ASX climbs after Wall Street rebounds;Lendlease surges

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

The numbers

The Australian sharemarket rebounded on Monday to recover almost all its losses from Friday,when investors mirrored the actions of Wall Street equity market players who staged a broad-based sell-off amid fears US interest rates would remain higher for longer.

The S&P/ASX 200 Index rose 60.7 points,or 0.8 per cent,to 7788.3 at the close. Ten out of the 11 major sectors advanced,with energy (down 0.2 per cent) the only sector in the red. Real estate investment trusts (REITs) shone,with the sector advancing 1.8 per cent.

Wall Street bounced back for a strong finish to its week.

Wall Street bounced back for a strong finish to its week.Bloomberg

The lifters

The REIT sector rose on the back of a widespread rally across the group. Large-caps Goodman Group (up 2.3 per cent),Stockland (up 1.8 per cent) and Scentre Group (up 1.3 per cent) all made ground. It also benefited from a change in investor sentiment for property giant Lendlease,which saw its shares rise almost 8 per cent after the company told the ASX it would make a strategic shift away from its overseas construction markets and refocus on its Australian businesses.

Mercury NZ (up 4.6 per cent),Yancoal (up 3.5 per cent) and Meridian Energy (up 3 per cent) were among the best-performing large-cap stocks.

The laggards

Energy (down 0.2 per cent) was the only sector in the red amid a continuation of falling commodities prices. Brent Crude Oil futures dropped 2.2 per cent last week,but have been falling steadily since mid-April.

Shares in oil and gas heavyweight Woodside Energy retreated 0.8 per cent to weigh heavily on the sector.

Other poor-performing stocks included Pro Medicus (down 2.1 per cent),Bluescope Steel (down 1.7 per cent) and IGO (down 1.5 per cent).

The lowdown

Eightcap market analyst Zoran Kresovic said Australian shares had “a stellar day” as investors eagerly await key monthly retail sales and inflation data,to be released on Tuesday and Wednesday,respectively. The consensus forecast of economists is for an inflation rate of 3.4 per cent,down from 3.6 per cent in the year to March.

“We might see some more upside in the equity market because,right now,we’re one of very few markets that haven’t broken an all-time high,” Kresovic said. “In order to rally,we need to see inflation cooling off and coming in lower than what the market is anticipating.”

On Wall Street on Friday,the S&P 500 Index rebounded from its losses in the previous two trading sessions with a gain of 0.7 per cent. A tiny gain for the week enabled it to extend its weekly winning streak to five.

The technology-heavy Nasdaq Composite index surged 1.1 per cent to top its previous record high set earlier in the week. The Dow Jones Industrial Average was relatively flat,with a gain of less than 0.1 per cent.

The market received a boost from an economic report showing US consumer sentiment weakened less in May than preliminary data had suggested. A report from the University of Michigan also said US consumers’ expectations for inflation in the coming year rose by less in May than earlier feared. That could help stave off a vicious cycle where high expectations for inflation among US households drive them to behave in ways that only make inflation worse.

Worries about stubbornly high US inflation were behind last week’s rocky trading sessions.

Tweet of the day

Quote of the day

“We will consider,when necessary,appropriate measures to promote de-risking and diversification of supply with partners within and beyond the G7,”G7 finance ministers said in a communiqué,claiming China’s policies undermined their countries’ workers,industries and economic resilience.

“We will enhance co-operation to address non-market policies and practices and distortive policies,including those leading to overcapacity,through a wide range of policy tools and rules to ensure a global level playing field,” they said.

You may have missed

Sydney-based design software maker Canva went viral over the weekend for an “incredibly cringy” two-minute rap video that surfaced from its Canva Create event in Los Angeles,in which duelling rappers and backup dancers hyped new product features aimed at large businesses.

With AP,Bloomberg

The Market Recap newsletter is a wrap of the day’s trading.Get it each weekday afternoon.

Sumeyya Ilanbey is a business journalist for The Age and Sydney Morning Herald

Most Viewed in Business