He said the movement away from high-growth names wasn’t necessarily based on inflation fears or negative news, but more as a source of funding for materials and industrials.
“They are just used as funding for investments into companies that maybe the market sees as having immediate term upside in earnings, based upon a resumption in economic activity,” Mr Sequeira said.
The banks were firmly in focus this week as a slew of half-year reports revealed surging profits, a sharp rebound in dividends, and billions in excess capital that should ultimately trickle down to investors.
The first-half reports from NAB, ANZ and Westpac - while not exactly stellar - showed a massive turnaround in headline profits from the depressed levels of last year, when a pandemic-fuelled surge in bad debt provisions wiped nearly $5 billion from the big lenders’ profits.
Elsewhere, record iron ore prices above $US200 a tonne helped BHP, Rio Tinto, and Fortescue Metals all gain, while gold miners were also strong as the precious metal moved to near three-month highs above $US1800 an ounce.
Travel firms also rebounded after NSW delivered a pleasing COVID update: no new local cases.
Webjet rose 7.4 per cent to $4.78, Flight Centre gained 7.3 per cent to $15.51, and Corporate Travel added 6.3 per cent to $17.86 and were the market’s best performing firms on Friday.
CSL dropped 0.9 per cent to $274.51 and was joined in the red by fellow health care names ResMed, Sonic, and Fisher and Paykel.
The sector dropped 0.8 per cent for the week.
Technology suffered even more severely, losing 10.5 per cent across the five sessions.
Afterpay shed 18.9 per cent this week to close at $95.38, its lowest in five months. Appen fell 21.5 per cent across the five sessions, Nearmap was 15 per cent lower and Nuix dropped 10.6 per cent.
Mr Sequeira said the market had surged impressively from its flat position two weeks ago, though a consolidation would not be surprising as investors eye off all-time highs.
“It is not unusual for the market to take the pause before breaching that all-time high.
“There wouldn’t be any surprises if that occurred, or even a retracement.”
US futures were pointing to gains on Wall Street tonight, with the S&P500 and Dow E-mini up 0.1 per cent, and the Nasdaq gaining 0.3 per cent.