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Bonds have been driving stocks in 2024, and markets continue to look for rate cuts moving forward. The futures market has pushed back the timing of these well into 2025, while the risks of another hike this year have even crept back into the current pricing. However, a quick glance at the RBA Cash rate since the new millennium shows that after periods of major interest rate adjustment, we often see prolonged periods of no change, i.e. many, many months with a cash rate of 4.35% would not surprise. If today’s AFR story is on point and we won’t see rate cuts until next Christmas, the valuation of some areas of the ASX200 does feel rich.

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Latest Reports

Afternoon report

The Match Out: ASX follows U.S higher, shrugs off tariffs

Between copper, pharmaceutical and country-specific tariffs sprayed across the globe by U.S President Donald Trump overnight, there was plenty on the macro front for the local bourse to digest today.

The Match Out Market Matters
Morning report

What Matters Today: Can the Utilities Sector Extend its Recent Outperformance?

The ASX200 fell 0.6% on Wednesday, its largest decline in two months, as the market spent its 26th day rotating in a relatively tight 200-point range. However, while the index has been very calm for almost six weeks on the stock level, it's been a very different story with the return of tariff uncertainty and the ever-changing perceptions around the future path for interest rates, spiking volatility across stocks – it’s just been a case of rotation between sectors instead of between stocks and cash.

what matters today Market Matters
Afternoon report

The Match Out: Stocks hit as Trump ramps up tariffs

A weaker session today as Copper tariff news created some volatility amongst the resources, gold stocks were weak, while rate sensitive areas like property felt the pinch from the RBA reticence to cut rates yesterday.

The Match Out Market Matters
Weekend report

Weekend Q&A: The ASX200 closes above 8600 for the first time

The ASX200 advanced another 1% last week, closing above the psychological 8600 level for the first time. The healthcare, real estate, and materials sectors all closed up around 3%, while the financial sector was the weakest over the five days, closing down 0.7%. For the market to extend the recent gains, it will need to shrug off high valuations and lack of earnings growth, although, as we saw last week, the resources stocks can do some of the heavy lifting after experiencing a tough 18 months.

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