Stocks bounced back from two days of losses as traders tracked a Wall Street surge fueled by data pointing to slowing US inflation and hopes the Federal Reserve’s rate hike drive is coming to an end.
The PSE index, the 30-company benchmark of the Philippine Stock Exchange, jumped 242 points, or 3.57 percent, to close at 7,035.76 Wednesday as all six subsectors posted gains.
The broader all-share index also went up by 96 points, or 2.70 percent, to settle at 3,687.17, on a value turnover of P9 billion. Gainers outnumbered losers, 143 to 49, while 43 issues were unchanged.
All ten most active stocks ended in the green, led by PLDT Inc. which climbed 6.41 percent to P1,428.00 and International Container Terminal Services Inc. which gained 5.40 percent to P218.60.
Most Asian markets also traded higher Wednesday. The gains will provide some relief to investors after January’s rally appeared to have hit the buffers this week on lingering concerns about the economic outlook.
Expectations the Fed will hike borrowing costs by just 25 basis points on Wednesday were ramped up after a key gauge of wage increases came in below forecasts.
“The employment cost index is closely watched by the Fed as it compositionally adjusts wages growth, unlike other more timely measures,” said National Australia Bank’s Tapas Strickland.
“More important for the Fed is one of the subcomponents, the wages and salaries for private sector workers excluding incentive paid occupations, which rose 0.9 percent on-quarter from 1.2 previously.”
He added that the reading was “a notable deceleration and in quarter annualized terms would be equivalent to 3.6-3.7 percent. That is close to being consistent with at-target inflation if repeated next quarter.”
The ECI reading came as another report showed a slowdown in the US housing market as well as a dip in consumer confidence, suggesting the Fed’s tightening campaign is beginning to kick in.
While they indicate the world’s top economy is slowing, hope is building that the data will allow the central bank to wind down its rate hikes.
“We’re getting closer to the terminal rate,” Sassan Ghahramani, of SGH Macro Advisors, told Bloomberg Television. “Data that has come out does not justify 50-basis-point hikes. If anything, I’d say it’s virtually a 100 percent certainty they do 25.”
OANDA’s Edward Moya added: “Wall Street is slowly growing confident that this week’s Fed rate hike might end up being the last one in this tightening cycle.”
All three main indexes on Wall Street ended more than one percent higher, helped by strong earnings from big-ticket firms including ExxonMobil and General Motors.
And Asia picked up the baton, with Hong Kong, Tokyo, Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Wellington, Taipei, Mumbai, Bangkok and Jakarta all in positive territory.
Mumbai managed to rally around 1.9 percent, despite more heavy selling of tycoon Gautam Adani’s business empire, which has now lost around a third—or $76 billion—of its value after allegations of massive accounting fraud from a US investment group.
Worst-hit was Adani Total Gas, which saw trading suspended again after another 10 percent drop, while flagship Adani Enterprises shed more than five percent. The losses came even after a stock sale in the firm Tuesday was oversubscribed.
London, Paris and Frankfurt all opened on the front foot.
With an eye on Wednesday’s post-meeting news conference at the Fed, SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes said: “The running assumption is that the Fed doesn’t want the market bossing them into a less hawkish policy corner, and in the Q&A, the pushback comes from Powell.
“But without doubt… reporters will try to coax out the word pause from Powell, and if there is any whiff of that word, risk assets will take flight.” With AFP