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Thursday, April 25, 2024

Stock market slightly rises; DITO, Ayala bounce back

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The stock market edged slightly higher Tuesday, with investors capping early gains on worries over a spike in COVID-19 cases and stricter quarantine rules.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index added 6.62 points, or 0.1 percent, to 6,559.08 on a value turnover of P5.9 billion. Gainers beat losers, 118 to 97, with 41 issues unchanged.

DITO CME Holdings Corp., the third major mobile phone firm, rose 3.4 percent to P10.18, while conglomerate Ayala Corp. climbed 3.3 percent to P757.

Universal Robina Corp., the biggest snack food maker, advanced 3 percent to P125.50, while BDO Unibank Inc., the largest lender in terms of assets, gained 2.2 percent at P104.60.

Meanwhile, optimism over the economic recovery helped push Asian markets higher Tuesday following another record on Wall Street, with focus on the Federal Reserve’s much-anticipated policy meeting this week.

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News that several European countries had stopped administering the AstraZeneca vaccine on safety fears, dealing a blow to the continent’s already stuttering inoculation program, appeared to have little impact on sentiment.

As the US vaccine program kicks on and Americans begin to get their government cash handouts as part of President Joe Biden’s mega-stimulus, investors are betting that months of pent-up spending will soon be let loose on the world’s top economy, a key driver of global growth.

Expectations for a surge in activity in the second half of the year, backed by huge government rescue packages and central bank largesse, have helped power world markets to record or multi-year highs.

However, the rocket-powered recovery has investors growing increasingly worried about soaring inflation that could force national banks to wind down the ultra-loose monetary policies that have helped send equities higher.

US benchmark 10-year Treasury yields—a guide to future interest rates—have risen to a one-year high in recent weeks.

Still, for now the positive economic benefits were winning the tug of war with inflation fears.

Wall Street’s three main indexes chalked up healthy gains with the Dow and S&P 500 hitting new all-time highs and even the Nasdaq—which has suffered from a shift out of tech stocks over the past month—enjoying a healthy run-up. 

And Asia continued the run with Tokyo, Hong Kong, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai, Bangkok, Wellington and Taipei all up.

“On the heels of the reopening optimism, stocks again become a flat-out buy as tailwinds from an expected stimulus-induced shopping bonanza will find their way into higher corporate profits and higher earnings per share,” said Axi strategist Stephen Innes. 

“Markets continue to move based on the expectation of a post-virus boom. At least that is the dominant narrative right now. The economy, boosted by another round of stimulus, will surge once the virus is under control and things return to normal.”

Referring to Biden’s hope that Americans would be able to celebrate Independence Day together in July, Innes added: “I have some news for the Biden administration; the party has already started.” With AFP

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