Stocks Are Wobbling. Follow These 3 Rules for Better Returns.
Kanebridge News
    HOUSE MEDIAN ASKING PRICES AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $1,641,773 (+0.89%)       Melbourne $986,710 (+0.32%)       Brisbane $1,021,281 (-0.20%)       Adelaide $935,576 (+2.61%)       Perth $916,604 (+1.57%)       Hobart $747,530 (+0.06%)       Darwin $694,960 (+0.13%)       Canberra $955,820 (+0.49%)       National $1,061,087 (+0.80%)                UNIT MEDIAN ASKING PRICES AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $771,811 (-0.11%)       Melbourne $497,462 (-0.03%)       Brisbane $617,063 (-1.04%)       Adelaide $462,046 (-1.38%)       Perth $490,445 (-0.33%)       Hobart $517,941 (+0.68%)       Darwin $396,797 (+8.47%)       Canberra $501,782 (-0.79%)       National $553,526 (-0.09%)                HOUSES FOR SALE AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 12,712 (+1,105)       Melbourne 16,823 (+343)       Brisbane 8,826 (+74)       Adelaide 2,590 (+231)       Perth 6,989 (+299)       Hobart 1,189 (+60)       Darwin 285 (+1)       Canberra 1,223 (+49)       National 50,637 (+2,162)                UNITS FOR SALE AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 10,136 (+173)       Melbourne 9,004 (-62)       Brisbane 1,749 (+13)       Adelaide 453 (+5)       Perth 1,582 (+67)       Hobart 202 (+1)       Darwin 328 (-5)       Canberra 1,110 (+4)       National 24,564 (+196)                HOUSE MEDIAN ASKING RENTS AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $800 ($0)       Melbourne $600 ($0)       Brisbane $640 ($0)       Adelaide $600 ($0)       Perth $670 ($0)       Hobart $550 ($0)       Darwin $760 (+$10)       Canberra $680 (+$10)       National $672 (+$3)                UNIT MEDIAN ASKING RENTS AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney $733 (-$8)       Melbourne $560 (-$5)       Brisbane $620 (-$5)       Adelaide $490 (-$8)       Perth $620 (+$20)       Hobart $450 ($0)       Darwin $550 (-$15)       Canberra $550 ($0)       National $583 (-$2)                HOUSES FOR RENT AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 5,793 (-16)       Melbourne 7,032 (+191)       Brisbane 4,223 (+22)       Adelaide 1,379 (+3)       Perth 2,274 (-59)       Hobart 230 (+3)       Darwin 112 (+7)       Canberra 515 (+27)       National 21,558 (+178)                UNITS FOR RENT AND WEEKLY CHANGE     Sydney 9,437 (+67)       Melbourne 6,688 (+64)       Brisbane 2,240 (-15)       Adelaide 374 (-10)       Perth 598 (+20)       Hobart 99 (-16)       Darwin 244 (0)       Canberra 740 (-2)       National 20,420 (+108)                HOUSE ANNUAL GROSS YIELDS AND TREND         Sydney 2.53% (↓)       Melbourne 3.16% (↓)     Brisbane 3.26% (↑)        Adelaide 3.33% (↓)       Perth 3.80% (↓)       Hobart 3.83% (↓)     Darwin 5.69% (↑)      Canberra 3.70% (↑)        National 3.29% (↓)            UNIT ANNUAL GROSS YIELDS AND TREND         Sydney 4.94% (↓)       Melbourne 5.85% (↓)     Brisbane 5.22% (↑)        Adelaide 5.51% (↓)     Perth 6.57% (↑)        Hobart 4.52% (↓)       Darwin 7.21% (↓)     Canberra 5.70% (↑)        National 5.48% (↓)            HOUSE RENTAL VACANCY RATES AND TREND       Sydney 0.8% (↑)      Melbourne 0.7% (↑)      Brisbane 0.7% (↑)      Adelaide 0.4% (↑)      Perth 0.4% (↑)      Hobart 0.9% (↑)      Darwin 0.8% (↑)      Canberra 1.0% (↑)      National 0.7% (↑)             UNIT RENTAL VACANCY RATES AND TREND       Sydney 0.9% (↑)      Melbourne 1.1% (↑)      Brisbane 1.0% (↑)      Adelaide 0.5% (↑)      Perth 0.5% (↑)      Hobart 1.4% (↑)      Darwin 1.7% (↑)      Canberra 1.4% (↑)      National 1.1% (↑)             AVERAGE DAYS TO SELL HOUSES AND TREND       Sydney 28.8 (↑)      Melbourne 31.1 (↑)      Brisbane 31.4 (↑)      Adelaide 24.1 (↑)        Perth 35.7 (↓)       Hobart 28.4 (↓)     Darwin 42.2 (↑)      Canberra 29.4 (↑)      National 31.4 (↑)             AVERAGE DAYS TO SELL UNITS AND TREND       Sydney 28.7 (↑)        Melbourne 31.3 (↓)     Brisbane 31.6 (↑)        Adelaide 22.9 (↓)     Perth 36.5 (↑)        Hobart 28.8 (↓)     Darwin 41.8 (↑)        Canberra 36.2 (↓)     National 32.2 (↑)            
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Stocks Are Wobbling. Follow These 3 Rules for Better Returns.

By IAN SALISBURY
Thu, May 30, 2024 9:54amGrey Clock 3 min

Suddenly, stocks look shaky. After briefly touching 40,000 earlier this month, the Dow has since shed more than 1,000 points, as worries flare about where interest rates are headed next . The index posted another loss on Wednesday, down 411 points, or 1.06%, to 38,442.

While volatility can be frustrating. It has always been part of the two-steps forward, one-step back nature of the stock market. So keep in mind: Stocks may still have room to run , and they perform their best when investors feel least confident.

Here are three smart rules for interpreting the current market culled from new stock research.

Don’t assume the market is in a bubble

Anytime the market hits a new high, then pulls back sharply, it’s natural to wonder: Could it be all downhill from here? It isn’t an idle concern. Even after the recent dip, stocks are trading at more than 25 times trailing 12-month earnings, their highest level since 2021, according to FactSet.

Still, investors shouldn’t necessarily assume the market has become irrational, suggests a recent note by Leuthold Group, a stock research firm known for compiling dozens of bespoke indicators to measure market sentiment.

Leuthold recently compared large capitalisation stock prices to four separate valuation thresholds it thinks mark out bubble territory.

The results? This year, prices have approached three of these thresholds—one focused on forecast earnings, one based on average earnings and one based on cash flow. But after getting close, stocks didn’t blow through these thresholds as might be expected during a bubble. Instead, they stalled or pulled back. “‘Resistance’ proves formidable,” the firm concluded, citing a term common in technical analysis.

The fourth valuation threshold, which Leuthold calls “P/E on trailing peak GAAP EPS” has yet to be reached. The indicator compares stock prices not to companies’ most recent earnings, but to the market’s record for earnings, in this case set in the first quarter of 2022.

While stocks are trading at 25 times their peak earnings—a very high figure by historical standards—they are still below the 30 times level Leuthold thinks signals bubble territory. The upshot: “We don’t think U.S. large caps quite qualify as a mania,” writes Chief Investment Officer Doug Ramsey.

Don’t sweat the short-term

It’s natural after a short, sharp pullback to worry where the market is headed next. But trying to make short-term market calls is usually a fool’s errand, according to Trivariate Research, another investment firm.

Trivariate recently tested more than two dozen stock market metrics it says are commonly used to predict short-term stock market declines. These indicators included the S&P 500 put-to-call ratio, mutual fund flows, the futures-based VIX fear gauge, the price of oil and more.

The results were “terrible,” according to the firm. “The factors’ large loss predictions were correct at about the same rate as random selection,” Trivariate said in its note.

The firm found that during many months when signals like the VIX and the Conference Board’s Leading Economic Indicators Index predicted a big drop, the market actually showed bigger-than-average gains. The indicators were signalling volatility not declines, the firm noted.

In another test, a model that Trivariate built based on several other indicators also wasn’t much help either. When the model predicted a large stock market loss, defined as a 2.5% monthly drop, the decline failed to materialise 60% of the time.

Do embrace the uncertainty

While uncertainty isn’t always comfortable, it can be to investors’ advantage. If you are willing to run with it.

Retired Wall Street economist Jim Paulsen points to a metric known as the Monetary Policy Uncertainty Index , which tallies newspaper reports and other data to measure uncertainty about what the Fed will do next.

Since 1985 the index has averaged just under 100, but since 2020 it has been elevated most of the time. It’s currently at 144, a higher level than during about 80% of its history.

Still, Paulsen argues this is good news. He compares the Fed’s Jerome Powell era, where the index has averaged 110, to eras of three earlier Fed Chairs: Ben Bernanke, Janet Yellen, and Alan Greenspan, where it averaged about 75.

Investors have been rewarded for enduring the lack of clarity. The S&P 500 has posted average annual returns of more than 12% during Powell’s term, compared with less than 10% under his three predecessors, according to the note.

“All investors long for clarity,” Paulsen writes. “But the stock market never does that well when you and I are comfortable. The great bulk of the returns generated by the stock market typically occur when most are still in their bunkers waiting for conditions to improve.”



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The worldwide trend Australia does not want to be following

Governments around the world are offering incentives to reverse a downward spiral that could threaten economic growth

By KANEBRIDGE NEWS
Fri, Oct 18, 2024 2 min

The Australian birth rate is at a record low, new data has shown. 

Figures from the Australian Bureau of Statistics have revealed there were 286,998 births registered around the country last year, or 1.5 babies per woman.

Birth rates in Australia have been in a slow decline since the 1990s, down from 1.86 births per woman in 1993. Declining fertility rates among girls and women aged 15 to 19 years was most stark, down two thirds, while for women aged 40 to 44 years, the rate had almost doubled.

“The long-term decline in fertility of younger mums as well as the continued increase in fertility of older mums reflects a shift towards later childbearing,” said Beidar Cho, ABS head of demography statistics. “Together, this has resulted in a rise in median age of mothers to 31.9 years, and a fall in Australia’s total fertility rate.” 

The fall in the Australian birth rate is in keeping with worldwide trends, with the United States also seeing fertility rates hit a 32-year low. The Lancet reported earlier this year that, based on current trends, by 2100 more than 97 percent of the world’s countries and territories “will have fertility rates below what is necessary to sustain population size over time”.

On a global scale, the Lancet reported that the total fertility rate had “more than halved over the past 70 years” from about five children per female in the 1950s to 2.2 children in 2021. In countries such as South Korea and Serbia, the rate is already less than 1.1 child for each female.

Governments around the world have tried to incentivise would-be parents, offering money, increased access to childcare and better paid maternity leave.

Experts have said without additional immigration, lower birth rates and an ageing population in Australia could put further pressure on young people, threaten economic growth and create economic uncertainty. However, a study released earlier this year by the University of Canberra showed the cost of raising a child to adulthood was between $474,000 and $1,097,000.

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11 ACRES ROAD, KELLYVILLE, NSW

This stylish family home combines a classic palette and finishes with a flexible floorplan

35 North Street Windsor

Just 55 minutes from Sydney, make this your creative getaway located in the majestic Hawkesbury region.

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