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Friday, April 26, 2024

Stocks fall; index dips below 8,500

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The stock market fell Friday on lingering concerns on a possible rate increase by the Bangko Sentral ng Pilipinas next month to address inflationary pressures.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index lost 48.01 points, or 0.6 percent, to 8,467.56 on a value turnover of P9.2 billion. Losers beat gainers, 122 to 91, with 39 issues unchanged.

BDO Unibank Inc., the biggest lender in terms of assets, dropped 2 percent to P147, while JG Summit Holdings Inc. of industrialist John Gokongwei declined 2.8 percent to P72.50.

Now Corp., which is bidding to become the country’s third major telecommunications company, advanced 4.4 percent to P15.70, while Golden Haven Inc. of the Villar Group climbed 3.4 percent to P300.

The rest of Asian markets, meanwhile, ended the week on a positive note following the lead from Wall Street, with energy firms lifted by a rally in oil prices.

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While the volatility that greeted the start of February has subsided for now, traders continue to fret over the prospect that US borrowing costs are likely to rise further as the world’s top economy powers ahead.

“Investors are just nervous about interest rates,” Paul Nolte, a portfolio manager at Kingsview Asset Management in Chicago, told Bloomberg News.

“Everybody is waiting for more economic data to confirm or deny whatever the Fed position is. It’s a big case of the nerves.”

Most equities in Asia sank on Thursday after the Fed released minutes pointing towards a number of rate hikes this year owing to an expected surge in inflation as Donald Trump’s tax cuts kick in and economic growth improves.

However, Friday saw a bounce-back as investors tracked their New York counterparts.

“The minutes were far more balanced than the equity market sell-off suggested,” said Stephen Innes, head of Asia-Pacific trading at OANDA.

“The discussions about their inflation target being symmetric indicate that the Feds are less concerned about the updraft from inflationary pressures than current market pricing.”

Tokyo ended 0.7 percent higher, helped by a weaker yen. Hong Kong climbed more than one percent, Shanghai added 0.6 percent and Sydney put on 0.8 percent. Seoul and Singapore each jumped 1.5 percent, while Wellington, Taipei and Jakarta were also well in the green.

Energy firms across the region were higher, recovering some of Thursday’s losses, after oil prices jumped on the back of data showing US stockpiles fell last week. Forecasts had been for a rise.

The news sent crude sharply higher on Thursday as it eased worries about a pick-up in US production, which was threatening to negate the output cap by Opec and Russia. Both main oil contracts continued to rise in Asia.

“The market’s been concerned about US production ramping, so as long as you still have these healthy inventory reports, it helps ease some of the fears,” Craig Bethune, a senior portfolio manager at Manulife Asset Management, said.

On forex markets the dollar climbed against the euro, recovering some losses after European Central Bank minutes showed a cautious move towards an exit from crisis-era stimulus. With AFP

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