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Saturday, April 27, 2024

Stocks end flat; Metrobank up

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The stock market closed flat Friday following a sell-off on Wall Street, US jobs data coming in below par and a dive in oil prices fueling losses across the energy sector.

The Philippine Stock Exchange Index added 1.02 points, or 0.01 percent, to 7,889.33  on a value turnover of P6.9 billion. Losers edged gainers, 104 to 102, with 46 issues unchanged.

Metropolitan Bank & Trust Co., the second-biggest lender, advanced 3.6 percent to  P92.75, while Century Properties Group Inc. surged 8.3 percent to P0.65. 

SSI Group Inc., a retailer of specialty brands, climbed 5.9 percent to P4.69, but East West Banking Corp., the banking unit of the Filinvest Group, slumped 4.3 percent to P32 on profit taking.

Meanwhile, increasing expectations that global central banks are about to start winding down their easy money policies are also weighing on buying sentiment and dragging on the dollar.

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With traders already nervous over North Korea’s latest missile provocation, analysts said there is little desire to buy risky assets such as stocks.

US markets closed sharply lower after payrolls firm ADP said private-sector employers added far fewer jobs last month than had been forecast.

The reading fanned concerns about the government’s official figures later Friday as experts suggest another two hikes in US interest rates this year are no longer certain, stifling the greenback. 

“Unless US economic data starts to improve again, the short-term outlook for the US dollar is rather negative,” said AxiTrader market analyst Milan Cutkovic.

“Rate expectations have declined. The market is expecting only one more rate hike this year. More importantly, the Fed is no longer the only hawkish central bank amongst the developed economies.”

While the US is showing some signs of softening, the global outlook is improving, which has emboldened central banks to begin scaling back the accommodative measures put in place during the financial crisis.

Tokyo’s Nikkei ended 0.3 percent lower, while Hong Kong slipped 0.3 percent in the afternoon.

Sydney dived one percent, Seoul 0.3 percent lower and Singapore retreated 0.1 percent. Wellington, Taipei and Jakarta were also in the red. But Shanghai ended the day 0.2 percent higher.

The Bank of England, Bank of Canada and European Central Bank are among those looking at tightening policies, bringing an end to the divergence that has supported the dollar for years.

The dollar edged up against the pound and euro Friday but held recent losses.

But it rallied against the yen after the Bank of Japan went on a bond-buying spree to lower yields on its benchmark 10-year notes, which had followed global rates higher Thursday, while there is also little expectation officials there will tighten policy any time soon.

Energy firms suffered hefty selling as oil prices tanked more than one percent, following a pick-up in US production while profit-taking kicked in after a surge of around 10 percent in the eight days up to the start of the week. With AFP

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