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Philippines
Monday, October 7, 2024

PH stocks surge after five-day slump

The Philippine Stock Exchange index, the 30-company benchmark of the Philippine Stock Exchange, surged by 129.54 points or 2.03 percent to close at 6,523.09 Monday, halting a five-day slump as all major sub-indices ended in the green.

Maybank Securities Philippines head of retail equities Michael Macainag said the volume picked up in the afternoon trading as funds took advantage of low liquidity to push the market higher.

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The broader all-shares index was also up by 55.71 points, or 1.63 percent, to settle at 3,470.46 on a value turnover of P5.13 billion.

All of the most active stocks ended in the green except for BDO Unibank Inc. which remained unchanged.

Universal Robina Corp. climbed 9.09 percent to P138.00. followed by Metro Pacific Investments Corp. which rose 3.7 percent to P4.75. Ayala Corp. went up 3.25 percent to P635.

Meanwhile, the ruble and most equity markets sank Monday as traders kept watch on Russia following an aborted mutiny at the weekend that stoked concerns about stability in the nuclear-armed country.

While the advance by the Wagner mercenary force led by Yevgeny Prigozhin was called off before it reached Moscow, analysts said the rebellion showed President Vladimir Putin’s grip on power was more fragile than previously thought.

It also added to unease on trading floors, where investors last week reversed a recent rally in stocks owing to concerns about ever-rising interest rates aimed at fighting stubborn inflation.

The ruble sank to 87 to the dollar—its weakest level since March last year in the early days Putin’s invasion of Ukraine—as traders reacted to the developments in Russia.

Bloomberg said banks had priced it as much as 100 to the dollar at one point Saturday before coming back as Prigozhin halted his advance on Moscow.

On equity markets, traders appeared to take the events in stride, though most major indices were in the red.

Hong Kong, Tokyo, Sydney, Shanghai, Taipei, Bangkok, Singapore, Mumbai and Wellington all slipped though Seoul and Jakarta rose.

London, Paris and Frankfurt all fell in opening trade.

Oil prices rose as Russia is a major producer, but concern about demand owing to the impact of rate rises kept gains limited, while futures for European natural gas jumped soared.

The revolt came afer Prigozhin had railed for months against the Russian military’s handling of the war in Ukraine.

But Wagner mercenaries returned to their base Sunday after Putin agreed to allow Prigozhin to avoid treason charges and accept exile in neighboring Belarus.

However, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken said the events exposed “real cracks” in Putin’s rule.

The agreement halted an escalation of the crisis but observers warned that markets were susceptible to any further instability in Russia.

“Even though the Prigozhin mutiny may not cause larger market movements directly, this could quickly change depending on how the political situation in Russia unfolds in coming months,” Erik Meyersson, at SEB AB, said.

“Markets will likely become more sensitive to internal political matters in Russia.”

Investors were also keeping tabs on comments from Federal Reserve officials, hoping for clarity on their monetary policy plans after boss Jerome Powell last week warned rates would likely keep rising.

His comments dealt a blow to hopes the bank had come to the end of its tightening cycle, and came as authorities elsewhere announced further hikes. With AFP

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