Interdum stultus opportuna loquitur...

Friday, June 23, 2006

HintRant: Here's One Possible Reason

Note - from June 24th 2009, this blog has migrated from Blogger to a self-hosted version. Click here to go straight there.

Journalists (CNBC-types) and people like Tom Petrovski (who appears to consist of nothing more than a lump of congealed hair-products) will be falling over themselves today wondering how the market rose (It will rise) when Durable Goods fell.

My bet is they will go for the tried and true "Well if the data is weaker than expected, the market may think that the Fed will pause the tightening cycle". That sounds awfully like they know what they're talking about - which is whatthey want you to think: they're like the guy in a graduate seminar who babbles about something that sounds esoteric, but when you get to know him you find out he's all phrasebook and no brains. But I do the grad seminar guy a disservice, since most journalists aren't capable of getting into any grad program except journalism... which is not even an academic discipline.

Now as a regular Rant readeryou know that the only number that matters in that report is...repeat after me...

Non-defence capital goods excluding aircraft

And guess what? Orders for Non-Defence CapEx ex aircraft rose 1%.

So if they have to have a reason from within the report, that be the reason. But it was going to rise anyhow... if only to takemoney off the dills who shorted when the report came out (the DAX dropped 35 points in 15 minutes just before the report... information leakage?)

Thursday, June 22, 2006

USRant: Like Kayaking In Toxic Sludge...

Note - from June 24th 2009, this blog has migrated from Blogger to a self-hosted version. Click here to go straight there.

Well, it's NOT a dodgy RAM stick. I did every test known to man, and the RAM in my machine passed with flying colours. I tested every single piece of hardware to within an inch of its life, and there s nothing wrong with ANY of it. So thank you Microsoft for yu half-assed "STOP" error messages and their attendant half-assed explanations on your "Knowledge Base" (which should be renamed "Knowledge: Base"). Way to go getting me to waste a whole bloody day chasing the wrong target due to you shit software.

So I am left with the idea that WindowsUpdate managed to fuck up my installation of XP. Funny how the obvious solutions (i.e., that Microsoft couldn't organise a pissup in a brewery without something being totally rooted) are the ones you end up with.

So, like I said. I was up until 7 a.m. French time (even over here, that means all night): almost 14 hours non-stop testing and pissing about with my machine, and finally, in the depths of an internet forum full of stories exactly hte same as mine, was found a workaround. 

Note: nota solution, mind you. A young chappie mentioned a piece of software call "AntiCrash". I'm mentioning it now, too. It is excellent at stopping crashes when they are in progress, and then it tells you about it.

As a side not,e I also now have to work in VGA mode - becasue all of my video settings have disappeared. 

Well played, MSFT. My new Dell is going to be a Linux box.

Federal Reserve Open Market Operations

The Fed's Open Market Operations desk performed 2 repurchase operations.

  • a $11.5billion, overnight repurchase entirely in T-backed collateral undertaken at a 5.3 basis point discount to the Fed Funds Rate (FFR); and
  • a $4billion, 14-day repurchase with $0.1billion in T-backed collateral undertaken at a 3 basis point premium to the Fed Funds Rate (FFR).

Major US Indices

The Dow Jones Industrial Average dipped 60.35 points (0.54%), closing out the day at 11019.11 points. Sounds pretty awful, but really the majority of the session was a wash. Everything had a moderately sluggish bias, but it was the absence of all the abovementioned repurchase dough that really left the thing hanging. No idea why such a large lick of cash, at a decent discount to FFR, didn't result in more 'oomph'. One extra tick's worth was all it would have taken - USSPy folks were long 1256.25 with a 3-point first target... the subsequent high was 1259.25, which was hit twice... but since it never became the bid, the target is deemed not to have been reached (it's not reached until anybody who placed their exit order at entry, is guaranteed to have had that order executed). Once more tick and there would have been a minor cause for rejoicing. As it is, it will have to wait for tomorrow.

The sluggishness of the market today took a form which should stand that entry in very good stead; allday, small-lot selling-at-the-bid was happening. the amount of large-lot execution was very limited, and was all over the shop; one second the TIKI (Dow TICK) would be +25 and the next second it would be -22. There was very little obvious program trading - I think I counted two or three instances of TICK (NYSE upticks - downticks) > 1000, and about the same numebr of instances of the same variable, below -900.

So anyhow - by my reading of the thing, there are a lot of new, late, small shorts. The preponderance of little-lot sell-at-the-bid trades were made within a point or two of each swing low.

The Dow's opening print turned out to be its intraday high (11077.78), and it bumped and ground all the way down to 10986.14 - which was hit just after 2:15 p.m. New York time.

Within the blue-chip index, 6 stocks rose, the biggest gainers being General Motors (GM, +4.08% to $27.27) and United Technology (UTX, +0.65% to $61.89), which accounted for 12 Dow points between them. Losers in the Dow numbered 24 and were led by Mcdonalds (MCD, -2.54% to $32.55) and Hewlett Packard (HPQ, -2.28% to $32.97), with these two stocks contributing -13 Dow points worth of downward pressure on the index. Volume traded was tilted in favour of the losers by 320.7m shares to 37.5m.

The broader S&P500 slid 6.6 points (0.53%), to 1245.6. Within the index, gainers numbered 109, while 349 S&P500 stocks fell for the day. Volume was tilted 4.0:1 in favour of the losers with 1398.83 million units traded in the losers as compared with 345.71 million traded in the winners .

Over at Times Square, the Nasdaq Composite shed 18.22 points (0.85%), to close at 2122.98, while larger-cap technology issues fared worse with the Nasdaq100 losing 19.07 points (1.21%), to end at 1554.49 points. Within the tech benchmark, gainers numbered 11, while 79 Nasdaq100 stocks fell for the day. Volume was tilted 8.9:1 in favour of the losers with 624.91 million traded in the losers compared to 69.91 million in the winners .

NYSE Volume was  pretty chunky,but still belowrecent high levels, with 2.09 billion shares changing hands, while Nasdaq Volume was insipid with 1.69 billion shares thrashing arund like cyber-dervishes.


Major Market Statistics
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
Dow Jones Industrial Average 11019.11 -60.35 -0.54%
S&P500 1245.6 -6.6 -0.53%
Nasdaq Composite 2122.98 -18.22 -0.85%
Nasdaq100 1554.49 -19.07 -1.21%
NYSE Volume 2.09bn - -
Nasdaq Volume 1.69bn - -

Bellwethers

My 9-stock "bellwethers" group fell by an average of 1.11%

  • General Electric (GE) -$0.18 (0.54%) to $33.24;
  • Citigroup (C) -$0.20 (0.41%) to $48.17;
  • Wal Mart (WMT) -$0.42 (0.86%) to $48.48;
  • I.B.M. (IBM) -$1.11 (1.42%) to $77.19;
  • Intel (INTC) -$0.15 (0.82%) to $18.25;
  • Cisco Systems (CSCO) -$0.38 (1.89%) to $19.69;
  • eBay (EBAY) -$0.73 (2.37%) to $30.01;
  • Fannie Mae (FNM) -$0.53 (1.11%) to $47.07; and
  • Freddie Mac (FRE) -$0.30 (0.52%) to $57.23.

Market Breadth & Internals

NYSE declining Issues beat out advancers by 2108 to 1120, for a single-day A/D reading of -988; and Nasdaq losers exceeded gainers by 1769 to 1221. The 10-day moving average of the A/D line fell to -588.4 on the NYSE, while the 10dma of the Nasdaq A/D fell to -499.1.

On the NYSE declining volume was greater than volume in advancing issues by 1429.8 to 600 million shares; On the Nasdaq declining volume exceeded volume in advancing issues by 1274.6 to 374.9 million shares.

28 NYSE-listed stocks rose to new 52-week highs, and 172 posted fresh 52-week lows, while on the Nasdaq there were 52 stocks that hit new 52-week highs, and 115 which fell to fresh 52-week lows.

All of these internal indicators can be lined up end on end. Once they are lined up, you have to get in a helicopter (or a hot air balloon) and go up high to see what they spell... "B... O... U... is that an N?... that looks like a G, maybe... E".

BOUNGE? What the f#ck is a bounge?

Market Breadth Statistics

NYSE Nasdaq
Advancers 1120 1221
Decliners 2108 1769
Advancing Volume (m) 599.99 374.94
Declining Volume (m) 1429.83 1274.56
New Highs 28 52
New Lows 172 115

Market Sentiment Statistics
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
CBOE Volatility Index 15.88 0.36 2.32%
CBOE Nasdaq Volatility Index 20.81 1.15 5.85%
Equity Put-Call Ratio 1.05 0.19 22.09%
10-day PCR 0.91 0.02 1.76%
SPX-VIX Ratio 78.4 -2.24 -2.78%

Bond Market Analysis

Bonds fell at the long end, with the yield on the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond rising 3.8 bps to 5.232%. Maybe that's what spookedequities (can't have been the LEI - they are meaningless and every major house know it).

The middle of the yield curve was broadly lower in price as well: five year yields rose to 5.181%, and ten-year yields rose to 5.198%.

Spreads between short-dated (2-yr) Treasuries and high-grade corporate bonds of similar maturity profiles were 2.0 bps tighter at 39.0 basis points; spreads between longer dated Treasuries and their corporate AAA counterparts fell to 65.0 bps for 10-year AAA, and 99.0 bps for 20-years.

Credit spreads (spreads between corporate bonds of the same maturity profile but different creditworthiness) were broadly tighter with the AAA-A spread on 20-years 5.0 bps looser at 32.0 basis points and the 10-year AAA-A spread 11.0 bps looser at 32.0 bps.

Treasury Yields
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
UST 13wk (yld) 4.775 -0.01 -0.21%
UST 2Y (yld) 5.23 0.1 1.95%
UST 5Y (yld) 5.181 0.046 0.9%
UST 10Y (yld) 5.198 0.043 0.83%
UST 30Y (yld) 5.232 0.038 0.73%

The Banks Index dipped 0.31 points (0.29%), to end the session at 106.47; within the index,

  • Zions Bancorp (ZION) -$0.96 (1.2%) to $78.92;
  • Mellon Financial (MEL) -$0.31 (0.89%) to $34.48;
  • Suntrust Banks (STI) -$0.54 (0.71%) to $76.05;
  • State Street (STT) -$0.38 (0.65%) to $57.90; and
  • Comerica (CMA) -$0.32 (0.6%) to $52.84.

The Broker-dealer Index dipped 0.93 points (0.45%), closing at 206.84; the ticket clippers lined up as follows -

  • Ameritrade (AMTD) -$0.50 (3.14%) to $15.44;
  • Raymond James (RJF) -$0.43 (1.48%) to $28.64;
  • Goldman Sachs (GS) -$1.52 (1.01%) to $148.31;
  • Legg Mason (LM) -$0.88 (0.87%) to $100.00; and
  • Jeffries Group (JEF) -$0.22 (0.79%) to $27.46.

The Philadelphia SOX (Semiconductor) index dipped 6.18 points (1.36%), to end the session at 449.19

  • Freescale Semiconductors (FSL-B) -$1.35 (4.62%) to $27.85;
  • Altera (ALTR) -$0.58 (3.25%) to $17.25;
  • National Semiconductors (NSM) -$0.78 (3.18%) to $23.72;
  • Teradyne (TER) -$0.39 (2.68%) to $14.16; and
  • Xilinx (XLNX) -$0.64 (2.67%) to $23.35.

Gold & Silver Markets

Gold fell by $5.6 (0.95%) to close at $585.40 per ounce.

The Gold Bugs Index dipped 1.26 points (0.41%), at 306.53

  • Meridian Gold (MDG) -$1.15 (3.79%) to $29.19;
  • Coeur d'Alene (CDE) -$0.14 (3.16%) to $4.29;
  • Iamgold (IAG) -$0.21 (2.33%) to $8.80;
  • Goldcorp (GG) -$0.63 (2.26%) to $27.25; and
  • Newmont Mining (NEM) -$1.01 (2%) to $49.51.

Silver fell by $0.21 (2.02%) to close at $10.21 per ounce. 

The Gold and Silver Index (XAU) lost 1.14 points (0.86%), ending the day at 131.3 points.

  • Meridian Gold (MDG) -$1.15 (3.79%) to $29.19;
  • Goldcorp (GG) -$0.63 (2.26%) to $27.25;
  • Newmont Mining (NEM) -$1.01 (2%) to $49.51; and
  • Barrick Gold (ABX) -$0.44 (1.55%) to $27.88.
Precious Metals and Indices
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
Gold 585.40 -5.60 -0.95%
Silver 10.21 -0.21 -2.02%
PHLX Gold and Silver Index 131.3 -1.14 -0.86%
AMEX Gold BUGS Index 306.53 -1.26 -0.41%

Oil Market

Oil was firmer, rising by $0.51 per barrel, closing at $70.84 per barrel. 

The Oil and Gas Index (XOI) added 5.63 points (0.54%), to end the session at 1047.04

  • Occidental Petroleum (OXY) +$0.90 (0.96%) to $94.75;
  • ConocoPhillips (COP) +$0.90 (1.5%) to $60.75; and
  • Sunoco (SUN) +$0.63 (1.01%) to $63.06.

The Oil service stocks (OSX) Index rose 0.43 points (0.22%), ending the day at 194.74

  • Schlumberger (SLB) +$1.31 (2.34%) to $57.21;
  • GlobalSantaFe (GSF) +$1.04 (2.05%) to $51.89; and
  • Transocean (RIG) +$1.14 (1.55%) to $74.49.
Energy Complex
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
Reuters CRB 379.5 -2 -0.52%
Crude Oil Light Sweet 70.84 0.51 0.73%
Heating Oil 2.0178 0.03 1.75%
Natural Gas 6.439 -0.15 -2.26%
Unleaded Gas 2.1136 0.05 2.23%
AMEX Oil Index 1047.04 5.63 0.54%
Oil Service Index 194.74 0.43 0.22%

Currency Markets

USD Exchange Rates
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
US Dollar Index 86.01 0.67 0.79%
Euro 1.2578 -0.0158 -1.24%
Yen 116.145 115.2632 13071.35%
Sterling 1.8284 -0.019 -1.03%
Australian Dollar 0.7343 -0.0039 -0.53%
Swiss Franc 1.2427 0.4244 51.86%
Canadian Dollar 0.8951 -0.0086 -0.95%

Wednesday, June 21, 2006

OzRant: Late Again...

Note - from June 24th 2009, this blog has migrated from Blogger to a self-hosted version. Click here to go straight there.

It's the old "Good news, Bad news' thing again. The good news is that it's now abundantly clear that the computer issues I've been having are definitely he result of a dying RAM stick. The bad news is that the new stick won't arrive for at last another day or so. 5 BSoDs were experienced in the writing of this Rant. How I suffer for my Art...

I've got to go up to Paris later today, so there might not be a USRant tonight (Paris time) - althoguh if I can get to an internet cafe I will stick up the tables and what-not.

Unlike the US Markets, the domestic bourse had no trouble getting traction for its morning moonshot. Right from the off, the thing blasted off as if everyone had won Lotto and decided to punt their winnings on the stock market.

And then, something interesting happened, and frankly when you see the pictures you will think it was so obvious that I must've been a big girl's blouse to refuse to have a crack at it. 

There was a nice, clean divergence right at the end of the first hour; everything was perfect - CCI divergence, %R overbought... and yet I didn't pull the trigger. No SPISpy call, nuthin'.

Here's the first picture - a snapshot from just after 11 a.m. Sydney time (in other words, the 'right hand margin' at the time:

SPI 15 minute intraday

C'est tellement clair - a divergence just like in them books what eggheads likes to read.

And it panned out as I expected - that is, not really worth it. 

The first divergence after a cross of the dark blue MA is usually 'soft' - that is, by the time you've seen it and notified the troops, you've only got 5-10 SPI points' worth of move left.

That's why there was no short sent out. Here's the after-party:

SPI 15 minute intraday

So the thing did what it was s'pose-da - and it did it with the lack of alacrity that it was s'pose-da, as well. When you get that first shorting opportunity during a bounce, it is invariably the time when dumbasses are still prepared to short near a low (although this was almost 80 points above yesterday's low). 

The most likely outcome is a 'Zero Line Reject' (ZLR) on the CCI, and a failed trade.

ZLRs are a CCI trader's best secondary tool (after the divergence) - it's where the CCI dips back to zero (or slightly below) during an uptrend (or jumps to zero - or slightly above - during a downtrend) and then reverses back in the direction of the trend. Along with something that's referred to as a 'ghost', the divergence plus the ZLR are pretty much all anyone ever needs. If you look at the bottom panel, you can see a ZLR during the previous session (the little 'upside-down W' on the histogram) - a signal to have another crack at the short side (of course I couldn't do nuthin' about that one either - BSoD intervened as if from on high), and there is one there today in the opposite direction - but as with the divergence, it was not worth having a crack at.

Major Market Indices

The broad market - the ASX All Ordinaries (XAO) - rose by 53.60 points (1.11%), finishing at 4884.40 points. The index hit an intraday high of 4889.90 pretty much bang-on 11 a.m., and its low was 4830.8 - at the open. 60 points up in an hour, and trading water (with a squishy feel) for most of the rest of the session. What an enormous pain in the sphincter.

Total volume traded on the ASX was 1.02 billion units, 2.8% below its 10-day average. Of the 483 stocks in the index, 188 rose while 100 fell. Volume was tilted in favour of the gainers by a margin of 2.4:1, with 341.86million shares traded in gainers while 145.40million shares traded in the day's losers ..

The Index that forms the cash basis for the SFE's Share Price Index Futures - the S&P/ASX 200 (XJO) - rose by 57.50 points (1.18%), finishing at 4918.90 points.

The "heavy hitters" of the Australian market - the ASX 20 Leaders (XTL) - rose by 41.50 points (1.58%), finishing at 2671.80 points. Within the index members, there were 18 that rose, and only 1 loser (Fosters'). Total volume in rising issues within the ASX20 amounted to 107.02m units while volume in the losers totalled 3.04m units.

The major winners in the "big guns" were -

  • QBE Insurance Group (QBE), +$0.660 (3.19%) to $21.350 on volume of 2.8m shares;
  • BHP Billiton (BHP), +$0.820 (3.13%) to $26.980 on volume of 16.97m shares;
  • AMP Limited (AMP), +$0.230 (2.68%) to $8.800 on volume of 4.91m shares;
  • Rio Tinto (RIO), +$1.800 (2.45%) to $75.250 on volume of 1.88m shares; and
  • National Australia Bank (NAB), +$0.670 (2.01%) to $34.000 on volume of 3.97m shares.

The only loser amongst the heafvyweights was Foster's Group (FGL), -$0.040 (0.72%) to $5.550 on volume of 3.04m shares.

At the smaller end of the market's capitalisation scale, the ASX Small Ordinaries Index (XSO) - the only place where underexploited value exists with any regularity - rose by 22.90 points (0.83%), finishing at 2784.40 points. The major winners in the "pop-guns" were -

  • Multiemedia (MUL), +$0.002 (28.57%) to $0.009 on volume of 14.23m shares;
  • Sally Malay Mining (SMY), +$0.130 (12.5%) to $1.170 on volume of 867,000 shares; and
  • Iinet (IIN), +$0.055 (8.15%) to $0.730 on volume of 5.41m shares; and
  • Western Areas (WSA), +$0.145 (8.08%) to $1.940 on volume of 141,000 shares; and
  • Novogen (NRT), +$0.150 (7.01%) to $2.290 on volume of 383,000 shares.

The losingest-little-guys for the session were (in order of decline):

  • Village Life Ltd (VLL), -$0.010 (8.7%) to $0.105 on volume of 422,000 shares;
  • Agenix (AGX), -$0.015 (8.57%) to $0.160 on volume of 530,000 shares; and
  • Norwood Abbey (NAL), -$0.020 (8%) to $0.230 on volume of 243,000 shares; and
  • Kresta Holdings (KRS), -$0.010 (5.56%) to $0.170 on volume of 218,000 shares; and
  • Symex Holdings (SYM), -$0.045 (5.29%) to $0.805 on volume of 292,000 shares.
Index Changes
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
XAO All Ordinaries 4884.4 53.6 1.11% 535.46m
XTL S&P/ASX 20 2671.8 41.5 1.58% 0
XFL S&P/ASX 50 4815.7 62.5 1.31% 237.1m
XTO S&P/ASX 100 3993.3 48.3 1.22% 366.98m
XJO S&P/ASX 200 4918.9 57.5 1.18% 442.07m
XKO S&P/ASX 300 4913.8 57.5 1.18% 0
XMD S&P/ASX Mid-Cap 50 4938.1 34.6 0.71% 0
XSO S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries 2784.4 22.9 0.83% 135.47m

All Ordinaries Market Internals

Market Breadth
ASX20 XTO XJO XAO XSO Market
Advances 18 65 122 188 96 537
Declines 1 19 44 100 55 493
Advancing Volume 107.02m 238.98m 289.57m 341.86 89.73 505.3
Declining Volume 3.04m 91.99m 114.58m 145.4 36.43 268.46

S&P/ASX200 GICS Sector Indices

The top sector for the day was XMJ Materials which gained 2.19% to 10081.00 points. The sector was helped by

  • Zinifex (ZFX), +$0.470 (5.4%) to $9.170 on volume of 8.26m shares;
  • Oxiana (OXR), +$0.140 (5.09%) to $2.890 on volume of 11.85m shares;
  • Excel Coal (EXL), +$0.290 (3.9%) to $7.720 on volume of 454,000 shares;
  • Timbercorp (TIM), +$0.120 (3.14%) to $3.940 on volume of 414,000 shares; and
  • BHP Billiton (BHP), +$0.820 (3.13%) to $26.980 on volume of 16.97m shares.

Second in the sector leadership stakes was XXJ ASX200 Financials ex Property Trusts which gained 1.46% to 5932.20 points. The sector leaders were -

  • Record Investments (RCD), +$0.610 (5.67%) to $11.360 on volume of 1.19m shares;
  • Axa Asia Pacific Holdings (AXA), +$0.320 (5.41%) to $6.240 on volume of 3.22m shares;
  • QBE Insurance Group (QBE), +$0.660 (3.19%) to $21.350 on volume of 2.8m shares;
  • Bendigo Bank (BEN), +$0.390 (3.12%) to $12.890 on volume of 115,000 shares; and
  • AMP Limited (AMP), +$0.230 (2.68%) to $8.800 on volume of 4.91m shares.

The bronze today went toXEJ Energy which gained 1.39% to 11730.40 points. The sector was led by

  • Australian Worldwide Exploration (AWE), +$0.110 (3.72%) to $3.070 on volume of 595,000 shares;
  • Hardman Resources (HDR), +$0.040 (2.61%) to $1.570 on volume of 4.75m shares;
  • Santos (STO), +$0.290 (2.6%) to $11.440 on volume of 1.58m shares;
  • Roc Oil Company (ROC), +$0.080 (2.13%) to $3.830 on volume of 527,000 shares; and
  • Arc Energy (ARQ), +$0.020 (1.38%) to $1.470 on volume of 406,000 shares.

The only sector that finished the day in the red was XNJ Industrials which lost 0.20% to 5284.50 points. The sector was dragged lower by QAN, mostly - how long ago was it that I put a (very unpopular) SELL rating on that thing - at above $3.50? Is it FOUR YEARS? Please, someone write me and tell me what an idiot I am for that call... how QAN is not a money-sink like every other airline on the planet... Four years of going fucking nowhere while the broader market has appreciated about 50%. Great stuff.

  • Qantas Airways (QAN), -$0.150 (4.72%) to $3.030 on volume of 37.1m shares;
  • PMP (PMP), -$0.040 (2.63%) to $1.480 on volume of 255,000 shares;
  • Spotless Group (SPT), -$0.100 (2.02%) to $4.850 on volume of 401,000 shares;
  • Australian Infrastructure Fund (AIX), -$0.040 (1.86%) to $2.110 on volume of 1.35m shares; and
  • Downer EDI (DOW), -$0.100 (1.35%) to $7.300 on volume of 1.37m shares.
Sector Indices
Code GICS Sector Close +/- % Volume
XMJ Materials 10081 216.5 2.19% 95.42m
XXJ ASX200 Financials ex Property Trusts 5932.2 85.3 1.46% 40.94m
XEJ Energy 11730.4 160.8 1.39% 15.78m
XIJ Information Technology 486.5 6.5 1.35% 3.07m
XTJ Telecommunications 1278.4 12.1 0.96% 50.07m
XPJ Property Trusts 1979.5 12.2 0.62% 90.12m
XHJ Healthcare 6297.8 35 0.56% 10.71m
XSJ Consumer Staples 6178.1 31.2 0.51% 21.45m
XDJ Consumer Discretionary 2270 2.8 0.12% 26.59m
XUJ Utilities 5811.9 1 0.02% 4.23m
XFJ Financials 5762.1 72.5 0% 126.77m
XNJ Industrials 5284.5 -10.8 -0.2% 75.79m

All Ordinaries Major Movers

All Ords Volume Leaders
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
TLS Telstra Corporation 3.69 0.05 1.37% 39.16m
QAN Qantas Airways 3.03 -0.15 -4.72% 37.1m
BHP BHP Billiton 26.98 0.82 3.13% 16.97m
PNA Pan Australian Resources 0.31 -0.03 -7.46% 16.1m
GFF Goodman Fielder 2 0.01 0.5% 15.77m
MIG Macquarie Infrastructure Group 3.39 0 0% 14.63m
All Ords Percentage Gainers
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
MUL Multiemedia 0.009 0.002 28.57% 14.23m
CNT Centamin Egypt 0.69 0.11 18.97% 171259
SMY Sally Malay Mining 1.17 0.13 12.5% 866824
SRI Sipa Resources 0.061 0.006 10.91% 1.65m
IIN Iinet 0.73 0.06 8.15% 5.41m
All Ords Percentage Decliners
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
AGX Agenix 0.16 -0.02 -8.57% 529883
NAL Norwood Abbey 0.23 -0.02 -8% 242916
PNA Pan Australian Resources 0.31 -0.03 -7.46% 16.1m
ARA Ariadne Australia 0.41 -0.03 -6.82% 170000
SYM Symex Holdings 0.81 -0.05 -5.29% 292397

Elsewhere in the Region...

Regional Indices
Country Name Close +/- % Volume
New Zealand NZSE50 3541.382 -5.17 -0.15% 43.83m
Japan Nikkei 225 14644.26 -4.15 -0.03% 0
Korea KOSPI 1227.19 1.36 0.11% 184654
Singapore Straits Times 2332.84 5.73 0.25% 0
Hong Kong Hang Seng 15561.55 -47.42 -0.3% 276.75m
Malaysia KLSE Comp 894.75 4.76 0.53% 0

Tuesday, June 20, 2006

USRant: Squish, Squirt, Ooze...

Note - from June 24th 2009, this blog has migrated from Blogger to a self-hosted version. Click here to go straight there.

Yesterday's USRant predicted a bounce today; if you were a Super Sleuth you might have got the hint by decoding the phrase "Tomorrow should see a bounce, but don't be surprised if it takes ages to get traction." You don't have to be bloody Leonardo da Bloody Vinci to work out that Code, eh?

Well, the bounce got traction all right - and exactly as I surmised, the Dow took an hour to get out of a 20-point trading range, then shot up like a bulldog with Tabasco on his goolies. (Note - I don't know what that looks like: I was just trying to think up an alternative to "like a duck shot in the bum". I would never do such a thing. Don't even think of trying that at home. No bulldogs were harmed in the Ranting of this Rant).

Bulldogs aside (speaking of which - GO PIES), as I was saying... one hour in, off she shot. Up 90 points in a little under an hour and a half, until it ran into 11025-ish. It was like pitting a Trabant against a Mack truck. For the rest of the session, the plucky little Trabant tried to keep itshead up, but just kept getting smacked in the face.

When you consider that the test of 11025 by the cash Dow coincided with the test of 1250 by the cash S&P, you will not be surprised that the twin test failed. Thanks to generous dollops of lipstick, the Sow was kept in the green for the session.


It's late June, and the Pies are still in the eight. Maybe this is the start of the Kingdom of the AntiChrist. That would also explain why my bloody PC experienced the BSoD four times... each time at a slightly different point in preparing this very Rant what you are  readin' right now.

Come, friendly bombs, and fall on Microsoft...

Federal Reserve Open Market Operations

The Fed's Open Market Operations desk did not enter the market..

Major US Indices

The Dow Jones Industrial Average posted a rise of 32.73 points (0.3%), closing out the day at 10974.84 points. The index hit an intraday high of 11029.83 (11025-ish), after falling to its session low of 10938.42 just after the end of the first half-hour. At the end of the first hour, that same level was re-tested, and held... and then off she shot, just as forecast. (Did I mention that? That I forecasted-ed it? Bloody BEFORE it bloody happened? I do that sometimes...)

Within the blue-chip index, 19 stocks rose, the biggest gainers being Verizon Communications (VZ, +1.77% to $32.74) and Caterpillar (CAT, +1.49% to $70.99), which accounted for 13 Dow points between them. Losers in the Dow numbered 10 and were led by General Motors (GM, -2.66% to $25.65) and Hewlett Packard (HPQ, -2.11% to $32.86), with these two stocks contributing -11 Dow points worth of downward pressure on the index. Volume traded was tilted in favour of the gainers by 224.2m shares to 196.2m.

The broader S&P500 was basically unchanged - it dropped 0.02 points (let's call that 0%), to 1240.12. Within the index, gainers numbered 197, while 258 S&P500 stocks fell for the day. Volume was tilted 1.2:1 in favour of the losers with 1007.23 million units traded in the losers as compared with 832.13 million traded in the winners. Notice yet again that,  in comparison to the other indices, the Dow looks like a sow that's been lipsticked up like a $20 hooker? Odd, that.

Over at Times Square, the Nasdaq Composite slid 3.35 points (0.16%), to close at 2107.06, while larger-cap technology issues fared better with the Nasdaq100 losing 0.62 points (0.04%), to end at 1548.32 points. Within the tech benchmark, gainers numbered 48, while 45 Nasdaq100 stocks fell for the day. Volume was tilted 1.3:1 in favour of the winners with 384.77 million traded in the winners compared to 296.47 million in the losers. You could almost call it square in the internals.

NYSE Volume was super-chunky, with 2.23 billion shares changing hands, while Nasdaq Volume was pretty modest, with 1.62 billion shares traded.


Major Market Statistics
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
Dow Jones Industrial Average 10974.84 32.73 0.3%
S&P500 1240.12 -0.02 0%
Nasdaq Composite 2107.06 -3.35 -0.16%
Nasdaq100 1548.32 -0.62 -0.04%
NYSE Volume 2.23bn - -
Nasdaq Volume 1.62bn - -

Bellwethers

My 9-stock "bellwethers" group rose by an average of 0.10%

  • General Electric (GE) -$0.02 (0.06%) to $33.70;
  • Citigroup (C) +$0.19 (0.4%) to $48.01;
  • Wal Mart (WMT) +$0.16 (0.33%) to $48.43;
  • I.B.M. (IBM) +$0.32 (0.41%) to $77.99;
  • Intel (INTC) -$0.09 (0.49%) to $18.15;
  • Cisco Systems (CSCO) -$0.09 (0.45%) to $19.73;
  • eBay (EBAY) +$0.06 (0.2%) to $30.17;
  • Fannie Mae (FNM) +$0.05 (0.11%) to $47.16; and
  • Freddie Mac (FRE) +$0.27 (0.47%) to $57.84.

Market Breadth & Internals

NYSE declining Issues beat out advancers by 1816 to 1422, for a single-day A/D reading of -394; and Nasdaq losers exceeded gainers by 1691 to 1338. The 10-day moving average of the A/D line rose to -500.6 on the NYSE, while the 10dma of the Nasdaq A/D rose to -488.4. 

On the NYSE declining volume was greater than volume in advancing issues by 1227.8 to 944.7 million shares; Nasdaq advancing volume was greater than volume in decliners by 850.9 to 751.4 million shares.

24 NYSE-listed stocks rose to new 52-week highs, and 170 posted fresh 52-week lows, while on the Nasdaq there were 38 stocks that hit new 52-week highs, and 163 which fell to fresh 52-week lows.

So every internal measure - new highs/lows, advancing/declining numbers and volumes, all say "Blyecch". And yet the Dow rose. Lipstick on a pig, I tells ya.

Market Breadth Statistics

NYSE Nasdaq
Advancers 1422 1338
Decliners 1816 1691
Advancing Volume (m) 944.65 850.86
Declining Volume (m) 1227.82 751.43
New Highs 24 38
New Lows 170 163

Market Sentiment Statistics
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
CBOE Volatility Index 16.69 -1.14 -6.39%
CBOE Nasdaq Volatility Index 21.03 -1.01 -4.58%
Equity Put-Call Ratio 0.78 -0.23 -22.77%
10-day PCR 0.88 -0.01 -1.27%
SPX-VIX Ratio 74.3 4.75 6.83%

Bond Market Analysis

Bonds fell at the long end, with the yield on the benchmark 30-year Treasury bond rising 1.3 bps to 5.196%. 5.25 seems close - and a wholeswathe of adjustable-rate mortgages are about to fall due for re-rating. Can you spell "Honey, We Lost The House?" (I know... mortgages hinge of 10-years these days... but the 10-year yield is only 4bps behind the 30). 

The middle of the yield curve was broadly lower: five year yields rose to 5.133%, and ten-year yields rose to 5.157%.

Spreads between short-dated (2-yr) Treasuries and high-grade corporate bonds of similar maturity profiles were 2.0 bps tighter at 38.0 basis points; spreads between longer dated Treasuries and their corporate AAA counterparts fell to 71.0 bps for 10-year AAA, and 102.5 bps for 20-years.

Credit spreads (spreads between corporate bonds of the same maturity profile but different creditworthiness) were broadly tighter with the AAA-A spread on 20-years 3.0 bps looser at 30.0 basis points and the 10-year AAA-A spread 6.0 bps looser at 24.0 bps.

Treasury Yields
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
UST 13wk (yld) 4.8 0.045 0.95%
UST 2Y (yld) 5.19 0.08 1.57%
UST 5Y (yld) 5.133 0.015 0.29%
UST 10Y (yld) 5.157 0.012 0.23%
UST 30Y (yld) 5.196 0.013 0.25%

The Banks Index gained 0.16 points (0.15%), to 106.29; within the index,

  • JPMorganChase (JPM) +$0.54 (1.35%) to $40.49;
  • Bank Of NY (BK) +$0.29 (0.92%) to $31.89;
  • Wachovia (WB) +$0.38 (0.72%) to $53.01;
  • Golden West Financial (GDW) +$0.39 (0.54%) to $72.64; and
  • Washington Mutual (WM) +$0.19 (0.43%) to $44.53.

The Broker-dealer Index gained 1.5 points (0.75%), closing at 202.37; the ticket clippers lined up as follows -

  • E*Trade (ET) +$0.41 (1.98%) to $21.14;
  • Bear Stearns (BSC) +$1.50 (1.15%) to $132.14;
  • Goldman Sachs (GS) +$1.51 (1.05%) to $145.26;
  • Raymond James (RJF) +$0.27 (0.97%) to $28.12; and
  • Ameritrade (AMTD) +$0.12 (0.79%) to $15.25.

The Philadelphia SOX (Semiconductor) index shed 3.13 points (0.7%), closing at 446.05

  • Marvell Tech Group (MRVL) -$1.99 (3.79%) to $50.47;
  • Teradyne (TER) -$0.24 (1.66%) to $14.18;
  • National Semiconductors (NSM) -$0.23 (0.95%) to $23.93;
  • Altera (ALTR) -$0.10 (0.57%) to $17.46; and
  • Intel (INTC) -$0.09 (0.49%) to $18.15.

Gold & Silver Markets

Gold rose $8.10 (1.42%) to close at $580.50 per ounce. The entire world is having a little existential crisis vis a vis Gold. How much easier would it have been for them to have read my clear statement (when Gold was $274, Oil as $19 a barrel and the Euro was $0.84)... "Buy Gold. Buy Oil. Buy Euro, Sell S&P"... aaah, those were the days - when interesting vehicles were not being pawed over by True Believers. 

It's the True Believers that cause all this volatility - Da Boyz know that no matter how much they batter the thing around, the True Believers will dive right back in at the first sign of strength, thence to be followed by Momentum Traders, and then by Breakout Traders, and then by NuffNuffs... and then Whoooshka... down she comes again. 

Don't get me wrong - Gold will eventually surpass $1000 an ounce, and maybe even $2000 or $3000. But by the time it gets there, there will exist a group of (bankrupt) people whose only exposure to Gold has been long, and yet they will have bought at or near every swing top, and exited at or near every swing low. For some reason, there is a type of investor who finds it easy to BUY something that is going parabolic... that's why for weekly-basis analysis, theCommitments of Traders data is so important.

The Gold Bugs Index advanced 8.35 points (2.94%), ending the day at 292.78

  • Golden Star (GSS) +$0.14 (5.45%) to $2.71;
  • Eldorado Gold (EGO) +$0.22 (5.15%) to $4.49;
  • Agnico Eagle (AEM) +$1.35 (5%) to $28.37;
  • Randgold Resources (GOLD) +$0.83 (4.62%) to $18.80; and
  • Gold Fields (GFI) +$0.79 (4.57%) to $18.07.

Silver rose $0.3 (3.01%) to close at $10.27 per ounce. The Gold and Silver Index (XAU) gained 2.75 points (2.21%), closing at 127.1 points.

  • Durban Rooderpoert Deep (DROOY) +$0.06 (5.17%) to $1.22;
  • Agnico Eagle (AEM) +$1.35 (5%) to $28.37;
  • Gold Fields (GFI) +$0.79 (4.57%) to $18.07; and
  • Harmony Gold (HMY) +$0.49 (3.9%) to $13.06.
Precious Metals and Indices
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
Gold 580.50 8.10 1.42%
Silver 10.27 0.30 3.01%
PHLX Gold and Silver Index 127.1 2.75 2.21%
AMEX Gold BUGS Index 292.78 8.35 2.94%

Oil Market

Oil lost ground, shedding $0.21 per barrel, closing at $69.34 per barrel. 

The Oil and Gas Index (XOI) shed 1.43 points (0.14%), to 1019.76

  • Kerr Mcgee (KMG) -$0.37 (0.75%) to $48.82;
  • ConocoPhillips (COP) -$0.40 (0.68%) to $58.80; and
  • Sunoco (SUN) -$0.26 (0.43%) to $60.60.

The Oil service stocks (OSX) Index shed 4.35 points (2.26%), to 188.26

  • GlobalSantaFe (GSF) -$1.80 (3.49%) to $49.80;
  • National Oilwells/Varco (NOV) -$1.98 (3.39%) to $56.50; and
  • Baker Hughes (BHI) -$2.22 (2.88%) to $74.91.
Energy Complex
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
Reuters CRB 376.5 2 0.53%
Crude Oil Light Sweet 69.34 -0.21 -0.3%
Heating Oil 1.9508 0.01 0.72%
Natural Gas 6.502 -0.39 -5.67%
Unleaded Gas 2.0167 0.01 0.74%
AMEX Oil Index 1019.76 -1.43 -0.14%
Oil Service Index 188.26 -4.35 -2.26%

Currency Markets

USD Exchange Rates
Index Close Gain(Loss) %
US Dollar Index 85.76 -0.16 -0.19%
Euro 1.2578 -0.0078 -0.62%
Yen 114.97 114.0923 12999.01%
Sterling 1.8419 -0.0017 -0.09%
Australian Dollar 0.7376 0.0019 0.26%
Swiss Franc 1.2392 0.4251 52.22%
Canadian Dollar 0.8939 -0.0021 -0.23%

OzRant: Still Spooked (The Market, Too)...

Note - from June 24th 2009, this blog has migrated from Blogger to a self-hosted version. Click here to go straight there.

Note to RantPRO subscribers: the Pro site is down for some reason, I have contacted the hosts, and they expect the issue to be resolved within an hour.

For cryin' out loud... if it's not one thing, it's another. Today it was plunging copper prices and 8%+ wage claims (specifically at BHP's Escondida mine), plus Woodside declaring a reduced production target. But what's worse, I had no access to any of the machinery of the Pro site for ages last night, which prevented me from doing anything whatsoever (except the stuff I can do outside RantWorld, which is the hand-crafted crapola you see before your very eyes). That's also the reason why the layout looks so awful - the CSS files that govern the blog layout are all stored on RantPRO's servers.

The folks who host the Pro site are usually very good - there has not been an unplanned outage for over a year, and even that was to relocate to a faster server (and one that gave me SSH access so that I could bash things). 

Anyhow - that's by the by. In "GT has finally lost it for good" news, the decomposing clown made another appearance - WTF is that about, I wonder?

Major Market Indices

The broad market - the ASX All Ordinaries (XAO) - fell by 39.10 points (-0.80%), finishing at 4830.80 points. The index hit an intraday high of 4869.90 just before 11:30 (a 'tease tick' re-test of the first-hour's high to lure in the nuffies) and its low was 4814.2, set at 3:30 p.m. Sydney time.

Total volume traded on the ASX was 890 million units, 18.7% below its 10-day average. Of the 483 stocks in the index, 195 fell while 91 managed a gain. Volume was tilted in favour of the losers by a margin of 3.0:1, with 344.87million shares traded in losers while 113.59million shares traded in the day's gainers ..

The Index that forms the cash basis for the SFE's Share Price Index Futures - the S&P/ASX 200 (XJO) - fell by 39.80 points (-0.81%), finishing at 4861.40 points.

The "heavy hitters" of the Australian market - the ASX 20 Leaders (XTL) - fell by 28.50 points (-1.07%), finishing at 2630.30 points. Within the index members, there were 4 that rose, and 16 losers. Total volume in rising issues within the ASX20 amounted to a paltry 10.01m units while volume in the losers totalled 105.95m units.

The major winners in the "big guns" were -

  • Foster's Group (FGL), +$0.040 (0.72%) to $5.580 on volume of 2.77m shares;
  • AMP Limited (AMP), +$0.050 (0.59%) to $8.570 on volume of 4.24m shares;
  • Woolworths (WOW), +$0.080 (0.43%) to $18.750 on volume of 2.16m shares; and
  • Macquarie Bank (MBL), +$0.140 (0.22%) to $65.190 on volume of 845,000 shares.

The following stocks made up the biggest percentage losers in the big-guns:

  • BHP Billiton (BHP), -$0.810 (3.02%) to $25.990 on volume of 18.81m shares;
  • National Australia Bank (NAB), -$0.92 (2.7%) to $33.10 on volume of 4.95m shares;
  • Commonwealth Bank Of Australia (CBA), -$1.00 (2.38%) to $41.00 on volume of 3.13m shares;
  • Woodside Petroleum (WPL), -$0.97 (2.31%) to $40.95 on volume of 1.8m shares;
  • Rio Tinto (RIO), -$1.59 (2.13%) to $73.21 on volume of 2.28m shares.

At the smaller end of the market's capitalisation scale, the ASX Small Ordinaries Index (XSO) - the only place where underexploited value exists with any regularity - fell by 14.10 points (-0.51%), finishing at 2761.50 points. The major winners in the "pop-guns" were -

  • Iinet (IIN), +$0.095 (16.38%) to $0.675 on volume of 6.57m shares;
  • Colorado Group (CDO), +$0.260 (7.54%) to $3.710 on volume of 1.14m shares; and
  • Dragon Mining (DRA), +$0.010 (7.41%) to $0.145 on volume of 800,000 shares; and
  • Cellestis (CST), +$0.240 (6.58%) to $3.890 on volume of 29,000 shares; and
  • Agenix (AGX), +$0.010 (6.06%) to $0.175 on volume of 1.28m shares.

The losingest-little-guys for the session were (in order of decline):

  • Multiemedia (MUL), -$0.001 (12.5%) to $0.007 on volume of 2.76m shares;
  • Perilya (PEM), -$0.240 (10%) to $2.160 on volume of 816,000 shares; and
  • Sirtex Medical (SRX), -$0.150 (6.12%) to $2.300 on volume of 5,000 shares; and
  • Kagara Zinc (KZL), -$0.240 (5.9%) to $3.830 on volume of 911,000 shares; and
  • Bendigo Mining (BDG), -$0.095 (5.38%) to $1.670 on volume of 2.52m shares.
Index Changes
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
XAO All Ordinaries 4830.8 -39.1 -0.8% 496.77m
XTL S&P/ASX 20 2630.3 -28.5 -1.07% 0
XFL S&P/ASX 50 4753.2 -43.7 -0.91% 226.6m
XTO S&P/ASX 100 3945 -34.4 -0.86% 331.48m
XJO S&P/ASX 200 4861.4 -39.8 -0.81% 396.1m
XKO S&P/ASX 300 4856.3 -40.5 -0.83% 0
XMD S&P/ASX Mid-Cap 50 4903.5 -28.8 -0.58% 0
XSO S&P/ASX Small Ordinaries 2761.5 -14.1 -0.51% 145.63m

All Ordinaries Market Internals

[]

Market Breadth
ASX20 XTO XJO XAO XSO Market
Advances 4 30 55 91 52 329
Declines 16 55 110 195 102 691
Advancing Volume 10.01m 57.18m 69.61m 113.59 59.77 200.77
Declining Volume 105.95m 253.83m 299.48m 344.87 75.77 535.34

S&P/ASX200 GICS Sector Indices

The top sector for the day was XUJ Utilities which gained 0.12% to 5810.90 points. The sector only hadtwo advancing stocks:

  • Diversified Utility And Energy Trusts (DUE), +$0.100 (3.51%) to $2.950 on volume of 317,000 shares;
  • Australian Pipeline Trust (APA), +$0.030 (0.69%) to $4.360 on volume of 88,000 shares;

Second in the sector leadership stakes was XSJ Consumer Staples which gained 0.07% to 6146.90 points. The sector leaders were -

  • AWB (AWB), +$0.140 (3.43%) to $4.220 on volume of 1.75m shares;
  • Ridley Corporation (RIC), +$0.010 (0.83%) to $1.220 on volume of 53,000 shares;
  • Foster's Group (FGL), +$0.040 (0.72%) to $5.580 on volume of 2.77m shares;
  • Lion Nathan (LNN), +$0.040 (0.52%) to $7.780 on volume of 500,000 shares; and
  • Woolworths (WOW), +$0.080 (0.43%) to $18.750 on volume of 2.16m shares.

These were the only two sectors that rose for the session..

The worst-performed sector today was XMJ Materials which lost 1.88% to 9864.50 points. The sector was dragged lower primarily by a 3% fall in BHP, although BHP did not make it into the list of the sector's 5 worst performed stocks in percentage terms:

  • Zinifex (ZFX), -$0.480 (5.19%) to $8.760 on volume of 8.48m shares;
  • Great Southern Plantations (GTP), -$0.130 (3.88%) to $3.220 on volume of 2.57m shares;
  • Jubilee Mines (JBM), -$0.260 (3.67%) to $6.830 on volume of 727,000 shares;
  • Lion Selection Group (LSG), -$0.065 (3.5%) to $1.790 on volume of 102,000 shares; and
  • Gunns (GNS), -$0.090 (3.14%) to $2.780 on volume of 773,000 shares.

Just in front of last place on the sector table was XTJ Telecommunications which lost 1.29% to 1266.30 points. Both of the sector's stocks fell:

  • Telstra Corporation (TLS), -$0.060 (1.63%) to $3.630 on volume of 43.38m shares; and
  • Telecom Corporation Of New Zealand (TEL), -$0.030 (0.85%) to $3.490 on volume of 8.11m shares.
Sector Indices
Code GICS Sector Close +/- % Volume
XUJ Utilities 5810.9 6.8 0.12% 2.34m
XSJ Consumer Staples 6146.9 4.5 0.07% 16.37m
XFJ Financials 5689.6 -27.5 0% 113.81m
XIJ Information Technology 480 -0.2 -0.04% 6.13m
XDJ Consumer Discretionary 2267.2 -3 -0.13% 25.87m
XHJ Healthcare 6262.8 -26.1 -0.42% 11.1m
XXJ ASX200 Financials ex Property Trusts 5846.9 -27.8 -0.47% 38.89m
XPJ Property Trusts 1967.3 -10 -0.51% 78.48m
XEJ Energy 11569.6 -121.9 -1.04% 16.63m
XNJ Industrials 5295.3 -57 -1.06% 67.54m
XTJ Telecommunications 1266.3 -16.5 -1.29% 51.49m
XMJ Materials 9864.5 -189 -1.88% 91.04m

All Ordinaries Major Movers

All Ords Volume Leaders
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
TLS Telstra Corporation 3.63 -0.06 -1.63% 43.38m
MIG Macquarie Infrastructure Group 3.37 -0.12 -3.44% 24.76m
BHP BHP Billiton 25.99 -0.81 -3.02% 18.81m
BIL Brambles Industries 10.55 -0.13 -1.22% 15.42m
PNA Pan Australian Resources 0.34 -0.01 -2.86% 13.44m
LHG Lihir Gold 2.66 -0.08 -2.92% 11.13m
All Ords Percentage Gainers
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
BBB B Digital 0.11 0.02 22.09% 1.94m
IIN Iinet 0.68 0.1 16.38% 6.57m
PBD Port Bouvard 2.33 0.17 7.87% 89440
UNW Unwired Group 0.28 0.02 7.84% 952917
CDO Colorado Group 3.71 0.26 7.54% 1.14m
All Ords Percentage Decliners
Code Name Close +/- % Volume
TAW Tawana Resources 0.23 -0.05 -16.67% 371000
PEM Perilya 2.16 -0.24 -10% 816165
CBH CBH Resources 0.35 -0.04 -9.09% 1.71m
EOS Electro Optic Systems Holdings 1.22 -0.11 -8.27% 44198
SPL Starpharma Holdings 0.39 -0.03 -7.14% 245442

Elsewhere in the Region...

Regional Indices
Country Name Close +/- % Volume
New Zealand NZSE50 3546.549 -17.97 -0.5% 22.89m
Japan Nikkei 225 14648.41 -211.94 -1.43% -na-
Korea KOSPI 1225.83 -25.84 -2.06% -na-
Singapore Straits Times 2316.98 -50.92 -2.15% -na-
Hong Kong Hang Seng 15571.66 -197.2 -1.25% 263.37m
Malaysia KLSE Comp 890.21 0.7 0.08% -na-