Good morning to the day trading cohort. Thanks to @Shovel...

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    Good morning to the day trading cohort. Thanks to @Shovel @Helsyd @Ravgnome and @Patterns.

    Shares on the Australian market closed little changed after investors seemed more worried by coronavirus outbreaks in Australia and abroad than US politicians striking a deal on economic stimulus.

    The S&P/ASX200 benchmark index closed lower by 5.6 points, or 0.08 per cent, to 6669.9 on Monday.
    The All Ordinaries lost 4.1 points, or 0.06 per cent, to 6920.0.

    Most sectors closed lower. Utilities lost 2.21 per cent.
    The materials sector gained 1.43 per cent.

    The number of people infected by a Sydney COVID-19 cluster rose by 15 to 83 as states and territories restrict people from much or all of NSW entering.

    Several European countries have placed new restrictions on travel to and from the United Kingdom due to a new strain of the coronavirus spreading rapidly there.

    Meanwhile there was little ASX investor response to US congressional leaders agreeing on a $US900 billion ($1.2 trillion) economic package. The news broke early in the session.

    The Aussie dollar was buying 75.62 US cents at 1621 AEDT, lower from 75.89 US cents at Friday’s close.

    Source: The Bull

    The S&P 500 lost ground on Monday, but was well off its session lows as investors grappled with the outbreak of an ominous new strain of COVID-19 along with the likely passage of a long-awaited stimulus package.

    The Nasdaq joined the S&P 500 in the red, but financials helped the blue-chip Dow reverse course for a modest gain.

    “While there’s talk of the sell-off being related to the new COVID strain, my sense is air’s being let out of the balloon,” said Oliver Pursche, president of Bronson Meadows Capital Management in Fairfield, Connecticut. “We got ahead of ourselves in terms of market performance and we still have significant economic headwinds.”

    Congress hammered out a pandemic relief agreement on Sunday after months of partisan wrangling. The $900 billion package, expected to pass on Monday, includes unemployment aid and steers money to small businesses, airlines, transit systems and vaccine distribution.

    “Last week it was pretty clear we were going to get something, but (the stimulus package) is on the low end of what people were hoping for,” Pursche said.

    But the emergence of new, highly infectious strain of COVID-19 in Britain has raised fears of additional shutdowns, and prompted countries around the world to shut their doors to travelers from the United Kingdom.

    The news sent airline stocks sliding, even with the prospect of $15 billion in payroll assistance for commercial carriers included in the stimulus deal. The S&P 1500 Airline index was down 1.2%.

    Tesla Inc became the most valuable company ever added to the S&P 500 and will account for about 1.69% of the index. The electric car maker’s stock dropped 4.6%.

    Banks bucked the trend. The U.S. Federal Reserve released the results of its semiannual stress test late Friday and announced relaxed restrictions on buybacks and dividends. The S&P Banking index jumped 3.0%.

    Goldman Sachs Group surged 7.4%, surpassing its pre-COVID share price.

    The CBOE Volatility Index .VIX, a gauge of investor anxiety, jumped to its highest level since early November and was also on course for its biggest one-day point jump since Oct. 28.

    The Dow Jones Industrial Average was flat, the S&P 500 was down a third of a percent and the Nasdaq Composite
    dropped around half a percent.

    Of the 11 major sectors in the S&P 500, financials and tech were the only percentage gainers.

    Nike Inc rose 4.7% after the athletic apparel maker boosted its full-year revenue forecast, prompting multiple brokers to raise their price targets.


    Declining issues outnumbered advancing ones on the NYSE by a 2.06-to-1 ratio; on Nasdaq, a 1.41-to-1 ratio favored decliners.

    The S&P 500 posted 12 new 52-week highs and no new lows; the Nasdaq Composite recorded 153 new highs and 16 new lows.

    Source: Reuters

    Markets

    Gold: $US1,875.86 ($2,471.03) (-0.26%)
    Silver: $US26.15 ($34.45) (+1.46%)
    Oil (WTI): $US47.77 (-2.71%)
    Oil (Brent): $US50.76 (-2.87%)
    Coal: $US83.25 (+0.60%)
    Iron 62pc Fe: $US155.11 (+1.72%)
    AUD/USD: $US0.7591 (-0.41%)
    Bitcoin: $US22,893.10 (-5.07%)

    TUESDAY:
    Pepinnini (ASXNN) – capital raising
    HSC Technology (ASX:HSC) – capital raising
    Blue Star Helium (ASX:BNL) – acquisition of mineral leases
    Impact Minerals (ASX:IPT) – exploration results

    WEDNESDAY:
    Australian Vanadium (ASX:AVL)
    – updated pre-feasibility study
    Dubber Corporation (ASXUB) – acquisition
    Rafaella Resources (ASX:RFR) – capital raising
    BuildingIQ (ASX:BIQ) – receivership appointment
    Douugh (ASXOU) – acquisition
    Rex Minerals (ASX:RXM) – project update

    Source: *

    Over to The Smug Fig at East Brisbane - another favourite breakfast/brunch place of mine.
    Feast on Crushed Avocado with Feta, Hummus Charred Corn, Radish and Zataar.

    Smugfig.JPG

    Successful trading to All.
    Last edited by Cleo: 22/12/20
 
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