Stocks fell Monday, as markets across the region slid following a US lead after the defeat of the bill to repeal and replace Obamacare on Friday.
The Philippine Stock Exchange index, the 30-company benchmark, shed 23 points, or 0.3 percent, to close at 7,245.97, as three of the six sectoral indices—holding firms, industrial and financials—ended in the red.
The heavier index, representing all shares, also tumbled 6 points, or 0.2 percent, to settle at 4,370.00, on a value turnover of P7.8 billion. Losers outnumbered gainers, 90 to 81, while 51 issues were unchanged.
Eight of the 20 most active stocks ended in the green, led by PLDT Inc. which climbed 3.1 percent to P1,619.00 and SM Prime Holdings Inc. which rose 1.8 percent to P28.50. Conglomerate LT Group Inc. of tycoon Lucio Tan gained 1.4 percent to P15.64.
Meanwhile, most Asian markets fell Monday and the dollar struggled on fears the collapse of Donald Trump’s repeal of Obamacare could mean he will struggle to push through his promised tax-cut and infrastructure spending policies.
In a severe early blow to the new administration, the healthcare reform was pulled Friday as it failed to garner enough support among Trump’s Republican party, who have a majority in both houses of Congress.
While the tycoon said he would now move on to tax reform, the failure of the bill — which was seen as a litmus test for his ability to push through his economy-boosting agenda—there is concern about future policies.
Global markets had surged since November on hopes the president’s pledges to overhaul the tax code, ramp up spending and deregulate markets would fire the already healthy economy.
“This was the first major attempt by the administration to reform the government and its miserable failure exposes the limits of President Trump,” Rodrigo Catril, a currency strategist at National Australia Bank in Sydney, told Bloomberg News
Tokyo’s Nikkei index led losers, shedding 1.4 percent as the dollar retreated against the yen, while Toshiba lost 2.1 percent on a report its troubled US nuclear unit is likely to start bankruptcy proceedings this week.
Sydney slipped 0.1 percent and Seoul gave up 0.6 percent. Singapore was 0.5 percent lower.
Hong Kong slipped 0.7 percent in the afternoon and Shanghai closed 0.1 percent off.
Greg McKenna, chief market strategist at AxiTrader, noted: “If healthcare was complex then so too will the tax be with the many moving parts and competing interests.”
On currency markets the greenback fell against its major peers and most high-yielding units, with the South Korean won up 0.9 percent, Malaysia’s ringgit 0.3 percent higher and the Indonesian rupiah up 0.2 percent.
“How quickly the Whitehouse administration can pivot to and get a convincing message across on tax reform will likely be the major focus early in the week,” said Stephen Innes, senior trader at OANDA.
“The markets are desperately seeking any glimmer of optimism that the tax reform agenda can unite Republicans.” With Bloomberg, AFP