“Discipline is the bridge between goals and accomplishment.” – Jim Rohn
Market Insights
Australian Market
The S&P/ASX200 Accumulation Index rose 3.1% in August, marking another strong month for Australian equities. Markets were buoyed by a third RBA cash rate cut this year, bringing the rate to 3.60%, and supported by global signals from Jackson Hole that U.S. policy easing is likely in September.
The August reporting season provided a wealth of insight into corporate resilience.
Consumer optimism surprised to the upside: retailers exposed to household goods reported accelerating sales growth of 4-8% in early August, particularly in hardware, electrical, and furniture. This momentum reflected the compounding effect of two RBA cuts (in February and May), robust wages growth, and ongoing house price appreciation. Despite higher household debt, in our opinion these factors underpinned spending, showing the Australian consumer is resilient.
Banking sector results reinforced this resilience. CBA reported lower impairment charges, while NAB flagged stabilisation in arrears, suggesting stress levels are moderating. Regulatory reforms post-GFC and a more supportive approach to arrears management have also softened the impact of higher borrowing costs.
Sector performance was diverse:
- Materials (+9.0%) and Energy (+1.6%) rallied as Chinese policy support lifted commodity demand. Importantly, China announced large-scale infrastructure initiatives and began tackling industrial overcapacity in steel, aluminium, and solar, improving outlooks for exporters.
- Healthcare (-13.3%) was hit hard led by CSL (-21.4%) after delaying gross margin recovery expectations. Globally, healthcare budgets and reimbursement rates are failing to keep pace with inflation and rising operating costs.
- Consumer Discretionary outperformed as rate-sensitive names rallied on stronger spending signals.
Reporting season was notable for its volatility: average share price moves on result day reached ±8.3%, on our assessment, the most volatile season on record. We believe that algorithmic and systematic trading amplified these swings, leading to dislocations between earnings revisions and share price reactions. For long-term investors, such volatility provides opportunities to differentiate between short-term distortions and genuine shifts in company value.
Global Markets
Global equities advanced again in August, but leadership narrowed, and dispersion increased across regions and styles. The MSCI ACWI (AUD, Net Return) rose +0.8%, extending a four-month winning streak.
Materials (+5.3%) led on firmer commodity prices and improving industrial demand signals, while Healthcare (+3.1%) and Communication Services (+2.5%) also contributed; Consumer Staples (-1.1%) and Real Estate (-0.8%) lagged as risk appetite remained firm.
US equities closed at fresh highs, yet the rally’s breadth was less even than earlier in the year, with growth- and cyclical-exposed segments continuing to carry most of the load.
- United States. The S&P 500 and Nasdaq posted a fifth straight monthly gain, supported by an earnings season in which over 75% of companies beat expectations. Core inflation cooled modestly, while headline was nudged up by firmer energy; the Fed stayed in wait-and-see mode ahead of September.
- Europe. Major indices (Euro Stoxx 50, DAX) ground higher despite softer hard data. Manufacturing stayed weak, but services stabilised and inflation continued to moderate, allowing the ECB to reinforce a cautious easing path (further cuts contingent on sustained disinflation). Earnings were broadly supportive overall; industrials and luxury outperformed, while banks came under pressure as investors reassessed profitability in a lower-rate environment.
- Asia. Performance was mixed. China struggled to maintain July’s momentum as weaker property data and ongoing geopolitical tension weighed on consumer and financials, even as policy support and tech earnings offered some offsets. Japan extended gains on robust corporate profits, a weaker yen, and steady export demand; the BoJ kept to a gradual normalisation, a stance equity markets interpreted as supportive for risk assets.
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