spot_img
28.1 C
Philippines
Friday, March 29, 2024

Market retreats; URC rises

- Advertisement -

Stocks fell Friday after a four-day advance, following the movement of Asian markets and Wall Street amid a global sell-off after a deadly Barcelona rampage claimed by the Islamic State jihadist group exacerbated mounting fears over White House turmoil.

The Philippine Stock Exchange index, the 30-company benchmark, shed 56 points, or 0.7 percent, to close at 8,016.73, as five of the six major sectors declined.  Despite the loss, the bellwether was still up 17.2 percent since the start of the year.

The heavier index, representing all shares, also tumbled 26 points, or 0.6 percent, to settle at 4,734.84, on a value turnover of P5.4 billion.  Losers outnumbered gainers, 107 to 74, while 58 issues were unchanged.

Seven of the 20 most active stocks ended in the green, led by Crown Equities Inc. which surged 17 percent to P0.255 and PXP Energy Corp. which jumped 8.3 percent to P3.90.

Food manufacturer Universal Robina Corp. rose 1 percent to P150, while Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co. gained 0.8 percent to P87.80.

- Advertisement -

In New York, the S&P 500 Index tumbled by its second-biggest drop of the year with financial and technology shares among the worst hit, as news broke of a van ploughing into pedestrians in the Catalan capital, killing 13.

Stocks were initially in the red from rumors Donald Trump’s economic advisor Gary Cohn would resign owing to unhappiness over the US president’s response to a violent rally by racist groups in Charlottesville, although a White House source denied the claims.

Hong Kong led the Asian sell-off Friday with shares down more than one percent in morning trade. The Hang Seng was also dragged lower by market heavyweight Lenovo’s plummeting share price after the Chinese tech giant posted a surprise quarterly loss.

Tokyo was also more than one percent down by the break, as the Nikkei also struggled in the face of the renewed strength of the yen against the greenback.

Shanghai, Sydney and Seoul all fell, just as Asia-Pacific stocks had clawed back much of their losses from last week’s slump over fears of military clashes between North Korea and the US, fuelled by angry threats from both sides.

“Last Thursday’s Korean scare sell-off has now been followed by another significant decline,” said Ric Spooner, an analyst at CMC Markets in Sydney.

“This could be a more typical situation where volatility creates volatility as pent up profit taking and nervous investors are motivated to act as prices begin to weaken.”

Bourses in Europe closed before the Spanish attack unfolded, and mostly fell on uncertainty following minutes from a European Central Bank meeting highlighting concerns over the rising euro.

Sentiment in the US was also dented after the White House Thursday said Trump had abandoned plans to form an advisory council on infrastructure, worsening business fears he will struggle to enact pledges to boost the economy.

“Diminishing West Wing support from both business and political allies will continue to abrade investors’ confidence in President Trump’s economic agenda,” said Oanda analyst Stephen Innes. 

Gold broadly held gains, while on forex markets the dollar languished below 109.5 yen as safe haven assets received a boost from renewed geopolitical tensions.

“The go to currency haven USD/JPY continues to sag in early Asia trade as investors remain unnerved by the 24/7 US political melodrama that’s filling the airwaves,” Innes added.

“A very risk off scenario was evident overnight, and I suspect there could be more room for this move to play out as one should surmise we’ve only brushed the surface on the Cohn saga.” With Bloomberg, AFP

- Advertisement -

LATEST NEWS

Popular Articles