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In New York overnight, US equities closed lower as investors concerns over the state of the global economy, particularly in China, sparked a sell-off in equities, in addition to banking stocks weighing down the market. The Dow Jones fell 1.02%, the S&P500 lost 1.16% and the tech-heavy Nasdaq fell 1.14% on Tuesday. 

In Europe, markets closed lower on Tuesday as wages data in the UK weighed on investor sentiment. The UK median monthly wage, excluding bonuses, rose 7.8% in July from the prior corresponding period which is the largest annual growth rate since the records began in 2001, and provides further reason for the bank of England to continue raising interest rates to tackle inflation in the region. Unemployment in the UK also rose unexpectedly though from 4% to 4.2% in the three months to June. 

The RBA’s meeting minutes were released yesterday which could have boosted investor sentiment as the key takeaways were the slowing economy and acute pressure on household finances were behind the latest rate pause. We are not out of the woods yet though as the RBA did say at the latest meeting that further monetary tightening may be required to ensure inflation reaches the target 2-3% range within a reasonable timeframe.

Lake Resources (ASX:LKE) soared 25% yesterday, extending the rally this week after the lithium explorer released an update on its flagship Kachi Project. The update outlined the company reported successful stage 1 extraction and injection testing at the site to support the production of high purity battery grade lithium carbonate at the Kachi Lithium brine Project.

The market rally yesterday may also have been driven by the release of Australia’s annual Wage Price Index data for Q2 coming in at growth of 3.6% which was lower than expectations of 3.7% growth, in a sign wages inflation is starting to ease.

Iron ore slipped below US$100/tonne yesterday to near its lowest intraday level since June following China’s surprise 15-basis point interest rate cut on the one-year medium-term lending facility, alongside further economic data that indicated the economy’s recovery remains sluggish.

China’s industrial production data came in at a 3.7% rise for July, down from a 4.4% rise in June and below economists’ expectations of another 4.4% rise for July. The softest manufacturing activity was reported in mining output as well as electrical machinery and apparatus output. Chinese retail sales data was also released yesterday which broadly missed expectations as consumer spend on retail in the region rose by 2.5% in July from a year ago, below expectations of a 4.5% rise.

What to watch today:
• Ahead of the local trading session here in Australia the SPI futures are expecting the local index to open 1.04% lower amid the global market sell-off overnight.
• On the broader commodities front this morning, oil is trading 1.77% lower at US$81/barrel, gold is down 0.23% at US$1903/ounce, and iron ore is down 1.9% at US$103.50/tonne.
• AU$1.00 buying US$0.65, 94.16 Japanese Yen, 51.22 British Pence and NZ$1.08.

Trading Ideas:
• Bell Potter has increased the price target on Pro Medicus (ASX:PME) from $67 to $70 and maintain a hold rating on the leading health imaging IT provider following the release of the company’s FY23 results including revenues increasing by 34%, and EBIT increased 34%, both of which beat expectations. Bell Potter sees the drivers of growth remain firmly in place i.e. too few radiologists, and more managed care leading to more need for diagnostic imaging.
• And Trading Central has identified a bearish signal on Goodman Group (ASX:GMG) following the formation of a pattern over a period of 66 days which is roughly the same amount of time the share price may fall from the close of $19.89 to the range of $17.90 to $18.20 according to standard principles of technical analysis.