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Friday, April 19, 2024

Market extends losses; DITO CME up

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Stocks fell Wednesday as traders tried to assess the Federal Reserve’s next moves in the fight against inflation, with some appearing to adopt a “defensive” approach.

The PSE index, the 30-company bellwether of the Philippine Stock Exchange, slipped 18 points, or 0.28 percent, to close at 6,446.35, as five of the six subsectors declined, with financials as the exception.

The broader all-share index went down 7 points, or 0.21 percent, to settle at 3,464.12 on a value turnover of P3.4 billion. Losers edged gainers, 88 to 82, while 51 shares were unchanged.

Only three of the 10 most active stocks ended in the green, led by DITO CME Holdings Corp. which advanced 1.83 percent to P2.78. BDO Unibank Inc. rose 1.25 percent to P129.50, while Bank of the Philippine Islands picked up 0.20 percent to finish at P100.20.

The peso fell for a third day to close at 56.21 against the US dollar from 56.14 Tuesday. The local currency was also down 0.82 percent against the greenback since the start of this year’s trading.

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Meanwhile, Asian markets were mixed Wednesday. More or less flat results in New York offered global investors little direction, leaving them to scrutinize mixed earnings reports for major US lenders.

Not even receding fears of a banking crisis coupled with optimism for a recovery in the world’s second-biggest economy were enough to give a meaningful boost to sentiment.

Stephen Innes, of SPI Asset Management, suggested in a note that, with little to go on, “global traders have seemingly moved into defensive mode as the debate goes on whether the Fed is at the top of its hiking cycle”.

That debate remained far from settled, with some analysts warning that certain investors’ apparent confidence in coming rate cuts was misplaced.

Fed officials themselves seemed split on the way forward, with Atlanta bank boss Raphael Bostic happy for one more hike before holding rates above five percent for a time, and St. Louis counterpart James Bullard favoring taking them as high as 5.5-5.75 percent.

Borrowing costs are currently at 4.75-5 percent.

Paul Mackel, global head of foreign-exchange research at HSBC, urged investors “not get too complacent” amid the relative calm in markets.

“A couple more hikes and then the next thing is, ‘Well, what’s next?’ Are we gonna be facing a much bigger slowdown?” he said on Bloomberg Television.

Investors are also weighing the outlook for the Chinese economy, with data Tuesday showing it expanded a forecast-busting 4.5 percent in January-March, the first quarter it has been unencumbered by growth-sapping zero-Covid restrictions.

The jump was helped by a surge in retail sales in March, but while the readings were healthy, other figures on industrial output and fixed-asset investment came in below par, pointing to an uneven recovery, and weighing on most Asian markets Tuesday.

“The market has been very biased to discount good news in China, but we think the improvement, mainly if inflation picks up, will become harder to ignore over the coming months,” Innes said, pointing to “a continued reopening impulse, still-accommodative macro policies and a low base” from the previous year.

Shanghai, Tokyo, Hong Kong, Taipei, Bangkok and Mumbai were all down Wednesday, while Sydney, Seoul, Wellington, Jakarta and Singapore were up.

London and Frankfurt were also down in early trade, while Paris was flat.

The FTSE sank after the release of new data showing UK inflation slowed less than expected to remain stubbornly above 10 percent last month.

“Inflation falling to 10.1 percent in March marks a bittersweet moment as markets had anticipated inflation to dip into the single digits for the first time since last summer,” said Srijan Katyal, global head of strategy and trading services at international brokerage ADSS.

“However, the decline in inflation is still welcome news for consumers across the country.” With AFP

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