Wall St closed recovered some ground in afternoon trade on Tuesday to close the day mixed across the key indices as investors assessed the latest slew of corporate earnings and tried to gain further insight into the rate outlook out of the Fed. The Dow Jones rose 0.1%, the S&P500 fell 0.2% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq ended the day up 0.07%.
Technology stocks continue to outperform this reporting season in the US with Palantir Technologies soaring 19% on Tuesday after posting a revenue beat for Q4 while music streaming platform, Spotify, rose 6% after also topping expectations and posting an increase in premium subscribers.
In Europe overnight, markets rebounded to close higher as a rally for oil and gas stocks led to a positive close across markets in the region. The STOXX600 added 0.7% on Tuesday, Germany’s DAX added 0.76%, the French CAC rose 0.65% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 jumped 0.9%.
The local market extended losses into Tuesday’s session as the tech sector, which wears the full brunt of high interest rates, plunged 1.8% after the RBA did not rule out further monetary policy tightening should inflation remain high.
The RBA held the nation’s cash rate at 4.35% for the month ahead at the latest meeting yesterday as was largely expected but investors were more focused on the commentary and outlook out of the RBA to gauge an idea of when rate cuts may be on the horizon.
Inflation remaining at 4.1% is a good signal that it is easing faster than expected, however, it is still too early to assume inflation is under control. The RBA also outlined that higher interest rates are working to establish a more sustainable balance between aggregate supply and demand, and that the labour market in Australia, despite showing signs of easing, remains tight. Until the RBA sees a trend in inflation drivers coming under control over a material period, the likelihood is that the nation’s cash rate will remain on hold at 4.35%. RBA Governor, Michele Bullock, said she expects the nation’s inflation rate to fall to the target range of 2-3% by 2025.
Against all odds of declining Aussie retail spend, high interest rates and high input costs, the retailers continue to surprise with resilience as investors piled into Nick Scali and Myer on Tuesday. Nick Scali reported NPAT above the guided range for the first half of FY24 despite revenue falling in the high interest rate high cost of living environment. Myer on the other hand reported growth across most metrics and expects a strong NPAT for the first half between $49m and $53m.
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