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Australian sharemarket at six month low, as analysts predict three months of volatility

The Australian sharemarket suffered its greatest hit in six months yesterday, with $28 billion wiped off the market by close. Investors were responding to a sharp fall on Wall Street the day before, as manufacturing data was weaker than expected. The S&P/ASX200 benchmark ended the day down 90.80 points, losing 1.75% to 5,097.10. The banking […]
Yolanda Redrup

The Australian sharemarket suffered its greatest hit in six months yesterday, with $28 billion wiped off the market by close.

Investors were responding to a sharp fall on Wall Street the day before, as manufacturing data was weaker than expected.

The S&P/ASX200 benchmark ended the day down 90.80 points, losing 1.75% to 5,097.10.

The banking and mining sectors were particularly hard hit, with BHP Billiton shares dropping 2.58% to $35.50, ANZ stocks going down 1.78% to $29.30 and NAB shares closing 2.41% lower at $32.29.

IG Markets market strategist Evan Lucas told SmartCompany several events took place yesterday which caused the share marketโ€™s slide.

โ€œThere are simmering ideas and concerns about the emerging markets and the United States has had the worst start to February since 1933,โ€ he says.

โ€œPeople are also asking questions about China as theyโ€™re currently having Chinese New Year. Because of this, the market was taking its leads from the US and Europe predominantly, rather than Asia.โ€

Evans says there was also some pessimism because of the RBAโ€™s decision to keep the official cash rate on hold at 2.5% yesterday.

โ€œThe RBA has moved to as much of a neutral stance as you can get. The RBA is unlikely to ease anytime soon, so all of this culminated in what we saw yesterday in the stock market,โ€ he says.

On Monday Wall St stocks had their worst day since June 2013. The Dow Jones Industrial Average dropped 326.05 points, down 2.08% to 15,372.80.

NASDAQ also posted losses, falling 2.61%, down 106.92 points to 3996.96.

Invast Securities chief market analyst Peter Esho told SmartCompany investors shouldnโ€™t be fearful of yesterdayโ€™s falls.

โ€œThe US markets rallied very hard in 2013. They hit very high levels which are perhaps unsustainable, so this is an orderly correction. Itโ€™s not a situation of panic or fear yet,โ€ he says.

โ€œI think there is possibly another downside potential in the Dow Jones, but I think the most interesting feature for the Australian market is we have a sense of support coming in around the 5000 level.โ€

Esho says even if the US markets slip further, he doubts the S&P/ASX200 will fall below 5000.

โ€œIf the US markets fall further weโ€™ll have contained losses. Weโ€™re not completely reliant on the US, but because of our proximity to Asiaโ€™s emerging markets and weโ€™re still seen as being exposed to commodities, weโ€™ll continue to have volatility.โ€

The trouble in emerging markets, like those seen throughout Asia, has impacted many developed markets and caused some steep selling recently.

Earlier this week emerging markets fell to a five-month low as a result of a slowdown in manufacturing in China and fears global growth will falter.

The MSCI Emerging Markets index dropped 1.1% on Monday to 926.74, its lowest value since August last year.

Lucas says the upcoming Australian earnings season will dictate the direction of the ASX.

โ€œWeโ€™ve already had JB Hi-Fiโ€™s results which were as expected. Judging on the US earning season which is almost finished, companies have beaten analysts on the earnings line 78% of the time,โ€ he says.

โ€œThis is higher than the normal percentage of 68-70%. But in the materials sector only 33% of companies have been on the revenue line, which suggests revenue remains under pressure and this will impact Australia.โ€

Evans says overall the earning season should be better than predicted which will boost the market, but concerns will remain.

โ€œWe will continue to have pessimism about emerging markets, Chinaโ€™s growth and US taperingโ€ฆ the only winner out of this is volatility.โ€

Since January 24, market volatility has jumped 64%, however this number can change easily.

โ€œFor the year, the marketโ€™s pattern is hard to call but over the next three months volatility will remain. Weโ€™ll get retrospective China data, which has to filter out because of the New Year. Seasonality suggests between February and March itโ€™s always a poor time for China data because of the New Year,โ€ he says.

โ€œThis will make the market nervous again, but itโ€™s more likely just to be a reflection of the month.โ€

Esho says the most important figures for the ASX will be Australian job numbers.

โ€œJob numbers and the corporate reporting season will see the movement in the market,โ€ he says.

โ€œIโ€™m expecting some surprises in the mining space. I think they might report better than expected earnings, only because the currency has been working in their favour and theyโ€™ve been cutting costs.โ€