Philippine stocks extended their gains Thursday, bringing back the local index to the 6,500-level.
The 30-company Philippine Stock Exchange index rose 68.54 points, or 1.06 percent, to close at 6,509.86, while the broader all-shares index added 36.10 points, or 1.04 percent, to settle at 3,489.79.
Regina Capital Development Corp. head of sales Luis Limlingan said investors digested the better-than-expected May inflation rate.
Investors also anticipated the US Federal Reserve may ease interest rates later this year.
“This sentiment was bolstered by the slowdown in US payroll data, which reported 152,000 new jobs last month, adding evidence of weakening labor market that investors believe could prompt the Federal Reserve to cut benchmark interest rates,” Limlingan said.
Except for mining and oil which declined 0.34 percent, all other sub-indices ended in the green. Services registered the highest gain, increasing by 2.76 percent. This was followed by industrial and property which climbed 0.93 percent and 0.75 percent, respectively. Value turnover stood at P4.15 billion.
Meanwhile, Asian markets extended a surge on Wall Street Thursday as another round of soft US jobs data ramped up bets on the Federal Reserve cutting interest rates this year.
Worries about the world’s top economy sparked by a below-par factory gauge earlier this week appear to have been superseded by renewed optimism that an extended period of elevated borrowing costs is finally kicking in.
Figures from payroll firm ADP on Wednesday showed private sector hiring slowed far more than estimated in May.
That came a day after news that job openings had fallen more than expected and pointed to a softening labor market, a key goal of Fed officials along with falling inflation.
The data fanned hopes that the Fed can start to cut interest rates from their two-decade highs, and traders have priced in almost two before the end of 2024, with some penciling in September for the first.
“Momentum continues as US data starts to weaken… possibly supporting earlier rate cuts from the Fed this year,” said Charu Chanana at Saxo.
Investors are now set up for the release of the crucial non-farm payrolls report, which is due Friday and should provide a clearer snapshot of the labor market and the US economy.
That comes ahead of next week’s Fed policy meeting, where it will also unveil its latest “dot plot” of rate expectations.
Its previous guidance — in March — was for three cuts but many are preparing for that to be whittled down in light of recent data showing inflation remains sticky and decision-makers’ reluctance to move too early.
“The ‘dots’ are likely to cluster around one or two interest rate cuts this year,” Capital Economics’ Stephen Brown said.
“Nevertheless, as inflation falls a bit faster than officials expect and (gross domestic product) growth disappoints, our base case remains that the Fed will cut in September.”
Optimism over a rate cut has been boosted by news that Canada’s central bank had done so on Wednesday, while the European Central Bank is expected to later on Thursday.
All three main indexes on Wall Street advanced, with the S&P 500 and Nasdaq hitting fresh records.
The rally in New York came on the back of a surge in tech titans including chip-making darling Nvidia, which became only the third US company in history to break $3 trillion in market capitalization, after Apple and Microsoft.
Most Asian markets built on the gains, with Hong Kong, Tokyo, Sydney, Singapore, Taipei, Manila and Jakarta all enjoying buying interest. However, Shanghai, Wellington and Bangkok dipped.
Mumbai rose after Indian Prime Minister Narendra Modi formed a coalition government — having lost his majority in the country’s general election — raising hopes he will be able to push through economy-boosting measures.
Shares in India have swung wildly between big gains and losses this week after exit polls pointing to a landslide for Modi’s Bharatiya Janata Party (BJP) were proved wrong.
Paris and Frankfurt rallied ahead of the expected rate cut by the ECB. London also advanced. With AFP