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Written by: Ryan Love
Thursday, 03 March 2011

The simple summary is BHP and banks were the clear winners and large industrials were disappointing.

This reflects the "two speed" nature of the Australian economy (not surprisingly resources bounced 3.7% during the month compared to 1.7% for industrials).

Written by: Ryan Love
Thursday, 03 March 2011

Sales of new cars and trucks in Australia fell a seasonally adjusted 0.5% in February from January, according to industry figures.

The Federal Chamber of Automotive Industries said in its monthly VFACTS report that 80,896 vehicles were sold in February, 1.6% more than in February 2010 in original terms.

Year-to-date industry sales were 154,480 vehicles, down 1.7% or 2,603 vehicles from the same time a year earlier. The FCAI said passenger vehicle sales fell 5.0% in February on year, while sales of sports utilities were up 4.7%.

Written by: Ryan Love
Thursday, 03 March 2011

The total number of Australian houses and apartments approved for construction fell a seasonally adjusted 15.9% in January from December, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said.

Economists had expected on average that total residential building approvals fell 3.0% from the month before. Private-sector house approvals fell a seasonally adjusted 2.4% from a month earlier and fell 18.8% from a year earlier, the ABS said.

Written by: Ryan Love
Thursday, 03 March 2011

Australia's seasonally adjusted trade surplus narrowed to $1.88bn in January from a surplus of $2.02bn in December, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said. The figure is wider than analysts' expectations of a surplus of $1.5bn.

Written by: Ryan Love
Wednesday, 02 March 2011

New homes sales rose 2.5% in Jan from Dec according to a report by the Housing Industry Association in conjunction with manufacturing group JELD-WEN.

Detached house sales increased by 2.2% while the sale of multi-units rose 5%. Total detached house sales increased by 3.7% over the three months to Jan 2011 but remained down by 9.8% when compared with the three month period to Jan 2010.

Written by: Ryan Love
Wednesday, 02 March 2011

The economy grew solidly in the fourth quarter of 2010, increasing 0.7% from the third quarter and by 2.7% from the year-earlier period, the Australian Bureau of Statistics said.

The main contributors to growth in the quarter were a sharp rise in plant and machinery equipment and a rise in store inventories. A fall in construction detracted from growth.

Written by: Ryan Love
Monday, 28 February 2011

Civil unrest in the Middle East and a relatively poor domestic reporting season were the hot topics of the month.

The All Ordinaries Index shrugged off the negative sentiment to gain 1.5% and close February at 4,922.6 points. 

Global markets were also generally positive with the Dow Jones Index gaining 2.8%, the FTSE gaining 1.7%, the Hang Seng falling 0.5% and the Nikkei 225 Index gaining 3.8%.

Written by: Ryan Love
Monday, 31 January 2011

It certainly has been a devastating and tragic January with severe flooding across the country.  The Australian share market has understandably underperformed in comparison to the US for the month.

The All Ordinaries Index gained a meagre 0.1% to close January at 4,850.0 points.  Global markets were mixed for the month with the Dow Jones Index gaining 2.7%, the FTSE falling 0.1%, the Hang Seng gaining 1.8% and the Nikkei 225 Index gaining 0.1%.

Written by: Ryan Love
Sunday, 09 January 2011

Share markets around the world posted a solid month in December capping off an otherwise flat year.

The All Ordinaries Index gained 3.6% to close the year at 4,846.9 points.  Global markets also recorded solid monthly gains in December with the Dow Jones Index gaining 5.2%, the FTSE gaining 6.7%, the Hang Seng gaining 0.1% and the Nikkei 225 Index gaining 2.9%.

Written by: Ryan Love
Tuesday, 30 November 2010

Further concerns over European markets weighed on the Australian share market in November.

The All Ordinaries Index fell 1.2% to close at 4,676.4 points.  Global markets (with the exception of Japan) also fell in November with the Dow Jones Index falling 1.0%, the FTSE falling 2.6%, and the Hang Seng falling 0.4%.  The Nikkei 225 Index gained 7.7% for the month.