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Sunday, November 24, 2024

Stocks fell on global sell-off; Peso closes at 55.45 a dollar

Stocks retreated amid a global sell-off Wednesday, while the peso closed at a new three-month high against the US dollar on growing fears the US Federal Reserve monetary tightening will tip the US economy into recession.

The PSE index, the 30-company benchmark of the Philippine Stock Exchange, lost 149 points, or 2.2 percent, to finish at 6,525.16 Wednesday as four of the six subsectors declined.

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The broader all-share index also tumbled 51 points, or 1.5 percent, to settle at 3,425.86, on a value turnover of P6 billion. Losers outnumbered gainers, 104 to 68, while 47 issues were unchanged.

Two of the 10 most active stocks ended in the green, led by PLDT Inc. which rose 1.9 percent to P1,700.00. International Container Terminal Services Inc. picked up 0.9 percent to P190.00.

The peso appreciated 0.9 percent Wednesday to reach 55.45 against the greenback from 55.97 on Tuesday. It was the local currency’s strongest showing since Aug. 12 this year.

Meanwhile, Asian stocks were mostly lower, after the heads of Wall Street’s leading banks warned of tough times ahead in 2023.

JPMorgan Chase chief Jamie Dimon tipped a “mild to hard recession” and Goldman Sachs’ David Solomon said jobs and pay would be hit, while Morgan Stanley and Bank of America were also uneasy about the outlook.

The comments added to the downbeat mood that has coursed through trading floors at the start of the week, after forecast-beating reports on jobs and the giant US services sector fanned worries the Fed will have to push interest rates higher than hoped.

Markets had been rising healthily ahead of Friday’s employment figures after a weaker-than-expected inflation reading for October suggested the almost year-long tightening campaign was finally affecting prices.

“Any hopes that the Fed would turn more dovish in the months ahead have been dashed significantly as the vast US services industry is where sticky inflation hangs out,” said SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes.

He added that the latest readings suggest rates will go above five percent before the Fed stops hiking, while several observers have suggested they will not be reduced until 2024.

Hong Kong, Tokyo, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai, Bangkok and Jakarta all dropped.

And Lauren Goodwin, at New York Life Investments, saw further pain ahead for markets.

“We have not yet seen the bottom on equity prices,” she said, according to Bloomberg News. “While this phase of equity market volatility is likely to end in the next few months, earnings have not yet adapted to a recessionary environment.”

The somber outlook overshadowed China’s moves to wind back some of its harsh Covid rules that traders hope will kickstart the world’s number two economy, which has been battered this year by months of lockdowns and other containment measures.

In a sign of the impact the zero-Covid strategy has had, data Wednesday showed that imports and exports and imports plunged far more than expected in November.

On Wednesday, officials announced for the first time a nationwide loosening of restrictions, including a reduction in mandatory PCR tests and allowing some positive cases to quarantine at home.

But while the country edges back to normality, Zhiwei Zhang, of Pinpoint Asset Management, warned that it would take time.

“The zero-Covid policy has been loosened, but mobility has not recovered much on the national level,” he said. “I expect exports will stay weak in the next few months as China goes through a bumpy reopening process.

“As global demand weakens in 2023, China will have to rely more on domestic demand.”

And other observers said the recent rally fuelled by the reopening may have gone too far and traders were now taking a step back as they contemplate a likely spike in infections in the country.

Oil prices remained stuck at lows not seen for around a year as demand expectations tumble.

Brent on Tuesday sank below $80 for the first time since January, while WTI was at its lowest since December, having plunged from the 14-year highs of around $140 touched in March after Russia invaded Ukraine. Both contracts were only slightly higher in Asian trade.

“The crude demand outlook is getting crushed as we are in a slowdown basically across all the major economies,” said OANDA’s Edward Moya.

“Supplies seem plentiful over the near term and that has everyone hesitating on what was one of the easiest trades of the year.” With AFP

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