The key takeaways from the last 24 hours
ASX rallies after King’s Birthday, up 0.8 per cent, retail, tech jumps, as CBA hits new high
The local market posted another strong session as negotiations between the US and China on a renewed trade pact continued to support more positive sentiment in markets; the All Ords gained 0.8 per cent. The industrials sector was the only real detractor, falling 0.1 per cent, while both the retail and technology sectors gained more than 1.5 per cent, energy also performed well, latter boosted by hopes that global trade will return to normal. Shares in the Commonwealth Bank (ASX:CBA) continued to power high, gaining 1.2 per cent, a new all-time high as the business retains its $300 billion valuation despite a growing chorus of those suggesting the company is overvalued. The likes of Next DC (ASX:NXT) which reversed a recent trend, and WiseTech (ASX:WTC) both rallied by 5 and 2 per cent respectively, as attention turns back to a risk on market focus on earnings growth as opposed to defensive protection.
Johns Lyng in trading halt, Korean firm looks to up Austal stake, Monash IVF sinks on errors, government investigation
Shares in Monash IVF (ASX:MVF) plummeted during the session after the group reported a second instance of transferring an embryo into the wrong patient, falling 24 per cent. The state government has launched a full investigation into the issues, at the same time the business is undertaking an internal review. Ship builder Austal (ASX:AST) managed a near 7 per cent gain after the companies large shareholder, South Koren Hanwha Group was seemingly given the greenlight by the US foreign review board to buyout the local company. It will still need to be reviewed by the local regulator given the defence contract the business retains. Property services provider Johns Lyng Group (ASX:JLG) started the day in a trading halt following news that Pacific Equity Partners was considering a takeover bid for the company. Similarly, Metcash (ASX:MTS) gained slightly after management confirm its intention to merge its Mitre 10 and Home Hardware brands.
US markets near all-time highs as trade deals emerge, Mexico, China near agreements, Tesla rallies on automated Taxi
The S&P500 and Nasdaq led the way overnight, both gaining 0.6 per cent, with the former just 2 per cent away from a prior record high. Shares in GameStop (NYSE:GME) continued to struggle in after-hours trading as quarterly sales fell and a pivot to crypto wasn’t enough to offset the decline. The Dow also added 0.3 per cent after positive news emerged from both China and Mexico, that could be set to see punitive tariffs levels reduced on key imports including steel, in the coming months. Markets are paused ahead of new inflation data which comes after bond yields around the world increased on debt and inflation concerns. Shares in Tesla (NYSE:TSLA) gained more than 5 per cent after Elon Musk released a video showing a Tesla driving through Austin, Texas without a driver, suggesting that autonomous taxi’s may be set to launch sooner than expected. Boeing (NYSE:BA) has seen the highest monthly intake of orders in more than a year, triggered by Donald Trump’s trip to the middle east last month.
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