A number of Australian economists are now expecting a 25-basis point rate hike in April following the release of Australian retail sales data for February indicating a rise of 0.2% for the month or 6.4% from February 2022, on the back of a 1.8% rise in January. The retail data shows consumers are still spending despite the increasing cost of living pressures down under, with $35.14bn spent last month. Department stores had the biggest increase in monthly turnover, while household goods retailing remained flat which isn’t great news for the likes of Temple & Webster (ASX:TPW) and Nick Scali (ASX:NCK). UBS though, is adamant the RBA won’t hike rates at next week’s meeting but will instead hike by 25-basis points in May. Australia’s consumer price index or inflation data is out today for February which will give a greater insight into how successful the RBA’s monetary tightening policy has been to date and will give the RBA a better idea of whether a pause or hike is most appropriate at next week’s interest rate meeting.
Locally yesterday, the ASX rallied 1.04% led by a surge in energy stocks, with the sector jumping over 4%. Lithium mining and production companies felt some much-needed relief yesterday following a recent sell-off amid declining demand outlook. The reason for yesterday’s boost in lithium stocks was due to lithium giant Liontown Resources (ASX:LTR) announcing it had received and rejected a takeover offer from Abermale, the world’s largest lithium producer, in a deal worth $5.5bn on the grounds of the offer substantially undervaluing Liontown and its assets. The announcement sent shares in Liontown soaring 68.5%.
Over in New York, Wall St had a mixed session on Tuesday as rising bond yields placed pressure on high-growth technology stocks. The yield on the 2-year U.S. Treasury note climbed back above 4%, which makes future profits for growth companies, less attractive as higher rates mean that earnings years from now are worth less today. The Dow Jones ended Tuesday’s session down 0.12% while the S&P500 lost 0.16% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq took the biggest hit ending the session down almost half a percent.
In Europe overnight, investor concerns over the unfolding banking crisis in the region led to a muted trading day across the key markets in Europe. Germany’s DAX closed up just 0.09%, the French CAC added 0.14% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 rose just 0.17%.
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