It was another mixed day for the S&P/ASX 200 (ASX: XJO) on Thursday, finishing slightly higher, up 0.2%, despite a strong opening. The S&P/ASX 200 is expected to open slightly lower on Friday, according to the Sydney Futures Exchange.
The following video comes from Rask’s free Beginner Shares course and explains the 5 things every investor must know before buying shares.
IT stocks gains
Thirsday’s gains came from the IT and consumer staples sectors, which were both over 1% higher for the day, the former driven by a large jump in Zip Co (ASX: Z1P) shares.
The Z1P share price finished over 13% higher amid rumours that a large ‘strategic’ investor was creeping up the share register. Reports suggested that the investor is global BNPL competitor Klarna, which is part-owned by the Commonwealth Bank (ASX: CBA).
AMP’s (ASX: AMP) breakup continues to gather steam, with the group announcing the sale of its Global Equities and Fixed Income unit to Macquarie Asset Management for $185 million. Shares in both AMP and Macquarie were up slightly. In my opinion, Macquarie sees the opportunity to provide both scale and distribution as sentiment towards all things AMP wanes.
Macquarie is clearly staying busy with reports now suggesting they are testing interest to build a second consortium to scuttle IFM’s bid for Sydney Airport (ASX: SYD). The SYD share price ended 2.9% higher.
Rural Fund capital raising
Rural Funds Group (ASX: RFF), which was subject to a short attack a few years ago, has moved from strength to strength and entered a trading halt as management seek to raise a further $100 million. The funds will be put towards greenfield expansion of their macadamia plantations, adding another 500 hectares along with further investments in cattle feedlots.
In the video below, Rask Founder and analyst Owen Rask explains what an ASX capital raising and trading halt means and what to do next.
The offer is at $2.47 per share, just a 5% discount.
The dog of 2021, Nuix Ltd (ASX: NXL) continues to rally, jumping 8.2%, moving higher with the broader tech sector despite any additional news. Meanwhile, Megaport (ASX: MP1) increased slightly after delivering a strong update to the market, the company grew its customer base by 8% with a further 168 business customers added. This contributed to an 11% increase in monthly recurring revenue with quarterly revenue hitting $22.7 million — a record quarter for the company.
It seems many first-time investors were surprised by the significant falls in a number of broadly owned exchange-traded funds on 30 June 2021. As most readers would know, the funds and ETFs are structured as trusts meaning they must distribute all profits and income each financial year, and given the regular rebalancing of index funds, this can be quite substantial. Importantly, the 30 June reduction is replaced with a July cash payment which can always be reinvested.
Global markets drop across the board as jobless claims spike
All three US major stock market indices dropped overnight, led by the S&P500 which was down 0.9%, with almost every sector lower. The Dow Jones was 0.7% lower as industrial and materials sectors, which are more closely linked to the economy were hit with worse than expected unemployment data.
This sent the bond yield lower which for the first time in weeks didn’t result in a rally in tech shares, as the Nasdaq also fell 0.7% behind the likes of Apple Inc. (NASDAQ: AAPL). The pressure came from a much worse than expected release of new jobless claims which increased by 373,000 with expectations for a fall of 350,000. Commentators are now suggesting the ‘Delta strain’ may hold back the economy in the short to medium term. This pushed the entire semiconductor sector lower, including Nvidia (NASDAQ: NVDA) which fell 2.3%, whilst Boeing (NYSE: BA) was the top performer as travel demand continues to improve.