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Articles
Government tinkering a 'body blow' to SMSFs
Market Update - 31 August 2012
Securely transfer your personal and business information
'Speeding tickets' for SMSFs
Cashing in risk
Those who miss out
Debt Consolidation and Budget review tools added to the Cash Flow / Financial tools on this website.
Abbott clarifies super stance
Advisers beat banks in fostering client loyalty
SPAA sounds warning on tax backdating
What a relationship breakdown may mean for an SMSF
Create opportunity from market volatility
Retirement savings challenge
New Financial year: the outlook for markets
Market Update - 30th June 2012
New Financial year: the outlook for markets
The impact of today's global uncertainties on the Australian economy, stockmarket and investors this financial year can be separated into those associated with .......








.......a crisis of confidence and those associated with ongoing debt deleveraging.


The impacts from a crisis of confidence in Europe will
primarily be focused on eurozone and global debt markets. This could
potentially impact Australian corporations with high debt levels as well as
Australian banks seeking wholesale funding.


Currently Australian corporations have very low debt levels and Australian banks have
been reducing their dependence on wholesale funding due to the very strong
growth in domestic term deposits.


The damage from a crisis of confidence would likely be fleeting. If anything, it might create a
short-term buying opportunity for local investors in the Australian market.


In contrast, ongoing global debt reduction will slow global economic growth for a sustained
period.


But a low-growth world is not necessarily bad for markets or investors. There are
still opportunities for Australian investors to generate income and returns.


The Australian market, for example, has one of the highest dividends yields in the world and
some of the best growth prospects.


Australian dividend yields are high and sustainable and even if world markets do not go
anywhere in 2012-3, investors can receive close to a 6 per cent fully franked
yield from the local Australian market.


With the cash rate heading down, this yield will look more and more attractive to investors.
Companies that can deliver a high and sustainable dividend yield, or companies
that have growth in a low-growth world, or both, will be bid up by the market.
They are the ones we want to own.


At present, whether a company is a good quality company, low quality company, high growth,
low growth; pretty much all companies are trading around very similar ranges.


We think there should be differentiation, there should be discernment in the market - and
there will be at some stage - and that's where we see opportunities.


I also think there is also some confusion in the market about what is being caused by
Reserve Bank of Australia
interest rate settings and what is being caused by large structural shifts in
markets and economies. Bricks-and-mortar retailers are facing structural
headwinds that have more to do with consumer preference changes, focus on value
for money and channel to market and very little to do with interest rate policy.


Interest rate settings will not change the long-term structural themes playing out in the
economy. The significant structural headwinds facing large parts of the
automotive sector, aluminium smelting, steel, media and bricks-and-mortar
retailers will be there for a prolonged period regardless of interest rates.


 


Paul Taylor is head of Australian Equities at Fidelity Worldwide Investment
2-7-12
Source:  Professional Planner    http://www.professionalplanner.com.au





24th-July-2012

        
FuturePlan Partners Pty Ltd, ACN 097 032 114, Corporate Authorised Representative of
SECURITOR Financial Group Limited, ABN 48 009 189 495, AFSL and Australian Credit License 240687,
Level 7, 530 Collins Street , Melbourne VIC 3000.