Philippine stocks slumped Wednesday in line with the movement of Asian markets on concerns about China’s economic slowdown.
The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index declined 64.49 points, or 0.97 percent, to close at 6,572.51, while the broader all-shares index dropped 29.57 points, or 0.84 percent, to settle at 3,476.66.
“Philippine shares continued to slide with HK and China equities, plunging after the latest growth print showed that the second largest economy grew at the slowest pace in three decades when excluding the pandemic,” Regina Capital Development Corp head of sales Luis Limlingan said.
Limlingan said the decline on Wall Street also contributed to the PSEi’s decline. All sectoral indices ended in the red. Net value turnover amounted to P5.45 billion.
Other Asian markets also fell further Wednesday as hopes for an early interest rate cut by key central banks faded and data confirmed China’s economy last year grew at its slowest pace in more than three decades.
The euphoria that saw out 2023 has been erased by a string of data and comments from the US Federal Reserve suggesting a first-quarter dovish pivot was unlikely as inflation stays stubbornly above target and labor markets remain resilient.
At the same time, rising tensions in the Middle East and eastern Europe, and the long-running US-China spat, continue to keep investors on their toes, fearing the fragile economic recovery could be turned on its head.
Fed governor Christopher Waller, a noted dove at the central bank, said on Tuesday that figures suggest decision-makers should be able to cut borrowing costs this year — with their inflation target in sight — but they must move steadily.
“I am becoming more confident that we are within striking distance of achieving a sustainable level of two percent (personal consumption expenditures) inflation,” he told a virtual event hosted by the Brookings Institution, referring to the Fed’s favored gauge.
“As long as inflation doesn’t rebound and stay elevated, I believe the (policy board) will be able to lower the target range for the federal funds rate this year.
“When the time is right to begin lowering rates, I believe it can and should be lowered methodically and carefully.”
The comments came after minutes released at the start of the month showed policymakers were keen to keep rates at two-decade highs as they look to cement their achievements in the battle against inflation.
That was followed by forecast-beating jobs figures and a surprisingly higher consumer price index reading.
“We view (Waller’s) comments emphasizing no need to rush as indicating that he does not expect to push for a March cut,” Krishna Guha, at Evercore ISI, said.
Waller was “consistent with our baseline of a first cut in May or June”, Guha added.
Expectations for a March cut have fallen to about 65 percent, having hovered around 80 percent Friday, according to Bloomberg News.
The prospect of rates staying restrictive weighed on equities, with all three main indexes on Wall Street ending in the red as dealers there returned from a long weekend.
The selling continued in Asian trade, with Hong Kong once again the worst performer — shedding more than four percent at one point — as tech giants were heavily sold, while there were also deep losses in Shanghai, Sydney, Seoul, Singapore, Mumbai, Bangkok, Taipei, Wellington, Jakarta and Manila.
Tokyo fell for a second straight day, having dropped Tuesday after six days of gains that pushed the Nikkei to a 34-year high.
The negative mood was worsened Wednesday by data showing China’s gross domestic product expanded 5.2 percent last year, its worst performance since 1990, excluding the years that were hit by the pandemic.
The reading highlighted the impact of a crippling property crisis, sluggish consumption and global turmoil on the world’s number-two economy, which has struggled to capitalize on the reopening from long-running zero-Covid measures that were lifted in late 2022.
While in line with forecasts and slightly above the government’s target, the data will do little to silence calls for Beijing to unveil a stimulus “bazooka” to kickstart growth and do more to address a debt crisis in the vast property sector.
However, in a speech to the World Economic Forum in Davos on Tuesday, Premier Li Qiang predicted the reading and flagged that it was achieved without “massive stimulus”.
“We did not seek short-term growth while accumulating long term risk,” he told the gathering.
“The headwinds facing China’s economy in 2023 have not subsided, and the geopolitical environment may become more contentious following election results in Taiwan,” warned SPI Asset Management’s Stephen Innes, referring to the victory for pro-sovereignty candidate Lai Ching-te in a weekend presidential vote.
London dived more than 1.2 percent as data showed UK inflation unexpectedly ticked up in December, denting hopes for the Bank of England to cut rates.
Paris and Frankfurt were also both down more than 1.0 percent. With AFP