Local stocks and the Philippine peso rose Thursday, after minutes from the Federal Reserve’s latest policy meeting suggested it could slow the pace of its rate hikes.
The PSE index, the 30-company benchmark of the Philippine Stock Exchange, went up 20 points, or 0.3 percent, to close at 6,530.51, as four of the six subsectors advanced.
The broader all-share index also gained 6 points, or 0.2 percent, to settle at 3,422.04 on a value turnover of P5.9 billion. Losers outnumbered gainers, 94 to 87, while 49 issues were unchanged.
Seven of the 10 most actives stocks ended in the green, led by Converge ICT Inc. which jumped 6.7 percent to P16.00 and Ayala Land Inc. which climbed 3 percent to P29.30.
The peso also hit another two-month high as financial markets believe the easing inflation rate in the United States may result in smaller rate hikes by the Fed in the coming weeks.
The peso gained P0.16 to close at 56.78 against the dollar Thursday from 56.94 on Wednesday. It was the local currency’s strongest level in more than two months since it settled at 56.77 against the greenback on Sept. 13, 2022. Total volume turnover reached $870.5 million, up from $687.85 million previously.
Rizal Commercial Banking Corp. chief economist Michael Ricafort said “recent comments from Federal Reserve officials indicated openness to slow the pace of future rate hikes.”
Meanwhile, most Asian markets also rallied on indications the Fed could slow the pace of its rate hikes. The news provided traders with a cushion against concerns about surging Covid-19 cases in China that have fanned speculation authorities will revert to lockdowns and other economically debilitating measures to fight the outbreak.
Wednesday’s much-anticipated minutes showed most US central bank chiefs felt smaller increases would “likely soon be appropriate” as the economy shows signs of weakness following almost a year of monetary tightening.
Bets were growing on officials announcing a 50-basis-point lift at their December gathering, down from four straight 75-point hikes.
The latest indicators showed the manufacturing and services sectors continued to contract last month, while jobless claims picked up.
The developments allowed Wall Street traders to head off to their Thanksgiving break with a spring in their step, the S&P 500 ending at a two-month high as they finally see a glimmer of light at the end of the tunnel after a painful year.
Asia mostly followed suit, with Tokyo, Hong Kong, Mumbai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Taipei and Jakarta all positive, though Shanghai dipped and Wellington barely moved.
Kuala Lumpur surged more than three percent and the ringgit held gains after opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim was named prime minister, ending a days-long leadership impasse after inconclusive polls that had rattled Malaysia’s markets.
London was flat at the open, while Paris and Frankfurt edged up.
The more risk-on environment was also reflected in a further drop in the dollar against its peers, having surged for much of the year as traders bet on ever-higher US interest rates.
“Equities are reveling in the wake of the… minutes after the Fed telegraphed a downshift from jumbo to extra-large rate hikes,” said SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes.
“A commitment to moving toward restrictive monetary policy remains intact, but the (policy board) is ready to slow the path toward that destination.”
He added that a less aggressive Fed “should pave the runway for take-off in Asia, fuelled by expectations of China’s reopening by March next year”.
Investors are keeping a close watch on China after it announced a record number of new Covid cases on Thursday as authorities worked to curb the spread with snap lockdowns, mass testing and travel restrictions.
While officials are trying more targeted measures to contain the disease, concerns remain that they will resort to the painful city-wide shutdowns seen in Shanghai earlier this year as part of the zero-Covid strategy, which hammered the economy.
However, that worry has been tempered somewhat after China signalled fresh support measures aimed at boosting growth, with the State Council saying tools would be used to ensure liquidity in markets.
The comments led to talk of another cut in the amount of cash that banks must keep in reserve, freeing them to lend more.
Oil prices extended Wednesday’s sharp losses fuelled by worries about the impact on demand from China’s Covid outbreaks.
SPI’s Innes added that a reported Group of Seven consideration for capping Russian crude at $65-$70 a barrel was higher than expected and not far from the present discount of the contract. That meant the move would likely not hit exports materially, he said. With AFP