 

The US central bank had contrasting rhetoric from a couple of members this week with one suggesting that the US should be well past the pandemic crisis before the central bank raises rates. Another member said high inflation this year may have already met one of the bank’s benchmarks for raising rates. 

The Germans have again warned that inflation in the Euro area could pick up faster than expected and urged the European central bank not to drag out their emergency bond-buying program.   

A gauge of investor expectations for the German economy plunged to 40 from 63 points in July as fears about the impact of the delta variant gather pace. 

Chinese economic data showed exports rising by 19% in July on the same time last year, coming in just under expectations, whilst imports were up 28% on the same time last year, also coming in below expectations. 

China’s central bank has fanned expectations of further monetary policy easing, saying in its latest quarterly report that inflation pressures are controllable whilst highlighting risks to the economic growth outlook. 
The US Senate voted to progress the US$1 trillion infrastructure bill with 19 Republicans voting with Democrats to support the push. However, the Democrat leader of the House has said she will only bring the bill to a vote after the Senate passes a separate US$3.5 trillion bill which has all kinds of things in it, most of it Democrat election promises, which the Democrats will likely look to push through via a process called reconciliation (ie. without Republican support). The debt ceiling (currently at US$28.5 trillion….) with partisanship likely to make it a tough task. 

The Biden administration faced some hard truths this week as it pertains to foreign policy. A return to the Iran nuclear deal looks to be dead in the water as Iran races towards the capacity to build a nuclear bomb in light of perceived US weakness. The US will now be sending troops back into Afghanistan following an ill-advised move earlier in the year to remove US troops from the country. The country has again become a hotbed for terrorism with the Taliban carry out deadly attacks against US allies left behind. Lastly, US energy self-sufficiency is very much a thing of the past after US oil inventories got so low that President Biden had to ask OPEC+ to increase supply. US inventories are low due to increase in demand, but mainly due to government policy banning new investment in oil & gas and pipelines.  

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

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A great way to help your kids – and you

Need help? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

We are always hearing about how important it is to insure our own lives and income, but what about insuring our children’s.

How would your adult child and their family survive financially in the unfortunate event of an accident or an illness that prevented them earning an income for an extended period of time?

Income protection, TPD and trauma insurance are often not a consideration to a young family in today’s financial climate with many struggling with mortgage repayments, education spending and increased living costs.

But what would be your role if your child and their family were suddenly without an income? Without adequate insurance how would they cope?

What if you had helped your child to buy his or her first home and that child suffered a long term-illness or disability? How would that affect you if they couldn’t make the repayments?

Here’s a scenario…

Alan and Joanne’s married son Tim was involved in a car accident, sustaining a spinal injury that prevented him from working for two years. Unfortunately, Tim did not have income protection or accident insurance.

The bank foreclosed on his mortgage and Tim and his young family were forced to move in with Alan and Joanne. Eventually, Tim recovered and was able to return to work.

Aside from the emotional impact on Tim and his family, Alan and Joanne’s retirement plans were seriously compromised. Joanne’s health deteriorated due to the extra stress of the situation, and she was diagnosed with severe depression.

What could Alan and Joanne have done differently?

They could have asked Tim if his income was protected in the case of an unforeseen illness or injury, Learning that the young couple was allocating all spare cash to the mortgage, the parents might have offered to help pay for adequate insurance cover.

Even if you are not in a position to contribute to the cost of their insurance, raising the issue with your adult children and encouraging them to talk to a financial professional could be some of the best guidance you could ever give them.

Need help? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

Company reporting season buoys investor sentiment

Need help? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial planning in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. https://www.macarthurwealth.com.au.

Local and global equity markets largely trended higher over the week, buoyed by strong company earnings results and slightly more dovish central bank sentiment. 

Results for US corporate quarterly reporting season have been much stronger than expected at the half-way mark, with 92% managing to meet or beat earnings estimates while 86% have done so on the revenue side, making it the highest beat ratios since 1st quarter 2008. 

In local stock news, National Australia Bank announced it will buy-back $2.5 billion in shares. The buy-back will happen in August and follows ANZ declaring a similar move earlier this month. Banks are awash with capital following wealth management sales and provisioning for bad debts which never eventuated as the government and central bank saved everyone. 

Ryan Stocks has become the chairman of Boral after Seven Group gained almost 70% of the company through its takeover efforts. Seven has also installed its CFO as a director, whilst the previous Boral chair has retired and 2 other board members will retire after the AGM. 

US digital payments giant Square Inc has agreed to acquire Afterpay in a deal worth $39 billion, or $126.21 per share. The all-stock deal will see Afterpay integrated into the existing Square ecosystems worldwide. Afterpay’s board has unanimously recommended the deal to shareholders. Afterpay shareholders are expected to own 18.5% of Square once the deal is enacted. 

Oil Search’s board has endorsed Santos’ offer of $4.52 a share, which will make the combined company one of the 20 largest oil and gas providers in the world. 

The oil price trended lower this week as concerns arose regarding the pace of the global economic recovery in light of increasing virus restrictions in some countries.
The Reserve Bank of Australia has unsurprisingly kept the cash rate at 0.1% at their August meeting. Given current lockdowns across the eastern states, any rhetoric about the bank moving earlier than expected to remove stimulus has now gone. 

Concerns continue to mount regarding the economic recovery given the continued length of the Sydney lockdown (including army deployment), with Melbourne and parts of Brisbane also now under lockdown. 3rd quarter economic growth will be negative and 4th quarter isn’t looking too good at this stage, which might see the economy dip back into recession. 

Australian credit rose by a solid 0.9% in June, boosted by a 1.6% business credit, likely the result of businesses drawing down credit facilities to survive the lockdowns. Housing credit also posted a strong lift for the month with both owner occupier and investor credit rising. Personal credit fell, hardly surprising given concerns regarding the length of lockdown. 

Australian dwelling prices rose by a solid 1.6% across the 8 capital cities in July, with annual growth sitting at 15%. Price rises in July were particularly strong in Sydney, Brisbane, and Canberra. Regional prices increased by 1.7% in the month. The monthly rate of growth peaked in March this year at 2.8%, and has since trended lower, but the pace of growth remains strong. 

Residential building approvals in Australia fell by 6.7% in June, driven by a large drop in approvals for houses as growth settles at lower rate post the HomeBuilder scheme finishing. New lending for housing fell by 1.6% in June, with lending to first home buyers driving the fall whilst lending to investors rose. 

Plenty of rhetoric from US central bank members this week pointing to internal differences of opinion but not so far apart as to cause any major issues for chair Jerome Powell on the communication front. A couple of prominent members waxing lyrical about the economy being strong enough to see a reduction in money printing from 2022 and potential rate rises in 2023. 

US private payrolls data increased by a significantly less than expected 330,000 in July, versus expectations for more than 690,000

Price increases are starting to hit home in Europe with Germany’s inflation rate jumping to the highest level since 2008. Likely temporary given both the demand (government stimulus, restricted travel) and supply shocks (restricted work practices, border restrictions on labour, commodity price increases), but the data will fuel debate about whether policy makers need to start removing stimulus faster than anticipated. Highly unlikely at this stage, but worth monitoring. 

The Chinese government has pledged more effective fiscal support for their economy and tighter supervision of overseas share listings as policy makers highlighted economic risks in the 2nd half of this year. The US securities regulator has also increased disclosure requirements for IPOs of Chinese companies. 
US President Biden and his administration will likely ramp up already very high levels of government stimulus as the US economic recovery begins to stall, with $10 trillion of new spending/investment planned. 10 million Americans remained unemployed with new obstacles emerging as some states reconsider mask mandates and other restrictions, all whilst many of the emergency stimulus programs from 2020 come to an end. The political cycle is clearly front and centre as the Biden administration looks to buy its way to a stronger rebound in light of the all-important US mid-terms next year. 

A Hong Kong court sentenced the first person convicted under a national security law imposed by Beijing, to 9 years in prison. Doesn’t bode well for dozens of pro-democracy activists awaiting similar trials.  

China’s government has quietly issued new procurement guidelines in May that require up to 100% of local content on hundreds of items, erecting fresh barriers for foreign suppliers, according to a number of sources. The government has not responded to queries on the document. The edict flies in the face of their admission to the WTO and their phase 1 trade deal with the USA. Hardly surprising. 

YouTube suspended Sky News Australia from uploading content onto its website for a week under its “strikes” system. The Alphabet (Google) owned company said that the media company had breached its Covid-19 misinformation standards. Sky News Australia vehemently denies the allegations. In any case, a stain on censorship in Australia’s history. 

A growth number of Australian government MPs are pushing back against the use of vaccine certificates for domestic travel and attendance at venues and events. It came after news the government had agreed on a passport system for international travel, but was facing internal unrest when it comes to domestic use.  

Need help? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. https://www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

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Share markets retrace falls on virus concerns to finish higher

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

Local and global equity markets had a topsy-turvy week initially falling sharply on virus concerns before retracing those losses to finish the week higher as bad news became good news for markets on the expectation of more government and central bank support.  

In local stock news, Rio Tinto reported lower than expected iron ore production and shipments for its 2nd quarter. Heavy rain in WA’s Pilbara region, and coronavirus measures, limited efforts. BHP also reported a dip in quarterly iron ore production. 

News broke that oil and gas player Santos is pursuing an unsolicited takeover bid for rival player Oil Search. 

JB Hi-Fi shares rose strongly, no doubt supported by lockdown, after the company reported preliminary full year results showing sales up 12.6% and a soaring net profit. 

Lendlease continued to streamline their business selling its service business to Service Stream for $310 million. The property group has recently sold its engineering business and US telecommunications and energy operations. 

OPEC and its allies struck a deal to inject more oil into the recovering global economy, overcoming an internal split, which resulted in a strong fall in the oil price. The oil price recovered some of the fall after data showed lower than expected US inventories. 

The Aussie dollar fell further earlier in the week on increasing virus concerns before mounting a small recovery before the week was out. 
The evolving restrictions in NSW and VIC will lead to sizable contraction in economic growth in the 3rd quarter considering both states combined account for more than 50% of Australia’s economic output. Whilst the government’s fiscal taps have been turned back on, plenty more handouts will be required. 

Commonwealth Bank lending data shows a slowdown in the pace of growth in new home lending. However, lending to investors continues to accelerate as lending to first home buyers slows. The average loan size remained elevated whilst the share of fixed rate lending is relatively high. 

The preliminary estimate showed Australian retail trade fell by 1.8% in June coming in well below estimates, with the fall heavily affected by lockdowns in several states. Retail spending in July will be substantially weaker. 

The Australian national goods trade surplus hit a new peak due to demand for iron ore, with increase in exports for metals, coal, non-monetary gold and gas pushing the surplus to $13.3 billion for June. 

Data from the US Commerce Department showed retail sales rebounded 0.6% last month as spending shifted back to services as states are reopening at a faster pace. 

The European central bank left interest rates and its program of asset purchases unchanged, as expected, while tweaking its forward guidance on policy to move it in line with its newly adopted inflation target where they’d like to see inflation consistently at 2% before moving on interest rates. 

Banks in China kept the benchmark loan rate steady indicating that the central bank is continuing to keep policy stable despite the recent move to add liquidity to the financial system.
On the virus/vaccine front, increased and longer restrictions look likely for NSW and other parts of Australia as case numbers rise and the vaccine drive continues, whilst ICU admissions and deaths remain low. Case numbers in the UK, USA, France and Israel continue to rise, particularly troubling authorities in the UK and Israel where the number of deaths are also rising with already high vaccination rates. In contrast, cases in the USA are rising without the same corresponding increase in deaths. There was an uptick in civil unrest across a range of countries and cities, protesting against lockdowns and vaccine passports. 

China has pushed back against a World Health Organisation call for another probe into the coronavirus’s origins that includes examining whether it leaked from a lab, saying there’s no evidence for the theory……hardly surprising. 

The Trump administration’s US-China trade deal looks to be under review by the Biden administration after the US Treasury Secretary said the deal failed to address the fundamental problems they have with China. 

Taiwan will set up its first office in Europe using the name “Taiwan” (who would’ve thought), a decision the US hailed as a way for the island democracy to strengthen its global presence in the face of pressure from China. Lithuania offered to host the office putting themselves in the firing line of the Chinese given their “One China” principle. 

Days after the European Union announced ambitious plans to tackle climate change, the French broke ranks lobbying to water them down as President Macron can’t afford to rile voters ahead of the French elections next year. He’s already under tremendous pressure following recent poor showing in regional elections and recent imposition of the very unpopular vaccine passport.  

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

Markets still fretting over rising virus cases

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

Equity markets were mixed this week with developed markets flat to slightly lower on virus concerns whilst emerging markets moved higher assisted by Chinese policy support. 

A big jump in quarterly earnings is expected to mark a peak for US profit growth in the recovery from last year’s earnings collapse. Upcoming quarterly results will be key, with analysts now expecting 66% of companies to beat guidance. 

In local stock news, Sydney Airport’s board has rejected the $8.25 per share bid from a consortium of super funds citing that the offer undervalues the business, whilst Spark Infrastructure declined an offer for all its securities from a consortium of pension funds offering $2.80 per security. Pension funds cashed up, with cash burning a hole in their pockets. 

Wesfarmers made a $687 million bid for Australian Pharmaceutical Industries, the distributor of medicines and healthcare products and the owner of Priceline pharmacies, which will form the basis of a new healthcare division. 

Shareholders of waste management provider Bingo Industries voted for a Macquarie takeover, whilst Seven Group continues buying shares in takeover target Boral heading towards the 50% mark.

Buy-now-pay-later stocks fell sharply during the week after a report indicated that Apple plans to allow users to repay Apply Pay purchases in instalments

Oil prices fell this week on concerns regarding rising virus cases globally, which also resulted in defensive assets like gold and government bonds performing well. 
HSBC’s chief economist for Australia and NZ said with NSW accounting for 32% of the nation’s total economic output, an extended lockdown was likely to take a significant economic toll on Australia’s recovery from the virus. NSW Treasury estimates that each week of lockdown takes $850 million off activity. 

Australian employment rose by 29,100 in June following a 115,200 increase in May, with the unemployment rate moving down to 4.9%, its lowest level in a decade. However, recent lockdown measures will hurt those numbers in the period ahead. 

New Zealand’s central bank surprised most investors with a plan to scrap its bond buying program (money printing) from next week. The result will likely be a soaring NZ dollar. Not good for an export-led economy. 

US central bank chair Jerome Powell said it was still too soon to scale back the bank’s aggressive support for the US economy while acknowledging that inflation has risen faster than expected but portrayed a recent jump in inflation as temporary and focused on the need for continued job growth. 

Data indicated that US consumer prices rose by the most in 13 years last month, while core consumer prices surged 4.5% on the same time last year, the largest rise since November 1991. The bond market noticed briefly, before turning attention to rising virus cases. 

European central bank president Christine Lagarde has signalled that new guidance on monetary stimulus will be provided shortly and that fresh measures might be brought in next year to support the Euro-area economy after the current emergency bond program ends. 

China’s central bank cut the amount of cash most banks must hold in reserve in order to boost lending in the economy as growth starts to wane. 

China’s exports unexpectedly surged in June, helping to underpin the economy amid signs the recovery is starting to slow.  
In a sign that US-China relations won’t be fixed any time soon, the Biden administration will add more Chinese entities to its economic blacklist over alleged human rights abuses whilst the US Senate passed a bill that would ban all goods from China’s Xinjiang region unless importers can prove they weren’t made with forced labour. US relations with Iran don’t look any better with the likely realisation that the 2015 Iranian nuclear accord may be beyond saving, with no progress after multiple rounds of talks. 

On the virus front, the pace of reopening remains very mixed around the world whilst virus cases are rising in many countries. Most US states continue to reopen whilst California has just introduced some restrictions. The UK is proceeding with full reopening whilst cases continue to rise amongst a population with high vaccination rates. The rest of Europe remains mixed, particularly between the north and south, whilst cases continue to rise in South-East Asia. Closer to home, all states have seen varying degrees of increases to restrictions, with NSW’s lockdown extension and VIC entering a “snap” 5-day lockdown. 

In a sign that the people have had enough, we saw uprisings and street protests all around the world this week. Cubans have had enough of communism, South Africans weren’t happy with the jailing of former leader Zuma, whilst we saw protests in France, Greece, and here in Melbourne against government-imposed lockdowns and vaccine passports. 

Finance ministers from the US and Europe expressed confidence that a global tax deal endorsed by the Group of 20 has enough momentum to overcome domestic political obstacles in time for it to be finalised in October. 

Democrats on the US senate budget committee agreed to set a US$3.5 trillion spending level for a bill to carry most of President Biden’s economic agenda into law without Republican support. The bill would require the support of all 50 Democrats. This is in addition to the US$579 billion bipartisan infrastructure plan.  

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

Interest rates –accentuating the negative

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

So, it’s just a normal day.

You walk into the bank, deposit some money. And the teller asks you to pay them interest.

Keeping your cool, you ask why.

And the teller apologetically explains: “Oh we’ve got negative interest rates.”

Right now, we’re living in a world where some countries have ‘negative interest rates.’ That means, that instead of rewarding customers for depositing money, a bank (or a central bank) will charge them interest. In financial terms, that’s the world turned upside down.

So how did we get here?

The GFC hangover and COVID-19

Broadly speaking, negative interest rates are engineered by governments and central banks as a way of getting life into a chronically spluttering economy. If it costs you money to put your money in the banks (or it costs banks money to park their funds with the Government) there’s more incentive for individuals to spend it on housing, at the shops, or on holidays. And for banks to invest it in areas that also foster more economic activity and employment – like lending to business.

There’s no coincidence we’re talking about negative interest rates in 2021. They were part of a suite of measures used by some countries to try and get out of the economic slump caused by the Global Financial Crisis back in 2008/09. The economic shock administered by COVID-19 has brought them back into fashion – countries as advanced as Japan, Switzerland and Sweden have jumped on the negative interest rate train.

Australia stays positive

So, what do negative rates mean for you? The good news is that they’re not really happening in Australia. At least not yet. And they probably won’t.

Back in November 2020, the Reserve Bank of Australia (RBA) Governor Dr Philip Lowe said: “There has been no change to the Board’s view that there is little to be gained from lowering the policy rate into negative territory.”

Given that the Australian economy has picked up sharply since then – house prices and employment numbers are on the upswing – there seems less need for negative interest rates in Australia than most other countries.

Different folks

But, while not negative, interest rates in Australia are still at historic lows – and could stay that way till around 2024 according to Dr Lowe and his team at the RBA. This has implications for everyone – but different implications depending on whether you’re a saver or a borrower.

  • If you’re a saver or retired, low interest rates make it harder to earn the income you used to from products like Cash Management Trusts and Term Deposits. You might find you are considering investing in riskier assets, like shares, to try to make up that income.
  • If you have large debts – like a mortgage – your interest payments are likely significantly lower. And if you’re looking to borrow, it’s possible you can borrow more money, because your repayments will likely to be much lower.

What goes down must come up

As mentioned earlier, these low interest rates are a symptom of a global economy trying to get itself going again. They’re not normal (though they might feel like the new normal). That means it could make sense to get good advice about how to handle this economic trend – to look out a bit longer than the next three years.

Here’s how good advice could help:

  • Savers: A financial planner can help you find sources of extra income without taking on too much risk to do it.
  • Borrowers: Some expert advice could help you ensure you don’t overcommit when it comes to borrowing. As the popular US financial planning radio star Dave Ramsey puts it, “A lower interest rate doesn’t make a debt go away.”

Low and negative rates are likely to be with us for some time. But for Australian savers, borrowers and investors, it’s important to look beyond the obvious, front page economic headlines.

After all, the COVID crisis is just a year old – and already people are talking about a potential post-COVID boom. Things go down – and up again – and down again. Just like interest rates.

Need advice? Contact Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide on (02) 9683 2869. www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

Equity markets fall on virus variant concerns

Need help? Contact us Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. https://www.macarthurwealth.com.au

Equity markets locally and globally fell this week on concerns regarding rising virus cases

In local stock news, Sydney Airport’s shares rose strongly after they received a $22.3 billion takeover offer equating to $8.25 per share from a consortium of infrastructure investors mostly made up of Australian industry super funds. The offer will be hard for the company’s board to rebuff, but markets aren’t so sure given the stock price remains well south of the offer price. 

Tabcorp will spin-off its lotteries and Keno arm as a separate ASX listed business but has chosen not to sell its wagering and media arm despite several suitors offering to pay about $3.5 billion. 

Seven Group has continued to lift their stake in Boral buying 60 million shares at $7.40 each with the company now owning almost 41% of Boral. 

The upward trend in oil prices reversed course this week on expectations that some countries may break ranks from OPEC+ production targets. The moves come after the United Arab Emirates blocked an OPEC+ deal that cartel leaders Russia and Saudi Arabia had hashed out to increase output. The Saudis and Emiratis have historically had each other’s backs. Demand is likely to remain high as the global recovery continues, whilst US supply runs low due to President Biden’s green policy. 

The Aussie dollar fell into the 74c range against the US dollar as investors sought out safe-haven currencies in light of rising Covid cases and weaker Chinese inflation data. 
The Reserve Bank of Australia held the cash rate at the record low of 0.1% as expected at their July meeting. The board also made 2 other policy announcements relating to their bond yield targeting program (ie. keeping government bond yields very low) and their bond buying program (ie. money printing) which will see them taper bond purchases from $5 to $4 billion per week until at least mid-November. They also changed their language slightly to indicate they don’t expect to lift rates until 2024 (previously “2024 at the earliest”). 

New lending for Australian housing rose by 4.9% in May with a particularly large lift in investor lending in the month which was up 13%. Owner-occupier lending rose by 1.9% whilst lending to first home buyers continues to flatten out. New lending was strongest in NSW and VIC. 

New personal lending rose by a very strong 11% in May, which continues the recent trend higher. Commonwealth Bank’s internal data shows lending for cars and household goods are trending higher whilst lending for holidays remains very soft.
 
The number of Australian residential building approvals posted a large 7.1% fall in May, likely impacted by the ending of the government’s Homebuilder grant scheme. VIC and TAS actually posted increases. Approvals for renovations remain elevated, whilst non-residential building approvals have lifted in recent months.

Australian retail trade rose by 0.4% in May, which was an upgrade on the preliminary estimate. Retail trade continues to run at an elevated level with all major categories running above pre-Covid levels. Spending on food and eating out drove the increase in May. 
 
The US Labor Department’s employment report showed non-farm payrolls increased by 850,000 jobs last month, but the total remains 6.8 million below its peak in February 2020, as the federal government’s over-generous and over-extended Covid unemployment program pays people to stay home until September causing massive labour shortages. The better than expected monthly number comes as some Republican states have started to remove/decline the federal unemployment programs ahead of time thus forcing people back to work. 

European central bank policy makers have revamped their inflation target for the 1st time in almost 2 decades giving itself more room to keep monetary policy loose. The move gives the bank room to overshoot the target if needed, which means they can ply even more stimulus for much longer. 
A deal on an international corporate tax system of sorts came a step closer as 130 countries and jurisdictions backed a plan that includes a minimum corporate rate and tax-sharing on multinational firms’ profits. However, 3 European Union countries have resisted the plan given they currently have corporate tax rates less than the minimum being proposed. 

On the virus and vaccine front, the NSW lockdown was extended by a week impacting children’s first week back at school. The low percentage of people vaccinated seems to be the main focus of those in charge given their ill-guided elimination strategy, in contrast to the more critical areas of ICU bed availability (plenty) and deaths (very low relative to a normal winter flu season). In other parts of the world, concerns continued regarding the Delta variant, which data shows is more contagious, is significantly less deadly than the original strain, and vaccines are more than effective. The US continues to reopen, the UK is nearing the date when all restrictions will be removed, whilst Japan declared another state of emergency as it tries to ready itself for the Olympics. 

Chinese authorities are planning rules changes which would allow them to block companies from listing overseas, closing a two decade loophole which has allowed Chinese tech giants to attract foreign capital. The move continues Beijing’s tightening of controls over the country’s largest tech companies. 

Former US President Trump announced that he will sue Twitter, Facebook, and Alphabet as well as their CEOs in a class action lawsuit for blocking him out of their social media platforms. Trump is banned from Twitter for life and Facebook for at least 2 years, pending another review. The case will likely be decided by the US Supreme Court with both sides effectively using the same argument that it’s their 1st amendment right to not be censored (in Trump’s case) and to censor (in the social media company’s case given they’re private companies).  

Need help? Contact us Macarthur Wealth Management for expert financial advice in Parramatta and Sydney wide. (02) 9683 2869. https://www.macarthurwealth.com.au

General Advice Warning

The information provided on this website is general in nature only and does not constitute personal financial advice. The information has been prepared without taking into account your personal objectives, financial situation or needs. Before acting on any information on this website you should consider the appropriateness of the information having regard to your objectives, financial situation and needs. Before making any decision, it is important for you to consider these matters and to seek appropriate legal, tax, and other professional advice.

Disclaimer

All statements made on this website are made in good faith and we believe they are accurate and reliable. Macarthur Wealth Management does not give any warranty as to the accuracy, reliability or completeness of information that is contained in this website, except in so far as any liability under statute cannot be excluded. Macarthur Wealth Management, its directors, employees and their representatives do not accept any liability for any error or omission on this website or for any resulting loss or damage suffered by the recipient or any other person. Unless otherwise specified, copyright of information provided on this website is owned by Macarthur Wealth Management. You may not alter or modify this information in any way, including the removal of this copyright notice.

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