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Another solid day with the ASX 200 up 27 points to 8178 (+0.3%). NAB (+1.6%) results helped, but the news of Bessent heading for a Swiss showdown with Chinese counterparties on trade, popped US futures higher and commodity stocks were back on. China also cut rates. BHP up 0.9% with RIO up 0.6%. Gold miners were solid on bullion's rise, SPR up 0.9%, and VAU doing better, up 3.3%. NST fell 2.6% though with WGX up 2.9%. Lithium stocks better, LTR up 7.8% on WA loans, PLS rallied 4.8% and MIN up 2.6%. LYC slipped as US/China relations improved. Oil and gas stocks also bounced. WDS up 1.7% and STO up 2.0%. Uranium stocks were once again in demand as shorts continue to cover, BOE updated the market and ran hard, up 12.4%. PDN up 4.4%. Banks stalled with the Big Bank Basket flat at $263.60. NAB (+1.6%) the standout and CBA (-0.5%) the problem child. Other financials doing well. MQG rose 0.9% despite news from ASIC on serious breaches. ASX up 2.5% and PNI up 4.3%. ZIP presented at the Macquarie conference and rose 13.0%. Industrials were mixed, CSL fell 3.0% with TLX down too but RMD up 0.9%. REITs were positive. Tech slipped, XRO down 0.3% and WTC off 0.4%. The index slipping 0.2%. Retail recovered from early JBH losses, PMV up 2.6% and TPW on an update rose 8.0%.In corporate news, no real bad news from Macquarie Conference. NXL slammed 16.0% on an uncertain update, KLS ran hard, up 18.3%, on a positive briefing. On the economic front, all eyes on the Fed and China stimulated again with more rate cuts. Asian markets slightly positive. Japan up 0.5%. 10-year yields steady at 4.29%. Dow futures up 0.5%, NASDAQ futures up 0.6%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 started the week giving back 80 points to 8158 (1%) as the bank rally faded post WBC results. Slightly underwhelming and lack of growth to blame. WBC fell 3.0% taking CBA down 1.6% and the Big Bank Basket down to $265.29 (1.7%). MQG followed the other lower down 1.8% ahead of numbers Friday. Other financials gave up early gains, with RPL and XYZ, two of the only winners. REITs also slipped led by GMG down 2.2% and MGR off 0.9% with industrials also weaker. Retail sagged, PMV down 3.4% and APE off 3.1% with MYR down 3.5%. Defensives such as TLS slid 1.1% and REA down 1.8%. Resources held up better with BHP down only 0.9% and RIO off 0.9% despite rising Iron ore prices in Singapore. Gold miners were mixed, GOR jumped 9.4% on the takeover by Goldfields, NST up 0.4% and EVN up 2.1% with BGL rallying 2.2%. Lithium stocks were flat, LYC up 1.8% and oil and gas stocks crumbling in the face of oils fall. WDS down 3.6% and STO off 4.0%. Uranium stocks mixed, NXG down 4.6% and BOE up 0.8%. In corporate news, TYR pulled out of SMP talks, PLY dumped after CEO retires wounded. RWC warned on tariffs and fell 2.4% with EDV forecasting flat to modest retail sales growth. Nothing on the economic front. In Asia, China and Japan closed for a holiday. 10-year yields pushing higher to 4.26%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
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The ASX 200 rallied hard despite negative US futures with a 82-point gain to 7925 (+1.0%). The RBA left rates on hold as expected. Banks were the turn around story with CBA up % and the Big Bank Basket up to $248.66 (1.2%). REITs also in demand as GMG bounced 2.7% and SCG up 1.8%. Financials services still under some pressure, IFT down 1.4% and ASX off 3.0%. Industrials generally firmed, WES up 1.3% and WOW and COL better; Retail was back in demand, as retail sales numbers were released, JBH up 1.1% and PMV up 0.9%. Tech was better, WTC up 2.3% and XRO up 1.2% with ORG rallying 2.7% on news from Earring power station. JHX remained under pressure as the recent acquisition plan continues to spur selling, down 3.9%. Resources were back in demand, BHP bouncing % and FMG up %. Gold miners limped higher, NEM up 1.1% and RMS better by 0.8%. EVN doing well up 1.7%. PLS crumbled 5.5% again as shorts took control, MIN fell 0.8% and LTR down 6.4%. Oil and gas positive as crude rose, WDS up 1.7% and STO up 1.7%. Uranium under pressure again. In corporate news, AVJ gained 8.3% as it agreed terms with AVID. Looks like Virgin is heading for a June listing. On the economic front, retail sales rose 0.2% slightly below forecasts. Asian markets better across the board, Japan up 0.2%, China up 0.3% and HK up 1.1%. 10-year yields steady at 4.41%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX fell 139 points to 7843 (-1.7%). Tariff and global growth fears weighed as Asian markets saw profit taking, Japan off 3.8%. Some patches of green with the banks holding up better than expected, CBA up 0.3% but MQG off 3.4% though with the Big Bank Basket down to $(%). Financials geared to the market were in trouble across the board, GQG fell 2.8% with the ASX in trouble with ACCC and ASIC off 2.8%. PNI fell 4.0% with ZIP dropping 7.7% on US consumer slowdown. AMP also falling 3.5%. REITs slid, GMG dropped 2.9% with SCG down 2.0% and industrials also falling. TLS fell only 0.5% on defensive perceptions, CPU down 2.7% and retail sliding, JBH off 1.9% and PMV falling 2.8%. ARB dipped another 3.1% with DMP down 4.6%. ‘Old Skool' platforms also under pressure, REA dipped 3.3% on news NEC were in DD for the CoStar bid, SEK down 4.0% and the All-Tech Index down 2.2%. WTC rallied 1.5% as it named two new directors. Resources which had done better last week, cast all that asunder and we saw selling in the iron ore stocks, BHP down 3.8% and FMG off 4.0% with lithium under pressure, PLS off 8.2% with LTR falling 4.6%. Gold miners were mixed despite gold heading through $4900. WGX fell 1.4% and NST down 1.7%. Oil and gas also lower, WDS off 2.9% and KAR dropping 5.1%. Uranium stocks were knocked over again, PDN down 5.7% and NXG off 7.3%. In corporate news, DHG was the big one today, down 1.6%. Todd Sampson quit the QAN board, and HMC fell 5.8% as talks emerged of ambitions on Healthscope. Nothing locally on the economic front. Asian market fell hard, Japan under serious pressure, off 3.8% with China and HK down 1.7% and 1.0% respectively. 10-year yields around 4.39%Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 rose 6 points to 7937 (0.1%) in quiet trade ahead of the Budget. Banks were firm with the Big Bank Basket at $242.34 (+1.5%). Tariff proof fenced perhaps. CBA up 1.4% and insurers better too, QBE up 0.3%. REITs were a little mixed, GMG down 0.6% and SCG rising 0.6%. RPL was smashed 14.8% on news from OPT that it had missed Phase III end point. RPL owns 32% of the biotech. In the industrials, WOW and COL both giving back some of the optimism from Friday's ACCC report. Tech stocks also under pressure, WTC down 2.9% and 360 falling 4.4%. The All-Tech Index down 0.5%. Retail weaker, PMV down 2.9% with NCK off 2.0% and MYR down 2.1%. WES rose as did JBH.Resources were a mixed bag of lollies. BHP fell 0.6% with FMG up 3.2% on some broker upgrades. Gold miners were mixed, VAU down 3.2% with NST off 1.3% and BGL dropping 12.8% on change in substantial holding. MIN bounced 6.9% as the haul road reopened. Oil and gas flat, coal eased, NHC down 4.4% and WHC off with uranium sellers back. BOE down 3.5% and DYL falling 1.8%. In corporate news, JHX announced a huge US merger and dropped 14.5% on the news. HLI fell 25.6% as CBA said it may not renew its contract. SM1 curdled 12.0% on unimpressive results.Nothing on the economic front. Asian markets flat. 10-year yields back up to 4.42%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 put on another 13 points to 7932 (0.2%) after a tentative start. 2% up for the week. Banks were sold with the Big Bank Basket unchanged at $238.82. CBA flat. MQG saw some profit taking, other financials also flat, GQG down 1.4% and HUB off 1.8%. REITs once again in demand, SGP up 0.8% with VCX up 2.4%. Industrials were firm but unexciting, WOW and COL rallied hard on ACCC news, CPU up 3.7% and retail doing ok again, PMV up 3.9% on an update. JBH bounced back a little too. Tech was a little soft, WTC off 0.5% with the All-Tech Index down 0.7%.Iron ore stocks were firm despite falls in the iron ore price. BHP up 1.1% and RIO up 0.9%, maybe copper more a factor. Lithium stocks were depressed, PLS fell 5.1% and uranium squeeze continues, BOE up 6.7%. Gold miners slid on some fatigue in bullion. GOR down 3.3% and NST off 0.6%. In corporate news, PDN dropped 4% as the rains came down in Africa. CSC lifted 0.7% after announcing plans to issue $500mn worth of senior unsecured bonds and EMR crashed 3.85% on a production miss.Nothing locally on the economic front as we head into the Budget next week. Asian markets seeing sellers win, China down 0.9%, HK off 2% and Japan back from another holiday up 0.6%. 10-year yields steady at 4.41%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 rose another 64 points to 7854 (0.8%) with the banks finding bargain hunters, CBA up % and ANZ rallying % as the Big Bank Basket hit $236.48 ( +1.2%). Financials were mixed, MQG up 1.3% with GQG down 0.5% and PNI rallying 3.2%. REITs were flat as GMG rose 0.3%. Industrials a mixed picture, QAN down 0.9% and WOW and COL slipping slightly, Tech mixed, WTC down 0.6% and XRO up 1.0%. Retails stocks firmed, LOV up 4.2% and PMV rising 1.3% with DMP up 3.6%. Footy has started perhaps! MYR also had a good day, up 3.3%. Resources were the stand outs, BHP up 2.4% and FMG rallying 4.2%. Lithium shorts scrambling to cover with MIN up 11.6% as UBS upgraded. PLS rallying 7.1%. LTR also doing well, roaring 6.2% ahead. Gold miners were slightly better, GMD up 1.8% and SPR rose 9.1% as RMS made its move to merge. Oil stocks formed, WDS up 1.9% and coal better too, WHC up 2.5% with uranium stocks finding a little love. In corporate news, the NAB CFO has switched banks to WBC, SMP jumped 47.1% on news TYR and another was looking at a bid. Nothing on the economic front, Asian markets pushed hard, Japan up 1.3%, HK up 1.3% and China flat. 10-year yields 4.41%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 turned turtle after a promising start and closed down 37 points at 7749. (0.5%). Market heavyweights led us lower with the banks under pressure again, the Big Bank Basket fell to $235.18. WBC off 1.5% and CBA down 0.6%. MQG dropped another 1.2% and insurers slid, SUN off 1.4%. REITS firmed, GMG finding bottom feeders up 1% and SCG rising 0.3%. Healthcare mixed, RMD continuing to fall, down 1.6% and FPH off 1.5%. Industrials fell too, WES off 0.8% and ALL down 0.7% with retail under some pressure, JBH falling 1.4%. Electricity prices are set to rise around 9% on the east coast. PMV off 2.4% and APE falling 2.5%. In resources, Macquarie downgraded coal and coal stocks, WHC down 5.8% and YAL ex div off 12.6%. Iron ore stocks slid too, BHP off 1.8% and FMG down 0.5%. Gold miners doing well today, NEM up 0.9% and NST up 2.5%. Lithium stocks also finding some friends, PLS up 1.8% and MIN moving 3% higher. Oil and gas stocks slightly firmer, uranium stocks also in the green, PDN up 1.8% and BOE up 1.8%. In corporate news, SLH fell 22,2% as the ACCC said they had some concerns on the DP World takeover. NEC appointed Matt Stanton as chief executive. Nothing on the economic front. Asian markets mixed Japan up 0.3%, HK down 0.7% and China falls 0.4%.10-year yields ease to 4.42%. Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
The ASX 200 dropped another 57 points to 8141 (-0.7%) partially ignoring a decent rally in US futures as Trump gave his State of the Union address. China now targeting 5% GDP growth in a separate proclamation. Banks dragged us down with the Big Bank Basket down to $251.84 (-1.0%). CBA down 0.9% and MQG off 1.3% with XYZ continuing to stumble down another 4.1%. REITs slipped lower, VCX down 0.5% and GPT off 0.9%. Healthcare also down, RMD falling 2.3% and TLX off 1.2%. Industrials under pressure across the board with ex dividends not helping. WES dropped 0.8% with WOW and COL sliding on ex-dividend as did TWE off 5.6%. Retail eased back, PMV off 2.4% and JBH down 1.8% with GYG up 2.1% on a broker upgrade. Tech stocks mixed, WTC up 1.2% and XRO down 0.7%. The All-Tech Index off 0.4%. Resources were mixed, iron ore stocks seeing some buying, BHP up 0.2% and RIO up 0.2%. MIN still under pressure on debt and governance issues, down 1.9%. Gold miners were positive, WAF up 6.5% and EVN up 1.4%. Energy stocks still falling, WDS down 1.5% and STO falling 1.6%. Uranium stocks finding some support. In corporate news, Virgin gets approval for Qatar investment. WTC said it expects to appoint new directors very soon. MIN saw a downgrade by Fitch and SUN and IAG clarified Alfred impacts. In economic news, we saw a better than expected 0.6% rise in GDP. Asian markets were steady on Chinese stimulus talk, Japan up 0.7%, HK up 1.7% and China up 0.3%. 10-year yields 4.35%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
ASX 200 pushed 28 points higher to 8268 (0.3%) as results nearly finished. Banks were flat with ANZ up 0.5% and WBC up 0.4% with the Big Bank Basket at $253.25 (). Health insurers raced away on results and increases from April 1. REITs not doing much, GMG down 0.2% as it released the SPP details. Industrials mainly firmer, WTC still suffering down 2.6% with COL reporting and rallying 3.5%. QAN results and special dividend cheered up 5.6% and retail slightly firmer, LOV up 0.5% and PMV up 0.9%. BAP had a solid reaction day up 5.3% and APE shot the lights out, up 19.9% on better-than-expected numbers. IEL crashed 7.6% on worse than expected results. In resources, iron ore stocks found some friends, BHP up 0.8% and FMG up 1.7%. Gold miners pushed higher again, aided by a lower AUD, NEM back up 1.9% with EVN up 1.5%. Lithium and rare earths slightly firmer, PLS up 0.5% and LYC up 0.6%. Energy stocks saw some bargain hunting, STO up 1.2% and KAR posting better than expected numbers up 4.7%. Uranium stocks showed a glimmer of light, NXG up 4.5%. In corporate news, PME fell 3.7% on a 4m share block trade from the founder. NEU jumped 8.9% on better Daybue numbers. RHC jumped 6.8% after it appointed Goldmans to potentially sell its 52.8% in the European business. Nothing on the economic front. Asian markets drifted lower, Japan up 0.4%, HK off 1.1% and China down 0.4%. 10-year yield at 4.34% Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you. If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services. Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
ASX 200 fell 19 points to 8537 well off the lows for the day. Results dominated as the Banking sector had two to contend with WBC underwhelmed falling 4.1%, and BEN crashed 15.3% on higher costs and lower margins. The Big Bank Basket fell to $269.95 (-0.9%). Financials were missed with MQG up 0.7% and GQG putting on another 3.3% but insurers slipped on Dutton's comments and IAG downgrades. SUN down 7.2%. REITs are in demand on rate cut hopes, GMG down 1.1% but SGP up 3.2% and GPT up 4.5% on better-than-expected rates. Industrials mixed, AD8 smashed the bears on a decent outlook, rising 26.5%, tech fell as WTC back on the front page again. The All-Tech Index up 0.2%. Utilities firmed with ORG up 2.7% and retail mixed, JBH up 0.3%, and PMV off 0.9%. Resources were very mixed, gold miners saw profit takers move in following bullion falls, GMD down 3.3% and NEM off 2.8%. Iron ore stocks eased, FMG down 0.6% with energy under pressure, WDS off 2.9% on reserve statement and dividend concerns, STO down 0.9%. Uranium did better than expected, NXG off 4.2% though. In corporate news, WBC disappointed, BEN really disappointed. A2M +19.7% saw good traction in China, BSL rose 13.0% on a positive outlook statement and SGR rose 12.5% on an offer from Oaktree to refinance $650m of debt. Nothing on the economic front. Japanese GDP was better than expected. Asian markets slightly better, Japan up 0.1%, China up 0.1% and HK up 0.2%. 10-year yields rose to 4.45%.Want to invest with Marcus Today? The Managed Strategy Portfolio is designed for investors seeking exposure to our strategy while we do the hard work for you.If you're looking for personal financial advice, our friends at Clime Investment Management can help. Their team of licensed advisers operates across most states, offering tailored financial planning services.Why not sign up for a free trial? Gain access to expert insights, research, and analysis to become a better investor.
A quiet cautious session as the ASX 200 gave back 9 points to 8411. Down 21 points for the week after a torrid start. Banks were solid ahead of CBA results next week. The Big Bank Basket rose to $268.42 +0.2%) MQG slipped slightly with GQG down 1.3% with insurers steady. REITs better on lower 10-year yields, GMG up 0.6% and CHC up 0.5%. Industrials were mixed, and REA kicked 2.8% on broker upgrades. WES slid 1.1% with retail firm, PMV up 1.2% and SUL up 2.6%. Travel stocks also in demand, WEB up 2.6% and CTD rising 3.3%. DMP rose 21.3% like a cheesy crust as store closures were announced in Japan. Finally. Healthcare on the nose as RMD continues to stagger around after quarterly, down another 2.6%. CSL off 1.1% and PME falling 1.5%. Resources were generally weaker, though iron ore miners rose, BHP up 0.6% and FMG up 1.9%. Gold miners saw some profit taking, NST down 2.4% and WGX off 2.0%. Rare earths LYC up 6.1% on Chinese fears, and lithium stocks walloped as CATL rumoured to be reopening a lepidolite mine. PLS down 4.3% and LTR off 4.4%. Energy stocks fell, STO down 0.9% and WHC down 3.9% with uranium under pressure. In corporate news, MMS fell 10.4% on a broker downgrade, and NCK rose 10.5% on better-than-expected results. SIG guided up and rose 3.2%. Nothing locally on the economic front. Asian markets mixed, Japan down 0.6% and HK up 1.5% and China up 1.7%. 10-year yields slightly higher at 4.36%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
In deze aflevering van Z 7 op 7: Begin december bezochten twee eurocommissarissen staalreus ArcelorMittal in Gent. Een duidelijk signaal: niet alleen duurzaamheid, maar ook industrie is topprioriteit voor de nieuwe Europese Commissie. Vandaag wordt dat bevestigd met de voorstelling van het 'concurrentie kompas'. Een plan om Europa te laten opboksen tegen de bikkelharde internationale concurrentie.De Rechtvaardige Rechters, het gestolen paneel van het Lam Gods, heeft een digitale remake gekregen door Musketon. De Belgische kunstenaar stelde al eerder tentoon in New York en werkte voor grote merken als Nike, Audi en Coca-Cola. Collega Stijn Wuyts gaat in gesprek met Bert Dries, ofwel Musketon. En als je geen ondernemer of politicus bent, dan zal de naam PMV waarschijnlijk geen belletje doen rinkelen. Maar het Vlaamse overheidsfonds is een van de belangrijkste investeerders in België. Trends sprak met CEO Michel Casselman. Z 7 op 7 is de nieuwe dagelijkse podcast van Kanaal Z en Trends. Elke ochtend, vanaf 5u30 uur luistert u voortaan naar een selectie van de meest opmerkelijke nieuwsverhalen, een frisse blik op de aandelenmarkten en een scherpe duiding bij de economische en politieke actualiteit door experts van Kanaal Z en Trends.Start voortaan elke dag met Z 7 op 7 en luister naar wat echt relevant is voor uw business, onderneming, carrière en geld.
The ASX 200 faded slightly to close up 48 points at 8447, almost at an all-time high as US markets rebounded and CPI came in better than expected opening the door to a February rate cut. Banks led the charge early before fading slightly, the Big Bank Basket closed off at $262.75 (-0.1%). MQG rose 0.7% and insurers did better with QBE up 0.7%. Financial services continue to push ahead GQG up 3.5% and ASX bouncing back 2.9%. REITS better, GMG bouncing a little, SCG up 1.1% on rate hopes. Healthcare too in demand as CSL put on 1.8% with negativity on RFK Jnr helping sentiment. Industrials firmed across the board, WES up 1.2% and BXB up 0.6% with TLS up 0.8% and ORG bouncing back 1.6%. Retail firmed on CPI data. JBH up 1.9% and PMV went ex-bonus shares today and rose 4.7%. Tech in demand on Nasdaq rally, WTC up 2.6% and XRO up 2.5% with the All-Tech Index up 1.4%. Resources were generally firm, BHP and RIO the exceptions, gold miners doing well as quarterlies continue to drop and show cash piles, lithium bounced a little as PLS rose 3.5% on its quarterly. Despite uranium slipping below $70, stocks rallied hard after the rout yesterday. BOE quarterly helped its Honeymoon period up 5.6% and DYL up 6.9%. Oil and gas modestly higher. Asian markets better with China closed for Lunar New Year. HK up 0.1% and Japan up 0.8%. 10-year yields eased to 4.37%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 up another 30 points to 8409 (0.4%). Plenty of green across the board, even resources improved in places. BHP up 0.5%, RIO up 0.3% and FMG rallying 1.0%. Gold miners eased back, EVN down 1.8% and NST off 0.6%. WGX dropped 4.8% on quarterly feedback. Lithium stocks firmed slightly, IGO confirmed the closure of its TLEA refinery, up 0.8% and LTR rallied 1.5%. Uranium stocks eased back, PDN dropped 2.2% with WDS and STO both easier on lower crude prices. Banks were firm, yet again. The Big Bank Basket rose to $261.25 (+0.4%). Financials were firm, GQG up 1.0% and AMP pushing further ahead up 5.0%. Insurers mixed. REITs firmed, SCG up 0.6% and GPT up 1.4%. Industrials stronger, led by WES up 3.2% on a broker upgrade, ALL bounced back 1.9% and healthcare firmed. PME up 0.7% and COH up 1.1%. Retail firmed with PMV soaring 6.6% and MYR up 2.6%. In corporate news, MND raised guidance, SNL profits rose 32% and KGN dropped 15.2% on issues with Mighty Ape. 4DX had a positive reaction to a deal with Qscan Radiology, and SM1 saw cream rise on very positive H2 guidance. Nothing locally on the economic front, Japan raised rates 25bps as widely expected after Core CPI rose to 3%. Asian market followed US markets higher with Japan up 0.3%, HK up 1.8% and China up 1.0%. 10-year yields steady at 4.47%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
The ASX 200 took a tumble today down 51 points to 8379 (0.6%) as resources came under pressure on Trump tariffs fears. Asian markets were resilient and iron ore unchanged in Singapore, but miners still sold off. BHP down 1.7% with FMG off 2.2% on quarterly numbers, lithium also under pressure too with PLS down 3.7% and MIN off 3.3%. Gold miners eased and uranium stocks help relatively firm. Banks held steady with the Big Bank Basket at $260.17. Financials slipped slightly, ASX off 1.2% with insurers mixed. QBE up 1.0% and IAG down 0.5%. Industrials saw modest broad-based losses, retail slid, JBH down 2.2% and WES off 1.5%. Both WOW and COL fell and ALL dropped 2.7% with tech mixed, XRO up 1.1% and WTC off 0.4%. In corporate news, PMV and MYR voted yes to the deal. FMG had production numbers in line, PPS jumped on FUA numbers and EVN dropped 3.9% on broker research. Nothing on the economic front locally, BoJ tomorrow widely expected to raise rates. Asian markets firm Japan up 0.8%, HK up 0.2% and China up 0.6%. 10-year yields rising to 4.47%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
Stocks climbed on Wednesday, with the S&P 500 hitting a fresh all-time high, as Oracle and Nvidia rallied on artificial intelligence optimism and President Donald Trump's new term in office.The S&P 500 advanced 0.61% after hitting an intraday record of 6,100.81, exceeding the last milestone touched in December before the market pullback. The broad index closed at 6,086.37, slightly below its all-time closing high.The Nasdaq Composite popped 1.28% to 20,009.34, underscoring the outperformance of tech names. The Dow Jones Industrial Average rose 130.92 points, or 0.3%, to 44,156.73, boosted by Procter & Gamble's gain of nearly 2% on the back of strong earnings.SPI down 35 - OFL gets another bid - Gold up - Oil down - PMV and MYR vote today.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 grinds 37 points higher ahead to 8347 (0.5%) of Trump's inauguration. US markets closed tonight for Martin Luther King Day. Banks solid again with CBA up 0.8% and the Big Bank Basket up to $255.00 (0.7%). Financials were better, MQG up 1.9% and GQG better too. REITS higher, GMG up 0.6% and SCG up 1.4% with industrials also doing ok. WOW, COL and WES all solid, retail rallied, JBH up 3.0% and BAP up 2.3%. PMV eased off slightly with the vote this week, LOV gave back some of Friday's gains. Tech a little muted with the All -Tech Index up 0.9%. Iron ore miners were better as Port Hedland reopened after the cyclone was downgraded, Singapore iron ore futures slightly better. BHP up 0.5% and RIO up 1.1%. Gold miners eased with NST down 2.6% and EVN down 1.1%. Lithium miners continue to find a few friends and short covering, PLS up 2.5% and IGO up 2.6% despite talking impairments at Kwinana. Energy stocks flat, PDN down 3.7% with DYL up 0.8% on a broker upgrade. In corporate news, IFL granted DD to CC, KAR was plugged and abandoned with a Who Dat well. SGR fell 17.9% on uncertainty unless it can find funding. INR jumped 20.6% on a US government loan. FND is up 25.0% on acquisition and update. In economic news, China left rates unchanged as expected. Asian markets better with Japan 1.2%, HK up 2.3% and CSI up 0.9% on hopes for a Trump visit to China. 10-year yields steady at 4.49%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
In deze aflevering van Z 7 op 7:Investeringsfondsen brengen geld samen om te investeren in projecten of bedrijven, in de hoop op een mooi rendement. Ze zijn vaak een privé-initiatief, maar ook de overheid heeft investeringsfondsen. Het investeringsfonds van de Vlaamse overheid heet PMV, wat staat voor Participatiemaatschappij Vlaanderen. PMV investeert in infrastructuurprojecten bijvoorbeeld, maar ook in kmo's. Waarom moet de overheid een investeringsfonds hebben? Laat je dat niet beter over aan de markt? We vragen het aan de grote baas van PMV, Michel Casselman. Z 7 op 7 is de nieuwe dagelijkse podcast van Kanaal Z en Trends. Elke ochtend, vanaf 5u30 uur luistert u voortaan naar een selectie van de meest opmerkelijke nieuwsverhalen, een frisse blik op de aandelenmarkten en een scherpe duiding bij de economische en politieke actualiteit door experts van Kanaal Z en Trends.Start voortaan elke dag met Z 7 op 7 en luister naar wat echt relevant is voor uw business, onderneming, carrière en geld.
Investeringsfondsen brengen geld samen om te investeren in projecten of bedrijven, in de hoop op een mooi rendement. Ze zijn vaak een privé-initiatief, maar ook de overheid heeft investeringsfondsen. Het investeringsfonds van de Vlaamse overheid heet PMV, wat staat voor Participatiemaatschappij Vlaanderen. PMV investeert in infrastructuurprojecten bijvoorbeeld, maar ook in kmo's. Waarom moet de overheid een investeringsfonds hebben? Laat je dat niet beter over aan de markt? We vragen het aan de grote baas van PMV, Michel Casselman.
ASX 200 dropped 17 points to 8310 ( -0.2%) finishing the week up 16 points for the week. Sums is up. Banks sold off after the huge run yesterday, CBA down % and NAB down % with the Big Bank Basket at $253.29 (-1.3%). Other financials flat, MQG down 0.1% and ZIP falling 1.0%. Insurers flat. REITs eased back, GMG solid but SCG off 0.8%. Industrials were firm but idle, WES up 0.5% and COL up 0.8% on a broker upgrade. Utilities better with tech down, WTC off 0.8% and the All-Tech Index flat. Retail was patchy, PMV up another 1.6% and CTD pushing up another 1.7%. LOV up 7.7% on a broker upgrade. In resources, FMG pushed up 1.8% with MIN up 2.9% on China data and iron ore prices. RIO fell 0.7% as the Glencore discussions were ‘poo pooed'. Gold miners were pushing slightly higher, GMD up 1.8% and GOR up 1.7%. Lithium stocks were firmer as LTR roared ahead again up 9.5%. PLS up 2.1% too. Energy stocks slightly positive, STO up 0.6% and PDN up 1.9%. In corporate news, IFL got a 460c bid from CC Capital, AVJ opened its books to Ho Bee, LYC dropped 0.9% on quarterly and ABB swooned 5% on CEO news and then rallied 5.5%. TLX added 3.1% on EU approvals. In economic news, nothing locally, but Chinese GDP came in spot on as expected. Asian markets, Japan down 0.6%, HK up 0.2% and CSI up 0.5%. 10 year yields solid at 4.49% Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 jumped 114 points to 8324 (+1.4%) following the US rally. Jobs numbers stifled gains to some extent coming in at 4% with any RBA cut in February a distant dream. Banks as usual led the charge higher as US banks delivered in spades, CBA up 3.0% and ANZ up 2.7% with the Big Bank Basket up to $256.84 (+2.9%). MQG put in a solid day up 3.2% with insurers and other financials also doing well. GQG finally saw some reasons to be cheerful, up 2.5%. REITs too were in demand led by tech GMG, up 3.2% and SGP leaping 3.7%. Industrials firmed, Tech did well with the All-Tech Index up 1.4% as WTC rallied 2.6% and XRO up 1.5%. TLS fell another 0.5% as the trading bots trumped the customer service bot upgrade. Retail found some friends as MYR and PMV rallied hard on the upcoming vote. In resources, Iron ore went nowhere, RIO production report failed to ignite any animal spirits, gold miners were generally better, GMD up 4.4% on a presentation and lithium stocks finding some support again. PLS up 2.2% and IGO up 0.6%. Energy stocks modestly better. DYL up 3.6% and STO up 1.0%. In corporate news, TAH soared on news of its first chief wagering officer. Whatever that is. NEU rallied hard on a Healthcare conference presentation. On the economic front, economists were once again wrong-footed with soaring PT jobs created and the headline rate modestly higher at 4%. RBA will continue to be sidelined! Asian markets better. Korea keeps rates unchanged. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 fell 18 points to 8213 (0.2%) in quiet trade after a positive start gave way to some caution ahead of the US CPI tonight. Banks flat as yields firmed to 4.63% in 10-years. Financials mixed with MPL down 1.6% on news of potential premium increases. NWL continued to fall. REITs firm with GMG under some pressure as a ‘tech' stock off 0.6%. Tech stocks remain on the nose here with WTC down 3.7% and TNE off 1.9%. REA and CAR also fell whilst TLS announced a new AI deal and fell 1.2%. Retail mixed with PMV still under pressure, MYR down 1.8% and travel stocks a little higher with CTD up 2.0%. GYG jumped 4.4% on a broker upgrade. Resources mixed, iron ore miners a mixed bag, BHP fell 1.0% and FMG up 1.8%. Gold miners better with NST up 1.0% and NEM up 1.3%. Lithium stocks saw some short covering with PLS up 4.1% and LTR rising 7.4% on hopes for lithium prices bottoming. Energy and uranium are slightly weaker. In corporate news, AVJ got a new 70c bid, ARU rose 17.4% on the government support for a convertible note. BBN rallied 13.9% on a trading update. In economic news, China's central bank pumped a near-historic amount of short-term funds into its financial system today. Asian markets slightly weaker. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 rallied 39 points to 8231 (0.5%) with a better US market giving us the lead. Banks though were once again weaker as resources continued to find buyers. All change for 25! BHP rose 1.4% on stronger iron ore prices, FMG rallied 2.9% with gold miners also better despite falling bullion prices, a broker report helping sentiment. NST up 1.9% and EVN up 1.3% with lithium stocks finding friends, MIN up 2.0% and LYC up 1.6%. Energy stocks once again better, WDS up 0.5% and coal and uranium stocks better, PDN up 3.4% and WHC up 6.6%. Banks slipped ever so slightly with the Big Bank Basket at $249.96 (-0.3%). Insurers rose and other financials mixed. PNI down 1.9% and ZIP falling 1.4%. REITs improved with GMG up 0.4% and SCG rising 1.1%. Industrials better, retail though still under pressure. JBH off 1.6% and PMV and MYR both down again. Travel stocks in demand, FLT up 0.6% and CTD up 2.2%. Tech still under a little pressure with the All-Tech Index up 0.4% with WTC off 1.3%. In corporate news, MSB raised more money at 250c, CCX jumped 14.6% on a trading update. Iron ore surged back over $100 a tonne as Chinese imports reached a record. No local economic news. In Asian Markets, Japan played some catch up after a holiday yesterday and fell over 2% with both China and HK both showing plus 1% gains.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
The ASX 200 fell 102 points to 8192 (1.2%) as a rethink on banks, and US leads, saw across the board selling. A downgrade to banks clobbered the sector with higher yields probably not helping. The Big Bank Basket dropped to $250.75 with WBC off 2.2% and the insurers seeing sellers despite higher yields. QBE down 2.0% and SUN off 2.2%. Other financials also under pressure, MQG down 2.4% and GQG off 3.8%. IFL better, a rarity, on another competing bid from Bain at 430c. SQ2 and ZIP under pressure with retail also on the nose today thanks to PMV and MYR trading updates. Challenging mentioned four times! WES also fell 2.3% with LOV down another 1.8% on broker downgrades. Tech stocks eased, WTC down 3.6% and XRO off 2.8% with the All-Tech Index down 2.6%. Resources fared better, the ‘Three Amigos' BHP, FMG and RIO barely changed, MIN up 2.0% and gold stocks better as AUD hit highs again. NST up 1.3% and EVN up 1.2%. Energy stocks getting a boost from oil prices. WDS up 2.0% and STO rising 2.2%. In corporate news, quarterlies are kicking off. MYR and PMV fell hard on trading updates, NWL fell % on a Citi downgrade, NWH dropped 9.5% on a CFO change. Nothing on the economic front locally. Chinese trade surplus soared to US$1 trillion on pre-Trump exports. Record exports and weak imports. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 slid 47 points to 8250 (0.6%) as banks remained solid and resources sunk. Iron ore stocks fell hard as Chinese retail data showed no real sign of a stimulus helping. BHP down 2.0% and FMG off 3.8%. Lithium stocks remain depressed, PLS off 3.1% and MIN falling 2.0%. Gold miners too under pressure as bullion comes off the boil. NEM down 3.6% with NST off 2.1% and VAU dropping 8.0%. Oil and gas eased with uranium stocks under pressure on a spot price downgrade from UBS. Banks help up with the Big Bank Basket solid at $257.88 (+0.3%). Insurers are also doing well, SUN up 0.8% and IAG up 1.2%. Other financials withered and died, ASX off 0.7% with HMC down 13.7% following DGT much lower. REITs fell, GMG down 1.8% with SGP down 1.0%. Tech eased back, WTC lost 1.8% with XRO down 0.3%, the All-Tech Index fell 1.0%. Retail was mixed, LOV up 0.5% and PMV down 1.8%. GYG dropped 3.6% with LNW down 1.9% too. In corporate news, not much around today. In economics, the RBA has been shaken up a little bit with two new appointments to the Interest rate-setting committee. Chinese data was lacklustre. Again. Asian markets drifted lower, Japan down 0.1% and China and HK falling 0.4% and 0.6% respectively. 10-year yields rose to 4.31%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 closes up 12 points at 8448 (0.1%) in lacklustre trade. Banks were mixed with the Big Bank Basket flat at $262.13. Insurers eased back as yields eased to 4.32%, QBE down 0.3% and MPL off 0.3% on NSW hospital changes. REITs were mixed, GMG down 0.4% and CHC falling 1.4% as funds locked in some of the year's gains. Industrials mostly stronger, WTC up 1.1% on the new White deal with Isaacs. XRO rose 0.4% and the All-Tech Index unchanged. Retail is a little mixed on better than expected retail sales, PMV up 0.5% and HVN up 0.4%. In resources, iron ore stocks pushed higher with BHP up 0.4% and FMG up 0.3%. Gold miners were hit hard as NST announced a takeover of DEG. NST fell 5.3% and DEG up 29.6%. GOR rose 0.4% as a 18% holder of DEG. Energy stocks rallied, WDS up 1.2% and PDN up 0.8%. In corporate news, MTS rallied 2.2% on better than expected 1H results. NWL fell 5.0% as it announced $100bn FUA. On the economic front, retail sales jumped 0.6% in October. Housing approvals picked up too, total approvals up 4.2% lifted by units and apartments. Asian markets firmed, Japan up 0.7%, China up 0.7% and HK up 0.2%.10-year yields fell to 4.32%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 soared to new record highs before falling into the close, up 74 points to 8371 (+0.9%) as both the banking sector and the resources pushed ahead. The Big Bank Basket hit a new record up to $260.88 (+1.2%). CBA led the charge with a 1.7% gain and insurers also doing well. QBE up 1.4% and SUN rallying 2.1%. Other financials also in demand, PNI up 1.1% and HMC doing well rising 1.6%. SQ2 stands out again by up 6.3%. REITs too piling on the points, GMG up 1.1% and SCG rising 0.6%, 10Y yields falling to 4.57%. Industrials also in a good place, WES up 0.9% with WOW and COL recovering, QAN up 0.8% and SGH a star, up 3.2%. Retail recovered somewhat, JBH up 0.6% and PMV putting on 1.0% with LOV still under a little pressure. ALL up 1.6% though LNW down 2.5%. Tech rallied hard as WTC put on 2.4%, TNE soared 10.0% on better results, the All Tech Index up 2.7%. Even dull utilities were in demand, ORG up 1.0% and AGL up 0.9%. In resources, early weakness gave the buyers reasons to nibble a little, BHP down 0.1% and RIO down 0.4 % with gold stocks doing well on bullion rises, NST up 4.0% and NEM up 2.0% after a sale of a gold project. Oil and gas better, STO announced a shift in focus and rose 0.3%. Lithium stocks still on the nose with PLS down 5.2% and uranium stocks firm but unspectacular. In corporate news, SYA announced a merger with PLL, CLG had an NBIO from PE, KMD warned of tough times, and MIN company secretary is moving to a compliance and governance role. On the economic front, RBA minutes were released, current settings appropriate. Asian markets mixed again, Japan up 0.7%, HK rose 0.2% and China off 0.5%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 ended the week sprinting 69 points higher to 8295 (+0.8%). A good 2.2% rise for the week. It has been a momentous week, money being put to work in the ASX. Resources buoyed by China hopes. BHP, RIO and FMG all better despite iron ore in Singapore falling 2.6%. Gold miners recovered as bullion pushed up again, NST up 1.8% and NEM up 1.2%. Uranium stocks ran out of ‘oompf' on Cameco production downgrade and oil and gas stocks eased. Lithium stocks mixed, PLS eased 1.0% with LTR up 2.5% despite the royalty ruling. Industrials and banks the driving force. Healthcare recovered, CSL up 0.7% and RMD up 1.1%. Tech better, WTC up another 1.8%, XRO rising 1.2% with the All-Tech Index up 1.0%. Retail better, JBH up 3.9% with PMV up 1.9% and DMP bouncing 1.3%. Travel stocks also finding friends, with FLT up 0.8% and CTD rising 2.5%. Banks were solid. CBA leading again up 1.4% with WBC, the Big Bank Basket up to $253.24 (+1.4%). Record highs. ANZ results were a little underwhelming but nothing either way, expect some modest downgrades, as we saw with NAB and WBC. MQG flat with other financials better. In corporate news, NEU jumped another 15.1% on strong US Daybue sales, REA up 0.3% on results, NWS off 2.1% on a revenue surge on Real Estate exposure. MYX rallied 15.1% on M&A hopes. Nothing on the economic front, apart from the Fed! Asian markets better, China heading for its best week in a month. Japan -0.1%, China down 0.5% and HK down 0.9%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence.Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 down only 41 points at 8119 (-0.5%) after a good afternoon rally on iron ore miners turning positive. Some slightly better Chinese data helping. BHP up 0.3% and RIO bouncing 1.7%. MIN also doing well up another 3.1%. Gold miners still a drift as bullion stumbles. NST down 0.9% and EVN off 2.1%. Uranium stocks steady and oil and gas better as crude rallies in Asian trade. WDS up 1.1% and STO up 0.7%. Banks were hit as MQG warned of increased competition after results underwhelmed. MQG off 3.6% and NAB falling 1.5% with the Big Bank Basket at $243.47 (-0.6%). Insurers slid and REITs also in the red, SCG off 1.4%. Industrials generally eased back, WES down 1.0% and XRO falling 0.9% with retail seeing some profit taking, JBH off 0.2% and PMV down 1.8%. In corporate news, AMC fell 4.3% despite reaffirming outlook and raising dividend. The probe into ANZ by ASIC has been expanded. On the economic front, economists are winding back hopes for a rate cut in early 2025. MQG reported a $1,6bn interim profit below expectations, talks a second-half bump and lifted its dividend to 240c. On the economic front, nothing locally, In China we had some better news on the Caixin PMI. Asian markets mixed again, with Japan off 1.7%, HK up 1.6% and China up 0.6%. 10Y yields pushing higher again, 4.55%. Dow Futures up 40 points. NASDAQ Futures up 57 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 closes down 20 points to 8160 (-0.3%) as some pre-election nerves creeping in. Banks were steady as results loom, NAB the standout up 0.9% with the Big Bank Basket at $244.82 (). Other financials drifted lower, ASX down 1.1% and SQ2 off 0.1%. REITs mixed, SGP up 0.2% and CHC off 0.4%. Industrials under a little pressure, COL down 0.6% on its trading update, WOW continues to struggle, off 2.8%. TLS fell 0.3% with QAN off 0.6% and TWE down 2.0%. Tech mixed, WTC continued to bounce up 2.5%. Retail bounced nicely on a JBH update, moving 5.3% higher. PMV gained 1.4% and LOV up 0.7%. Resources were weaker again, BHP and RIO down around 1% with FMG unchanged. Gold miners were mixed despite bullion price rises. Quarterlies in focus. Lithium slipped with PLS down 1.0% on broker research following results yesterday. Uranium stocks slightly better, PDN up 3.6% and BOE up 1.2%. In corporate news, MIN jumped 9.2% on news it had sold its oil and gas assets to Gina Rinehart. ORG up 1.4% on a dip in overall production. AGL fell 6.0% on a Barrenjoey report. BUB reaffirmed FY earnings forecast. In economic news, retail sales flat. but building approvals beat estimates. Asian markets mixed again, Japan down 0.9%, HK up 0.5%, China up 0.2%. 10-year yields higher again, 4.51%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 closed up 28 points to 8249 (+0.3%) locking in its third consecutive day of gains. Consumer discretionary stocks took centre stage today with MYR falling 1.55% after initially rallying ~7% and PMV advanced 9.9% after the two companies announced they've entered a binding agreement to combine apparel brands.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 rose 36 points to 8223 (+0.4%), well off the early highs despite a rally in resources with Asian markets back in the green. BHP up 1.4%, RIO up 1.4% and FMG rallying hard up 4.0%. Lithium stocks in demand following the LTM bid, up 38.8%, PLS up 2.5% and MIN bouncing 6.8%. Gold miners slightly better in places, DEG up 1.1% and BGL up 6.3%. Oil and gas better too, WDS bouncing 0.7% and uranium stocks firmed. Banks were mixed but flat with the Big Bank Basket $234.70 (+0.2%). MQG rallied 0.8% and insurers were slightly higher, QBE up 2.5%. REITs are mainly positive, and industries are flat. Retails eased slightly, JBH down 0.5% and PMV off 0.4%. DMP continue to push higher, up 2.3%. Tech stagnant, and the All-Tech Index up slightly. In corporate news, LTM rose 38.8% on the RIO bid. GYG rose slightly on a trading update. PRN signed an extension with IGO and STO secured US$800m of loans for Darwin upgrade. NWL up 3.8% on a FUM update. Nothing on the economic front. Asian markets turned positive with iron ore, Japan up 0.3%, China up 3.0% and HK up 4.2% awaiting MoF briefing Saturday. 10Y yields higher at 4.22%. Dow Futures up 13 points. NASDAQ Futures down 6 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 rose 11 points to 8187 as an early rally was snuffed out by weak Chinese markets. Banks good. Resources bad. The Big Bank Basket rose to $234.34 (+0.5%). CBA up 0.5% as a defensive play, Insurers better too, ASX rose 1.4% and SQ2 did well on a BNPL sector upgrade, up 4.4%. REITs mixed, GMG down 1.4% and SCG up 0.3%. Industrials firmed, TLS up 1.3% with REA up after AGM comments. Tech better, WTC up 1.5% and XRO pushing 1.5% ahead. The All-Tech Index up 1.8%. Retail and travel stocks better. FLT up 1.4% and PMV up 1.3% with ALL up 2.0%. WES, WOW and COL better by over 1%. Resources were in a world of pain. BHP dropped 1.1% with RIO down 2.3% and FMG off 1.6%. Lithium stocks suffered as the bears were back having a picnic in PLS off 5.0% and MIN having a double whammy hit, down 6.4%. Oil and gas fell hard, WDS down 3.0% and uranium stocks under a little pressure. In corporate news, RIO -2.3% to acquire LTM for US$5.85/share cash, APA rose 2.6% on pipeline relief from the regulator, MAC raised $140m to repay debt and on the economic front, our Kiwi brothers saw a 50bps rate cut. Asian markets were mixed, Japan up 0.3%, China falling hard down 5.0% and HK down 0.6%. Stimulus? What stimulus!. Dow Futures down 25 points. NASDAQ Futures down 50 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 rose 7 points in quiet range-bound trade to 8205 (+0.1%). Banks flat with the Big Bank Basket unchanged at $232.40; financials were slightly firmer as SOL rose 1.1% and ASX up 1.2%. Insurers eased back, QBE down 0.3% and REITs bounding ahead, GMG up 1.6% and SCG up 1.7%. Industrials drifted around, BXB up 0.5% and ALL down 0.6% with GYG under pressure on a broker downgrade. Retail stocks fell, PMV down 0.9% and LOV off 0.8%. IEL slid 2.9%. Resources were generally weaker, gold miners fell with EVN off 1.3%, NST down 1.0% and RMS down 2.3%. BHP bucked the trend up 0.7% with FMG easing back slightly. Lithium stocks were under pressure again, PLS saw a large block traded and fell 4.8% with LTR down 4.4% and IGO off 2.2%. MIN dropped 1.5%. Uranium stocks saw a little profit-taking. Coal down and oil and gas mixed, WDS up 0.6%. In corporate news, WBC completed the sale of its car loan book to RMC. ORG has abandoned its hydrogen plans. Apparently, a lot of hot air. In economic news, BoP numbers out. The IMF also passed judgment on the Federal government and said the rates may have to go higher whilst touting tax reform. Asian markets saw profit-taking in HK, China closed, and Japan +1.2% ahead as rates seem in limbo. 10Y yields steady at 3.99%. Dow Futures down 65 points and NASDAQ Futures down 60 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 drifted 16 points lower to 8126 (0.2%) as the ‘Great Rotation' continues with banks weaker and resources pulling away. BHP up 3.8% with RIO up 3.8% and MIN rising 5.4%. Base metals also in demand, S32 up 3.0% and LYC up 4.3% with lithium stocks slightly higher. Gold miners are also in demand as records tumble, NST up 0.8%, and EVN up 1.8%. Oil and gas mixed, coal stocks better led by WHC up 3.6% and uranium stocks taking a break. Banks eased, the Big Bank Basket fell to $235.70 (-2.0%). CBA down 2.3% and NAB off 2.7% with MQG down 2.2% after a fine for electricity trades. Insurers slid, QBE down 1.6% with REITs steady, GMG up 0.1%. Healthcare fell, CSL down 0.3% and RMD falling 2.2% with PME under pressure off 4.0%. Tech slipped, the All-Tech Index fell 1.5% with WTC down 1.2% and XRO off 1.2%. ALL fell 3.0% as LNW unchanged after it rallied hard off lows. In corporate news, PMV fell 9.1% after putting its ‘Smiggle' on ice, MYR deal still live. SIG released results and yet another ACCC delay on Chemist Warehouse listing. In economic news, CPI dropped to 2.7%, monthly numbers though. China cut another short-term rate. Asian markets firmed again, Japan up 0.4%, China up 2% and HK up 1.6%. 10-year yields at 3.90%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
S&P 500 rose 0.25%, closing the session with its 41st record close for the year. The Dow too notched a record close, up 84 points (+0.20%). Up 156 points at best. Down 68 points at worst. NASDAQ advanced 0.56%, while mega-cap tech stocks were mixed. Nvidia jumped 4.0%, while Microsoft and Meta eased 1.0% and 0.2% respectively. Markets shrugged off US consumer confidence data, despite falling to 98.7 in September dropping the most in three years from an upwardly revised 105.6 in August. Treasury yields slipped in choppy trading. 2Y yield fell 4.7bps pressured by a 2Y auction, and the 10Y yield fell 1.9bps to 3.732%. Steep Yuan inflows have pushed the Chinese Yuan to hit a 16-month high, resulting in broad USD selling USD Index down 0.48%, while also propping up HK +4.13% and Chinese +4.15% equity markets.ASX to rise. SPI Futures up 25 points (+0.30%). On the calendar today, Australian CPI data at 11:30am. AGL and RED hosting AGM's. SIG, SOL and PMV releasing earnings reports and CWP, IMD and NCK are trading ex-dividend today.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 finished down 57 points to 8153 (-0.7%) despite hopes for Chinese stimulus and better US and European futures markets. Banks eased back led by CBA down 1.5% and the Big Bank Basket down 0.9%. Other financials mixed, ASX up 0.4% and CGF gaining 0.6%. REITs fell across the board, GMG down 1.5% and SCG off 1.9%. Industrials fell after the ACCC announced it would be looking into WOW, down 3.4%, and COL, off 3.3%, for their pricing policies. WES caught up in the same inquiry falling 1.7%. Retail slipped slightly, PMV down 1.3% and SUL off 2.2% with JBH falling 2.0%. WEB fell 10.7% as it went ex-entitlement. FLT off 2.0% and DMP dropped 1.3%. Telcos eased, tech mixed with the All-Tech Index flat. Resources were mixed, iron ore down again as Singapore futures fell, BHP down 1.3% and RIO off 0.6%. Gold miners better on the bullion price, NST up 0.2% and NEM up 1.6% with oil and gas stocks slightly better outdone by uranium stocks that saw short covering again on Microsoft's embrace of Three Mile Island. In corporate news, ASB rose 2.4% after yet another contract from the US Navy. TLX rose 1.9% on a large US acquisition, HLS rose 7.5% on its sale of Lumus Imaging. FBU in a trading halt on a large capital raising. REA made another offer for Rightmove in the UK. Nothing on the economic front. Asian markets better on hoped-for Chinese stimulus, with HK up 0.2% and China up 0.4%. Japan closed for a holiday. 10Y yields rising to 3.97%. AUD heading towards 2024 high. Dow Futures up 54 points. NASDAQ Futures up 70 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
Over in the US, Wall Street started the new trading week in positive territory as investors bought into the dip following Wall Street's worst week in a year last week. The Dow Jones rose 1.2% on Monday, the S&P500 climbed 1.16% in recovery after the index posted its worst week since March 2023 last week, and the tech-heavy Nasdaq ended Monday's session up 1.16%. Investor eyes in the US are now firmly focused on the Fed's rate decision with the expectation of a cut to be announced later this month.In Europe overnight, it was a positive start to the week in the region as the STOXX 600 rose 0.76% led by travel and leisure stocks, while Germany's DAX added 0.77%, the French CAC rose 0.99% and, in the UK, the FTSE100 ended Monday's trading session up 1.09%.Across the Asia markets on Monday, key economic data out in the region painted a picture of eased economic stability which weighed on investor sentiment on Monday. Japan's Q2 GDP came in at 2.9% on an annual basis which fell short of economists' expectations of a 3.2% rise. Japan's Nikkei closed Monday's session down 0.48%, Hong Kong's Hang Seng lost 1.42%, and China's CSI index ended the day down 1.2%.On Monday, China's consumer price index climbed by 0.6% YoY in August which fell short of economists' expectations and paints a further concerning picture about the economic recovery of the world's second largest economy. China's producer price index also fell 1.8% YoY in August which was also a worse reading than economists' were expecting led by declines in the prices of oil, coal and other fuel industries due to insufficient domestic demand and a drag from the country's real estate sector.What to watch today:The local market started the new trading week in negative territory with a fall of 0.32% as investor sentiment was dampened by jobs data out in the US on Friday signalling a weakening labour environment in the world's largest economy.The big banks and energy stocks led the losses on Monday while rate sensitive real estate and tech stocks rallied to offset some of the heavy losses.Domino's Pizza (ASX:DMP) shares fell over 2.5% on Monday after the pizza giant was served with a class action from shareholders on allegations the company misled investors in 2021 about expected performance in Japan. Domino's has said it will defend against the legal proceedings and denies any liability.Looking at commodities, oil is trading 1.5% higher at US$68.68/barrel, gold is up 0.66% at US$2503/ounce and iron ore is up 0.34% at US$91.61/tonne.The Aussie dollar has slightly weakened overnight to buy 66.68 US cents, 95.17 Japanese Yen, 50.87 British Pence and 1 New Zealand dollar and 8 cents.Ahead of Tuesday's training session the SPI futures are anticipating the ASX to open the day up just shy of 1% following the rally on Wall St on Monday.We will likely see investors react to Westpac's consumer confidence data for September out this morning with the forecast of a 1.2% decline from a 2.8% rise in August, while NAB business confidence data for August is also out today with the forecast of a rise to 3 points from 1 point in July.Trading Ideas:Bell Potter has increased the 12-month price target on Premier Investments (ASX:PMV) from $35 to $37 and maintain a buy rating on the leading retail investment company following the release an update out of the company including FY24 post-AASB-16 (lease related payments guide) EBIT of $341m. The increase in the price target is due to Bell Potter's analyst seeing upside to the company's share price from the potential demerger of PMV's two-key brands, Smiggle and Peter Alexander which are highly profitable and global roll out worthy.Trading Central has identified a bearish signal on Orora (ASX:ORA) following the formation of a pattern over a period of 22-days which is roughly the same amount of time the share price m
ASX 200 rallied back from early losses to close only 25 points down at 7990 (-0.3%). No follow through this morning as resources found some bargain hunters and banks eased only slightly. The Big Bank Basket dropped to $245.27 (-0.5%). Losses across the financials, MQG off 0.6% and insurers falling, QBE down 0.4% and SUN down 1.3%. REITS were positive across the board with some M&A in HPI keeping the spice in the sector. GMG up 0.7% and SGP up 2.2%. Industrials were generally weaker, retail stocks suffered as PMV fell 3.9% on a trading update and the Smiggle boss sacked. LOV fell 4.5% with SUL down % on its ex-dividend, DMP continued lower and travel stocks in trouble, CTD down 5.3%. Iron ore miners perked up, BHP up 0.8% and FMG up 0.5% with some small gains in lithium stocks. PLS unchanged and LYC up 4.1%. Gold miners on the nose following bullion falls in USD. NST down 0.5%, EVN dropped 3.0% and RED off 3.3%. Oil and gas weaker. In corporate news, WBC has a new ‘King' in Anthony Miller, HPI saw a bid from Charter Hall Retail, and on the economic front, Business turnover rose 1.0% in July. Asian markets eased, Japan down 0.7%, HK off 2.0% and China down 1.3%. 10Y yields rose to 3.94%. Dow and NASDAQ Futures up 0.3% and 0.5% respectively. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 finished the week up 47 points to 8092 (+0.6%). For the month we are unchanged! Coincident? Pushed at close too. Solid gains across the board, banks as usual heading higher, CBA up 0.5% and the Big Bank Basket hitting new records, up to $239.31 (+0.6). Insurers also did well as yields rose. QBE up 0.6% and SUN up 1.1% with SQ2 bounding 3.1% ahead. Industrials solid too, REH up 2.2% and SVW ahead by 1.4%. REITs better GMG up 0.9% and SCG up 0.9%. Supermarkets eased back, WES down 2.0%, and WOW and COL eased back. Retail took heart from economic data today, JBH up 1.7% and PMV rising 0.9%. Travel stocks fining some friends, WEB bouncing back 0.6% on some book squaring. Resources were slightly higher. BHP continues to bounce around $40 up 0.6% with FMG easing 1.6% on broker comments. Gold miners doing ok, nothing spectacular, NST up 1.7% and EVN up 1.0%. Lithium stocks a little less depressed, PLS up 2.1% and LTR up 3.5%, with MIN still struggling down 1.1%. Oil and gas better, WDS up 2.1% and uranium stocks bouncing slightly. In corporate news, HVN fell 6.4% on soft numbers; Gerry reckons PE will take him out. DOW knocked it out of the park on results up 17.0%, and RHC continues to suffer from cost pressures, down 6.8%. Brookfield dodged a bullet there. On the economic front, retail sales buoyed things and led to higher yields at 3.97%. Asian markets are showing some strength, Japan up 0.7% on CPI numbers, China up 1.3% and HK up 2.2%. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 fell 13 points to 8071 (+0.2%) as some results fatigue set in. Banks slipped from lofty heights, with CBA off 1.0% and NAB falling 1.0%, with the Big Bank Basket down to $234.90 (0.8%). Insurers dipped, financials were also in the doldrums, with MQG off 0.5% and ASX down 1.7%. REITS mixed but drifted to the downside, GMG bounced 1.2% from a loss yesterday, and GPT fell 0.6%. Industrials were mixed, WOW off 1.1% and COL rallied 1.7% on better results. Tech slid, WTC off 0.4% and XRO fell 2.2%, the All-Tech Index dropping 0.9%. TLS drifted 0.5% lower and retail came under some pressure, with LOV smacked 13.0% on results, JBH off 1.4% and PMV down 1.2%. Travel stocks still on the nose, with FLT down 1.6%. In resources, iron ore stocks bounced, BHP beating expectations rose 1.3% on results, RIO up 0.8% and FMG up 1.8%. Lithium stocks slightly firmer, PLS up 2.0% and MIN up 1.0% with gold miners mixed, uranium stocks found buyers despite the fall in the spot price. DYL unchanged, and PDN down only 1.1%. Oil and gas leader WDS rose 3.9% on better-than-expected results. STO following suit up 1.9%. In corporate news, GYG rose 3.2% on its first set of numbers after the IPO. WOR rose 2.8% after results, JLG slumped 27.1% after a revenue decline, ZIP came undone down 7.9% despite a lift in transaction value. ASB up 3.6% on a settlement in the US. Nothing in economic news. Asian markets quiet, Japan +0.7%, HK +0.2%, China down 0.3%. 10Y yields slightly higher at 3.914%. Dow Futures down 13 points. NASDAQ Futures up 20 points. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 rose 13 points to 7827 (+0.2%) in quiet cautious trade ahead of US PPI tonight. Results are once again the focal point. Solid numbers from TPW and good guidance helping the retail sector again, with JBH up 4.0% on broker upgrades, PMV rose 1.2% and HVN pushing 1.9% ahead. Banks, as always were the beating heart of the market, with CBA up 1.5% ahead of results tomorrow. WBC and ANZ better on a broker upgrade, and CGF doing well on results today, up 6.5%. REITs mixed with GMG rebounding 0.9% and SGP off 0.7%. Elsewhere tech was mixed, WTC off 0.7% and REA up 1.0% on broker research, the All-Tech Index unchanged. In healthcare, CSL was dumped 4.6% post results as the outlook was sub-par, and Vifor seems to be still facing headwinds. Iron ore miners were slightly better, BHP up 0.3% and RIO rallying 0.5%, lithium again under severe pressure as PLS dropped 4.4% and MIN down 2.3%. LTR down 5.8%. Gold miners were better, bullion heading higher the driver, NEM up 1.5% and NST up 1.7%, with GMD jumping 8.3% following a large block trade. In corporate news, ORA revealed it had been approached with a NBIO at 255c by Lone Star. JHX is battling weak demand in ANZ together with rising wages and freight charges. On the economic front, wage growth came in a little lower than forecast, helping sentiment. In Asia, Japan has now made back all its losses from the extreme volatility last week. Japan up 2.8%, HK up flat and China -0.1%. 10Y yields slipped to 4%. Dow and NASDAQ Futures up 0.2% and 0.3%, respectively. Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
ASX 200 rallies 60 points to 7928 (0.8%) as iron ore rallies and China throws some money at stimulus. The ‘Three Amigos' all spurted ahead, BHP up 2.2%, RIO jumps 2.8% and FMG more muted post quarterly only up 1.0%. Lithium stocks got a lift from EV stimulus, PLS up 3.8% and MIN up 3.5% on quarterly. Some short covering adding to gains. Gold miners crashed as BGL returned, down 21.6%. NST dropped 3.2% with PRU off 3.1%. Oil and gas a little firmer, KAR up 5.8% on research WDS up 0.3% and some buying in uranium appeared. Banks were again a little better, WBC up 0.9% and the Big Bank Basket up to $228.30 (0.4%). MQG saw a 1.5% rally as brokers hoped for a 2H rebound. Insurers did well, QBE up 2.5% and SUN up 1.2%. REITs improved, GMG bouncing 1.1% with SGP up 1.4%. Industrials firm across the board, WES up 1.0%, TCL up 0.6% and retail powering ahead still. PMV up 1.7% with JBH 1.0% ahead. Tech stocks better, WTC up 1.5% and XRO up 1.1%. The All-Tech Index up 0.3%. In corporate news, NEC is facing strikes from staff on eve of Paris Olympics. Nothing on the economic front but US PCE tonight. Asian markets little changed as China moves again to try and stimulate.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
The ASX 200 pushed another 58 points higher to 8018 (0.7%) in a broad-based rally. Well off the intraday high though on some cooling as we await reactions to Trump and US reports this week. Banks were firm but off highs, CBA up 0.8% and NAB up 0.8% with the Big Bank Basket up to $227.88(0.8%). Other financials doing well too, ASX up another 1.2% with NWL up 1.7%. MQG pushed 0.5% ahead with insurers mixed. REITs were better with the exception of GMG falling 0.4% with SCG up 0.6%. Healthcare slightly better RMD up 2.0% and COH up 2.4%. Industrials firmed, WES putting on another 2.1% with retail stocks again finding buyers SUL up 1.3%, PMV up 1.9% and FLT up 2.8%. Tech in demand, WTC up 2.5% and XRO up 1.4%. In resources, BHP rose 0.6% with FMG double that gain. Gold miners were mixed as bullion consolidated, lithium still a little depressed and struggling for direction. Oil and gas better led by WDS up 1.3% and STO up 0.7%. In corporate news, LIC fell 18.1% on ABC media reports of issues. ABB dropped 14.0% as it launched a new cut-price NBN service, Buddy. Nothing locally on the economic front, in China, GDP data and retail sales numbers were disappointing again. Asian markets mixed, HK down 1.4%, Japan closed for a holiday, and China slightly higher. 10-year yields firmed 1bps to 4.33%.Why not sign up for a free trial? Get access to expert market insights and manage your investments with confidence. Ready to invest in yourself? Join the Marcus Today community.
Lords: * Fif * Mitch Topics: * The Ace Attorney series' English localization's naming conventions * The kissing mechanic in Bully represents both what is genius and terrible about the game * Podcast Prep Sheet Trending Guests and Topics * The Tay Bridge Disaster * https://www.scottishpoetrylibrary.org.uk/poem/tay-bridge-disaster/ * No but seriously what the hell is up with the user interface in Bully. I assume it's just a Rockstar thing? I'm only into Bully so it is a mystery * Comments that say "why did the algorithm recommend this to me" * https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=G1LhdhQEKtg Microtopics: * Two handfuls of times. * Something very fivey about hands. * Dependability and a detail-oriented nature. * Putting your resume in the show notes. * Naming your kid a list of two things. * A story taking place in a Los Angeles that is a satire of near future Japan. * Naming games after verbs. * Mario Push Button. * The Haiku-detecting tumblr bot. * Imagining an opinion and searching for someone who has it so you can yell at them. * All the time we have for Topic Lords. * Kissing a kissable person. (They have kissability.) * A dress-up fashion thing. * Wearing a reindeer patterned jumper to reduce your kissability. * Applying triple-A polish to a boarding school setting. * Dorms in a castle. * Hey, nice face. * Demographics based on what classes you have to take to kiss members of the demographic. * Dressing in real life like you do in a Grand Theft Auto game. * The one character in the entire GTA series that cares about the clothes you wear. * Secrets Behind the Suite: Unveiling the Hidden World behind Luxury Hotels. * Eco-friendly or Eco-fail? * Law and Disorder: how TV crime shows get it wrong. * Sending an email to yourself and it gets detected as spam. * The friend who has a lot of opinions about Homestuck. * Making your hearts for to quail. * Poems including civil engineering advice. * Good vs. bad nonsense poems. * A fun poem to read. * Paying money to engage with content. * Deliberately slipping on a banana peel. * What it says about hitting in the Banana Rules. * School administrators publishing statistics on how many banana peels you've slipped on. * Skyrim spoiling the presence of robots on the stats screen. * Watching what players do and rewarding every action they take. * A good video game is a game that has three good stats screens and no bad stats screens. * Having a question in your head and not knowing who to ask so you ask the person in front of you. * Youtube koans. * Showing content to someone who will be not that jazzed about it. * Youtube recommending a let's-play from a year ago with 10 views. * A PMV of the character you are obsessed with. * The only person who takes a the Youtube Creator Surveys. * Constantly deleting the shorts. * Posting a tweet to youtube.com. * Posting a link to your own videos on Youtube. * Community captions and what happened to them. * Doing annotations dirty. * Nekoneko. * Comments popping up and scrolling across the screen constantly. * Listening to a cassette tape you dug up in the desert.
The Slut Next Door sits down with the talented Noodledude! He helps to unpack what exactly is a Porn Music Video aka PMV and why gooners and porn lovers enjoy them. Noodledude also digs into how he got started editing and creating PMVs and his process in creating such sexy pieces of art masterpieces. Find & Follow Noodledude: Website, Discord Server, Twitter, Spotify, RedditSlut Next Door TwitterSlut Next Door Patreon
Get .1 ASHA CEU hereEpisode SummaryDoes the thought of working with complex airways make you lose your breath? Whether you find yourself breathless in fear or excitement, this episode has your name on it. Dr. Lindsay Griffin joins for a second round to discuss the ins and outs of the SLP's role in the tracheostomy and laryngectomy. For newbies looking to get the basics of this specialized area of our field, you'll leave with a firm foundation to answer questions like: What is the difference between a laryngectomy and a tracheostomy?; What is a speaking valve and what does it have to do with me?; and How do I not accidentally kill my patients? You more confident med SLP's will leave with some great tips to level up your practice, including some powerful cautionary tales. Tune in to learn about the details of the SLP's process and support for laryngectomy versus tracheostomy patients, and get some amazing guidance to get the knowledge and experience you need to get your foot into this incredibly complex clinical door. There's talk of pulmonary toileting, canulas, cuffs, PMV's, and body parts that do or do not grow back- (Nerdcast always delivers a bit more than you asked for :)). You can almost see Kate and Amy as dear in the headlight on this one-it's classic! So hold your breath and take the plunge, it's a good one!Course AccommodationsThe transcript for this course is provided below. You can also email us at ceu@slpnerdcast.comLearning Outcomes1. Describe the differences between tracheostomies and laryngectomies2. Explain the SLPs' role in management of patients with tracheostomies and laryngectomies3. Recognize external resources for acquiring deeper knowledge of complex airway managementResources:Passy Muir Speaking ValvesShiley Speaking ValveBlom-SingerAtosSpeaker DisclosuresLindsay Griffin financial disclosures: Lindsay is an Assistant Professor at Emerson College. Lindsay Griffin non-financial disclosures: Lindsay is a member of ASHA, SIG 13 and the Dysphagia Research Society.Kate Grandbois financial disclosures: Kate is the owner / founder of Grandbois Therapy + Consulting, LLC and co-founder of SLP Nerdcast.Kate Grandbois non-financial disclosures: Kate is a member of ASHA, SIG 12, and serves on the AAC Advisory Group for Massachusetts Advocates for Children. She is also a member of the Berkshire Association for Behavior Analysis and Therapy (BABAT), MassABA, the Association for Behavior Analysis International (ABAI) and the corresponding Speech Pathology and Applied Behavior Analysis SIG. Amy Wonkka financial disclosures: Amy is an employee of a public school system and co-founder for SLP Nerdcast.Amy Wonkka non-financial disclosures: Amy is a member of ASHA, SIG 12, and serves on the AAC Advisory Group for Massachusetts Advocates for Children.Time Ordered Agenda:15 minutes: Introduction, Disclaimers and Disclosures15 minutes: Review of the differences between tracheostomies and laryngectomies15 minutes: Review of the SLPs' role in management of patients with tracheostomies and laryngectomies10 minutes: Review of external resources for acquiring deeper knowledge of complex airway management5 minutes: Summary and ClosingDisclaimerThe contents of this episode are not meant to replace clinical advice. SLP Nerdcast, its hosts and guests do not represent or endorse specific products or procedures mentioned during our episodes unless otherwise stated. We are NOT PhDs, but we do research our material. We do our best to provide a thorough review and fair representation of each topic that we tackle. That being said, it is always likely that there is an article we've missed, or another perspective that isn't shared. If you have something to add to the conversation, please email us! Wed love to hear from you!__SLP Nerdcast is a podcast for busy SLPs and teachers who need ASHA continuing education credits, CMHs, or professional development. We do the reading so you don't have to! Leave us a review if you feel so inclined!We love hearing from our listeners. Email us at info@slpnerdcast.com anytime! You can find our complaint policy here. You can also:Follow us on instagramFollow us on facebookWe are thrilled to be listed in the Top 25 SLP Podcasts!Thank you FeedSpot!