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Wednesday, June 26, 2024

PH stocks retreat as investors wait for market catalyst

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The local stock market retreated Tuesday after several days of gains amid a lack of fresh leads.

The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index dropped 43.45 points, or 0.65 percent, to close at 6,637, while the broader all-shares index declined by 17.54 points, or 0.50 percent, to settle at 3,506.23.

Analysts said investors opted to take profits while waiting for fresh leads that could support the market’s upward momentum.

“Investors seem to be waiting for a positive catalyst to emerge before pushing through with a sustainable rally,” Philstocks Financial Inc. research analyst Mikhail Plopenio said.

He said investors were also monitoring the developments in the Middle East which could possibly impact global fuel prices.

Net market value reached P4.9 billion, while foreign investors were net buyers with a net inflow of P461.8 million.

Meanwhile, Asian and European stocks ticked lower Tuesday as Middle East concerns overshadowed hopes for an early Federal Reserve interest rate cut, with traders now awaiting the release of key data out of China and the United States later in the week.

With Wall Street closed Monday for a holiday, there were few catalysts to drive buying, while analysts warned investors might have overdone their optimism about how much the US central bank will loosen monetary policy this year.

Equities soared at the end of 2023 as several reports showed inflation coming down and the jobs market softening while the Fed indicated that it was preparing to reverse more than a year of hiking.

Bets had been building that officials would announce a rate reduction as soon as March.

However, January has seen the wind come out of the sails after minutes from the central bank’s December meeting showed decision-makers keen to keep rates elevated for some time, while a closely watched employment report smashed forecasts and consumer prices rose more than expected.

“The current market pricing indicates anticipation of nearly seven rate cuts in 2024, driven by the belief that the disinflation process is firmly entrenched and unlikely to be easily dislodged,” said Stephen Innes at SPI Asset Management.

“It’s essential to recall that the market consistently underestimated the Federal Reserve’s willingness to raise rates during the hiking cycle.

“So this prompts a straightforward question: Is the market now overestimating the Fed’s readiness or capacity, particularly in the context of prevailing inflation dynamics, to implement rate cuts over the next 12 months?”

While inflation is on a general downward path, there is a worry that it could pop back up anytime, particularly with tensions in the oil-rich Middle East showing no sign of calming.

The United States and Britain have in recent days launched strikes against Yemen’s Huthis in retaliation for the Iran-backed rebels’ attacks on Red Sea shipping in what they say is solidarity with Gaza.

The strikes have been met with warnings of retaliation from the group, which on Monday hit a US-owned cargo vessel with a missile, heightening fears that a region-wide conflict could erupt, battering supplies of oil and other goods.

Still, after an initial burst higher Friday, oil prices remain subdued owing to demand worries as the global economy — particularly China’s — struggles.

Investors are now awaiting the release this week of US data on retail sales, industrial production and jobs, among other things.

Asian markets mostly fell Tuesday, with Tokyo suffering a small drop after six straight gains that saw the Nikkei burst to a 34-year high thanks to rising inflation and a weak yen that helps exporters.

Hong Kong tumbled more than two percent ahead of data on Chinese economic growth and retail sales due Wednesday. Shanghai edged up.

There were also losses in Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Bangkok, Mumbai, Wellington, Taipei and Manila.

London, Paris and Frankfurt sank at the open, extending Monday’s losses that came after data showed the continent’s biggest economy Germany shrank slightly in 2023 as costly energy, high interest rates and cooling foreign demand took their toll.

Warnings from European Central Bank officials that it was too early to talk about rate cuts added to the gloom. With AFP

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