ASX dips after choppy day on Wall Street

Welcome to your five-minute recap of the trading day.

The numbers

Real estate investment trusts and utilities dragged the Australian sharemarket sharply lower on Thursday,after Wall Street struggled for direction in the final stretch of a strong quarter in which a small group of high-flying technology shares led the way.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index recovered most of its earlier losses but dropped 23.4 points,or 0.3 per cent,to 7759.6 by the close.

Wall Street had a choppy trading session overnight.

Wall Street had a choppy trading session overnight.Bloomberg

The lifters

Resmed was the top performer with gains of 4.1 per cent,followed by WiseTech (up 2.5 per cent) and BlueScope Steel (up 2 per cent). Information technology (up 0.7 per cent) and healthcare (up 0.4 per cent) were the best-performing sectors.

Iron ore heavyweights Fortescue and Rio Tinto were also holding up against the wider market,gaining 0.2 per cent and 0.5 per cent,respectively.

The laggards

Leading the declines were REITs (down 2.2 per cent) and utilities (down 0.8 per cent). GPT Group shaped up as the worst performer among REITs,falling 3.1 per cent,followed by Mirvac (down 3 per cent) and GPT Group (down 3.1 per cent). Mercury NZ (down 4.5 per cent),Telix Pharmaceuticals (down 2.7 per cent) and Meridian Energy (down 1.7 per cent) were the worst-performing megacaps.

The lowdown

In corporate news,Qatar Airways is in talks to take up toa 20 per cent stake in Virgin Australia, according to a report inThe Australian Financial Review. The deal,set to dramatically shake up the country’s aviation industry,would come amid private-equity-ownedVirgin’s stalled plans to relist its shares on the ASX.

More broadly,IG Australia market analyst Tony Sycamore said the fallout from Wednesday’s red-hot inflation numbers rocked the local market for a second day.

“Yesterday’s rise in the Reserve Bank of Australia’s preferred measure of inflation to 4.4 per cent in May puts it on track to comfortably beat the RBA’s own forecast for June,” he said. “This means it will likely take a significant and unlikely downside surprise in June inflation data to prevent the RBA from delivering a 14th rate hike to 4.60 per cent before year-end. The ASX 200 and its interest-rate-sensitive sectors are not big fans of higher interest rates.”

The local losses come after major US stock indexes eked out modest gains after a choppy trading session overnight,with investors holding their cards close to their chest ahead of a presidential debate and an inflation report closely watched by Federal Reserve policymakers.

The S&P 500 closed 0.2 per cent higher at 5477.90,while the Dow Jones Industrial Average was flat. The Nasdaq Composite rose 0.5 per cent.

The US Federal Reserve has been projecting only one interest rate cut this year,in December. But investors see a 56.3 per cent chance of a 25 basis point rate cut in September,and about two cuts by year-end,LSEG’s interest rate probabilities app showed.

A renewed bout of volatility hit AI giant Nvidia,which slipped during its annual shareholder meeting but ended up with a gain of 0.3 per cent. The poster child of the artificial-intelligence frenzy has been on a rollercoaster ride,mostly driving broad-market direction.

However,big tech fell in late trading after Micron Technology’s outlook failed to meet the lofty expectations for the AI industry that has driven the bull market.

“The stock market is way too reliant on big tech — period and end of story,” said David Bahnsen at The Bahnsen Group. “Whether or not the past week’s volatility in tech is the start of something deeper or if that reckoning is still forthcoming remains to be seen,but excessive investor sentiment,euphoria and overdone momentum always ends the same.”

For the coming earnings season,the “Magnificent Seven” megacaps are still expected to account for the bulk of the growth for the overall S&P 500,according to Ryan Grabinski at Strategas.

Tweet of the day

Quote of the day

“This is a banking code with teeth,” said Australian Banking Association chief executive Anna Bligh as the corporate regulator approved the ABA’s updated rule book,whichextendsprotection to 10,000 additional small businesses.

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Jessica Yun is a business reporter covering retail and food for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age.

Millie Muroi is a business reporter at The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age. She covers banks,financial services and markets,and writes opinion pieces with a focus on economics.

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