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Here are the main factors driving the ASX this week, according to Pendal’s head of equities CRISPIN MURRAY. Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams
Here are the main factors driving the ASX this week, according to Pendal’s head of equities CRISPIN MURRAY. Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams
AI chip maker Nvidia – which continued to surge in price after last week’s blow-out first-quarter result – increasingly looks like “more than just another stock”, says Pendal’s Elise McKay.
“At present it appears to be a key driver of markets – touching almost every aspect of the global economy,” says Elise, an analyst and PM with Pendal’s Aussie equities team.
“Its influence is felt everywhere – from the geopolitical need for sovereign AI; to the productivity and cap-ex boom affecting economic growth; to increased demand for the commodities powering data centres; to the wealth effect of rising stock markets, which helps consumption.”
The velocity of demand for Nvidia’s graphics processing units continues to grow, with demand expected to outstrip supply until at least 2025.
Nvidia notes that corporations are now the fastest-growing segment for data-centre demand. But at the other end of the scale, there are now some 15,000 to 20,000 generative AI-related start-ups.
Pendal holds a number of ASX-listed stocks likely to benefit from the Nvidia effect.
Here are the main factors driving the ASX this week according to Pendal investment analyst ANTHONY MORAN. Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams
IT’S been a bullish period for assets after the US monthly Consumer Price Index (CPI) broke its run of hawkish surprises – instead, delivering in line with expectations and validating the recent decline in bond yields and the US Dollar Index.
We also saw a continuation in the run of softer, but not disastrous, economic news – reinforcing the narrative’s switch back from “no landing” to “soft landing”.
In response, US equity markets hit fresh highs; the S&P500 gained 1.60%, the S&P/ASX 300 rose 0.98%, while commodities and bonds also moved higher over the week.
As a result of recent data, the market is now pricing 45 basis points (bps) of rate cuts in the US this year – with an 85% chance of a first cut by September.
At the same time, the Atlanta Fed GDPNow tracker estimates that the US economy will grow 3.6% in Q2 2024.
On balance, this combination is positive for markets and – given the slower pace of change in the data – may support this environment through the Northern summer.
However, Federal Reserve Chairman Jay Powell noted that while he expects inflation to come down, his confidence is not as high as it had been and that it may take longer than expected for restrictive policy to help bring inflation down to target.
So, bond yields overshot in mid-April, but it is hard to see them moving much lower from here in the short term given the large pullback from peak.
We also need to keep a close watch on company earnings for any sign of impact from a slowing economy.
Here are the main factors driving the ASX this week, according to Pendal’s head of equities CRISPIN MURRAY. Reported by portfolio specialist Chris Adams
ASX small caps are once again outperforming their large-cap counterparts after a period of underperformance in recent years.
In a short video, Pendal PMs Lewis Edgley and Patrick Teodorowski explain why small caps underperformed, how conditions have changed and what they’re doing to take advantage.
A rapid post-pandemic rate-rise cycle benefited large caps such as banks and insurers, while recession fears put investors off smaller companies.
But this year, as recession fears dissipated and inflation began moderating, investors regained interest in small caps.
“We’ve also subsequently seen earnings hold up significantly better than investors feared, says Lewis.
“More fundamentally, over the past two earnings seasons we’ve seen greater resilience out of the more cyclical companies within our index.”
LAST week was a big one for macro data.
In the US, headline Q1 2024 Gross Domestic Product (GDP) growth came in relatively soft at 1.6%, versus 3.4% in the prior quarter and 2.5% as was expected.
At the same time, the Q1 Core Personal Consumption Expenditure (PCE) deflator – a measure of inflation – accelerated to 3.7% annualised, versus 2% in Q4 2023 and the 3.4% expected.
As a result, US bond yields continued their climb, with ten-year Treasury yields ending up five basis points (bps) for the week at 4.67% and the market increasingly implying a first rate cut by the Fed in December.
Chicago Federal Reserve (the Fed) President Austan Goolsbee said that the Federal Open Market Committee needs to “recalibrate” its stance – noting that “progress on inflation has stalled” in 2024 and that after three months, this signal “cannot be dismissed”.
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